Edible ices and ice cream Prices in Europe : How Much More Are Consumers Paying Since 2021

Edible ices and ice cream Prices in Europe: How Much More Are Consumers Paying Since 2021?

Cost of Living · Based on the data from the Consumer Conditions Scoreboard 2025

Between 2021 and 2024 the price of everyday food climbed sharply across Europe, but not every product rose by the same amount. This InfoCons Consumer Protection guide focuses on one of them – edible ices and ice cream – and shows exactly how much more consumers are paying, and how it compares with the rest of the shopping basket.

InfoCons Consumer Protection – How Much Edible ices and ice cream Prices Rose (+30.7%)

Across the EU, edible ices and ice cream prices were about 30.7% higher in December 2024 than in January 2021. It rose a little less than the average food product. For households that buy edible ices and ice cream regularly, this increase is felt directly at the checkout.

InfoCons Consumer Protection – How edible ices and ice cream compares with the food average. Based on the data from the Consumer Conditions Scoreboard 2025.

InfoCons Consumer Protection – Edible ices and ice cream vs the Average Shopping Basket

The average increase for all food and non-alcoholic drinks over this period was about 31.9%. At +30.7%, edible ices and ice cream rose roughly in line with the typical food product.

InfoCons Consumer Protection – Why Edible ices and ice cream Prices Went Up

Ice cream and edible ices were affected by higher prices for dairy and sugar, and especially by energy costs – keeping these products frozen all the way from factory to freezer is very energy-intensive.

Prices for this product also rose by very different amounts from one EU country to another, reflecting differences in local supply, taxes, competition and how much each step of production depends on energy.

InfoCons Consumer Protection – What This Means for You as a Consumer

You can soften the impact with a few simple habits. InfoCons Consumer Protection encourages consumers to compare the unit price (price per kilo or per litre) rather than the price on the front of the pack, try own-brand versions, watch for “shrinkflation” where the pack gets smaller for the same price, and buy in the right quantity to avoid waste. Family tubs are usually far cheaper per 100ml than individually wrapped portions.

Signature: InfoCons Consumer Protection Department

Other blog posts

keyboard_arrow_up