Here’s a modest puzzle: The quantity supplied of milk is way up, but the price is also way up. One usually expects higher supply to drive down the price. What’s happening? Here’s a meandering commentary on supply and demand in US dairy.
On the supply side, Jeffrey Gillespie and Eric Njuki of the US Department of Agriculture discuss “Fewer Farms, More Milk: The Changing Structure and Costs of U.S. Dairy Farming” (Amber Waves, Februar 23, 2026).
The pattern over the last couple of decades is fewer herds of dairy cattle, but bigger herds, along with a substantial rise in milk output. Gillespie and Njuki write: “Increasing adoption of new technologies and advanced management practices are among factors that have contributed to increasing productivity of cows on U.S. dairy farms. Between 2000 and 2021, advances in genetics, nutrition, and technology increased average milk yields per cow, and the market share of sales coming from farms using those advanced technologies and practices increased. Some of these technologies may be “scale-dependent” and are better suited to larger farms that need to exceed a minimum size in order to feasibly adopt the technology.”

A result of these changes is that annual milk prodution per cow continues to rise.

Gillespie and Njuki also provide this discomforting graph for milk producers. The USDA measures dairy production into four main categories, where the later and larger categories include what is in the earlier and smaller categories: feed cost, operating cost (including feed cost), and operating and ownership cost; and total cost (which also includes “unpaid labor, land cost, and general farm overhead expenses”). TThey write: “Between 2000–24, feed costs were covered by the average dairy farm in all years. Operating costs, which include feed as well as labor, inputs, and services, were covered by the average dairy farm in all but 2 years, 2009 and 2012. Total operating and ownership costs (related to assets such as buildings, equipment, and insurance) were covered by the average dairy farm in 13 of the 25 years. Total economic costs, which include opportunity costs such as unpaid labor and land, were covered by the average dairy farm in only 4 years.”
This figure shows what share of farms cover these costs, according to size of the farm, using annual data from 2000-2024.

In short, dairy production is up, and dairy is not a high-profit industry (no big surprise there). However, milk prices are up. The blue line shows the price for a gallon of whole milk in the last 20 years or so, while the green dashed line shows an overall price for low-fat and skim milk. But show a rise beginning back around 2018–that is, before the inflation of 2022. They also show a price that has remained fairly high in the last couple of years, despite increases in milk production.

Karen Bohnert tackles the question of what’s happening with milk prices in “The Great Rebalancing: Why 2026 Milk Prices are Defying the Supply Tsunami” (Dairy Herd Manageemtn, May 1, 2026). The subtitle for her article gives the punchline: “2026 milk prices are defying a massive supply surge as a revolution in protein demand and steady exports create a great rebalancing for U.S. dairy producers navigating market volatility.” As she reports, US milk production in the second half of 2025 was up about 4% over the same time in 2024; European milk production rose by a similar amount during that time.
In the State of the Dairy Industy 2026 Report from the Farm Journal, Bohnert reports in more detail. On one side, the profit expecations of dairy farmers are low this year. Bohnert writes: Top-line sentiment is bleak; profit expectations have cratered … Skyrocketing input costs, political volatility and labor scarcity have created a perfect storm. Essential infrastructure costs have nearly doubled in five years while land prices hit the ceiling. … Yet, inside this pessimism lies a remarkable paradox: 45% of dairy operators still plan to expand in the next five years.”
The underling reason here is a fundamental shift in the demand for milk: specifically, the demand for liquid milk has been falling for some time, but the demand for milk-based products as been shifting and rising. A moderate shift is that international demand for cheese is rising, which has been absorbing the increase in US cheese production in the last few years. A much bigger shift is the rising demand for high-protein products, which includes dairy-based products like whey power, yogurt, and others.
Bohnert describes several interrelated changes. One is the “cow number paradox.”
Perhaps the most interesting part of this story is the cow number paradox. Historically, more milk meant more cows. But in 2026, we are seeing a decoupling of those two metrics. While total milk production and total components are up, cow numbers are remaining relatively stable — and even declining in some regions. “For the first time in history, the dairy industry is growing its output while the heifer supply is at a 20-year low,” says Phil Plourd, president of Ever.Ag. “We are seeing a new math where the value of the components — not the number of head — is the only metric that matters. Producers are doing more with less because they have to.”
A related change is that dairy farmers are not optimizing for the total volume of milk produced–the traditional goal–but instead focusing on producing the components of milk that will be used for other purposes.
[A] staggering 89% of producers are now actively and surgically adjusting their rations to target specific milk components — such as fat and protein — rather than just total volume. This isn’t just a trend; it is a response to a market that is hungry for solids. As the domestic fluid milk market continues its long-term decline, the demand for cheese, butter and high-value protein powders has skyrocketed. For the modern producer, the milk check is no longer driven by the weight of the water, but by the percentage of the components. Producers are leveraging high-precision metrics, bypass fats and amino acids to push butterfat levels toward 4.5% and 5%. These are numbers that were once the exclusive domain of small Jersey herds but are now being achieved more and more by large Holstein operations. This component boom allows a farm to produce higher value while caring for fewer cows.
The third change is a surge of investment in dairy-processing. Again, Bohnert explains in the 2026 State of the Dairy Industry report:
The milk produced on these high-efficiency dairies has to go somewhere, and the U.S. landscape is currently seeing a processing renaissance. From the High Plains of Texas to the rolling hills of Idaho and the heart of Kansas, massive amounts of capital are being poured into new processing plants. These processing plants are hightech manufacturing centers designed for the global market. We are seeing the emergence of plants capable of processing millions of pounds of milk a day into cheese, ultra-filtered milk and specialized whey ingredients. This boom in processing infrastructure provides a home for the increased production and allows the U.S. to compete on a scale that was previously impossible. In 2026, the industry is no longer limited by how much milk we can produce, but by how much stainless steel we have in the ground to convert that milk into exportable goods.
In the modern US economy, where we spend an inordinate amount of time obsessing about technology and AI, it’s perhaps useful to remember that the extraordinary adjustments in response to shifting consumer demand happen all the time, even in an industry as ageless as dairy cattle.







