Global Palm Sugar Market Trends and Insights
Demand for unrefined sweeteners with trace minerals
Palm sugar's mineral profile, potassium, magnesium, zinc, and iron, positions it as a functional ingredient rather than a commodity sweetener, enabling premium pricing in health-food channels. The glycemic index of coconut palm sugar ranges from 35 to 42, significantly below table sugar's 65, making it attractive to the 84 million consumers who adopted low-glycemic diets in 2024. This positioning is particularly effective in North America and Europe, where clean-label regulations and consumer skepticism of artificial additives drive reformulation. However, the mineral content varies by sap source, processing method, and storage conditions, creating quality-control challenges for industrial buyers who require batch-to-batch consistency. Producers are responding by implementing Indonesian National Standard SNI 01-3743-2021, which specifies maximum moisture content below 2% and minimum sucrose levels, but enforcement remains uneven across smallholder cooperatives, according to Tradin Organic.Expansion of artisanal and ethnic food segments globally
The kopi susu gula aren trend, Indonesian coffee layered with palm sugar syrup, has migrated from Jakarta street stalls to specialty cafes in Melbourne and Los Angeles, demonstrating how ethnic beverages can cross over into mainstream foodservice. Chains such as Kopi Kenangan and Janji Jiwa scaled this format domestically, and their photogenic layered drinks drive social media engagement that helps younger consumers trial. Artisanal bakeries in Europe are incorporating palm sugar into sourdough and pastry formulations to achieve deeper caramelization and extended shelf life, capturing premiums of 15% to 20% over conventional sugar-based products. The challenge lies in educating chefs and product developers on substitution ratios: palm sugar's hygroscopic nature requires minor liquid adjustments in light sponges and meringues, and its lower melting point affects confectionery texture. Tradin Organic's 3-year grant from the Dutch Social Sustainability Fund, announced in 2024, targets 2,275 smallholder farmers in Central Java with training on organic integrity and food safety, aiming to standardize quality for export to artisanal and specialty channels.Limited industrial-scale processing infrastructure for value-added forms
Palm sugar production remains dominated by smallholder cooperatives and artisanal processors who lack the capital and technical expertise to produce consistent granulated, liquid, and powdered formats at an industrial scale. Approximately 1,400 plantations experienced production disruptions in 2024 due to labor shortages, and only USD 260 million of the USD 420 million in global supply-chain investment targeted Southeast Asia, leaving significant infrastructure gaps. The Indonesian Ministry of Industry partnered with PalmCo and Gerak Nusantara Producers Cooperative in April 2025 to promote palm sugar production from oil palm trunks, estimating that a single tree yields 6.8 liters of sap per day during a 1.5- to 2-month tapping period, with a net profit of IDR 18 million to IDR 25 million (approximately USD 1,150 to USD 1,600) per farmer. However, basic sap-processing equipment requires an estimated IDR 25 million (approximately USD 1,600) per hectare, a prohibitive upfront cost for smallholders without access to credit. The result is a two-tier market: large exporters such as Big Tree Farms and Asia Palm Coco invest in centralized drying and granulation facilities, while smallholders produce block and paste forms that command lower prices and face quality-control issues. This infrastructure gap constrains the supply of premium granulated and liquid formats that foodservice and industrial buyers demand, limiting market growth.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Growing demand for natural caramelization agents in food processing
- Application in functional beverages using traditional sweeteners
- Challenges in organic certification and traceability compliance
Segment Analysis
Coconut palm sugar commanded 62.42% market share in 2025, reflecting its established supply chains, mild flavor profile, and widespread availability across Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand. Date palm sugar serves niche Middle Eastern and North African markets where cultural familiarity and halal certification drive demand, while Palmyra palm sugar is expanding at 5.25% CAGR through 2031, the fastest growth among product types. Palmyra palm (Borassus flabellifer) yields up to 20 liters of sap per day per tree, nearly three times the output of coconut palms. However, Palmyra palms require 12 to 20 years to reach maturity, creating a near-term supply bottleneck that limits immediate scale-up. The "Others" category, which includes toddy palm and nipa palm sugars, remains marginal due to limited production volumes and regional supply constraints.Coconut palm sugar benefits from Indonesia's dominance; the country supplies approximately 90% of global output, with the Greater Banyumas region alone accounting for 80% of Indonesian production, according to ANTARA. This concentration creates supply resilience but also vulnerability: weather disruptions, labor shortages, or policy changes in Indonesia can ripple through global markets. Date palm sugar's growth is constrained by limited sap availability, as date palms are primarily cultivated for fruit rather than sap, and tapping reduces fruit yields. Palmyra palm sugar's expansion is driven by government support in India and Thailand, where ministries of agriculture provide subsidies for seedling distribution and tapping equipment. The product-type segmentation underscores a strategic tension: buyers seeking supply diversification are exploring Palmyra and date palm sugars, but the infrastructure and farmer networks required to scale these alternatives remain underdeveloped. Coconut palm sugar will retain dominance through 2031, but its share will erode as Palmyra and date palm production scales.
Granulated palm sugar held 41.18% market share in 2025 and will grow at 6.14% CAGR through 2031, the fastest rate among form types, driven by its versatility, shelf stability, and compatibility with existing bakery and foodservice equipment. Liquid and syrup formats accounted for approximately 22% of the market in 2025 and are expanding rapidly in ready-to-drink beverages, sauces, and quick-service restaurants, where they eliminate the dissolution step and integrate seamlessly into automated dispensing systems. Block-and-paste forms, which represent the traditional artisanal product, are growing more slowly because they require grating or dissolving before use, limiting their appeal to industrial buyers. PT Rumah Seho Nusantara and other Indonesian exporters introduced liquid palm sugar syrups in 2024 to serve beverage manufacturers seeking operational efficiency and consistent Brix levels.
Granulated formats benefit from Royal Pepper Company's enzymatic crystallization process, which extends shelf life by 40% by reducing hygroscopicity and preventing clumping. Powdered palm sugar, milled to fine mesh, is gaining traction in instant beverage mixes and chocolate confectionery, where rapid dissolution is critical. The challenge for liquid formats is logistics: higher water content increases shipping weight and refrigeration requirements, raising landed costs for importers. Producers are responding by concentrating syrups to 75 to 80 Brix and offering aseptic packaging that extends ambient shelf life to 18 months. Block and paste forms retain cultural significance in Southeast Asian cuisines, where they are used in traditional desserts and savory dishes, but their growth is constrained by limited export appeal and the need for consumer education on usage. The form segmentation highlights a bifurcation: granulated formats dominate retail and bakery channels, while liquid formats are capturing growth in foodservice and industrial applications that prioritize operational efficiency over traditional presentation.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Product Type
- Coconut Palm Sugar
- Date Palm Sugar
- Palmyra Palm Sugar
- Others (Toddy, Nipa, etc.)
- By Form
- Granulated
- Liquid/Syrup
- Blocks/Paste
- By Category
- Organic
- Conventional
- By Application
- Bakery and Confectionery
- Beverages
- Dairy and Frozen Desserts
- Nutraceuticals and Functional Foods
- Household
- Foodservice/B2B
- Others
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- Rest of North America
- Europe
- Germany
- United Kingdom
- Italy
- France
- Spain
- Netherlands
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- India
- Japan
- Australia
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- South America
- Brazil
- Argentina
- Rest of South America
- Middle East and Africa
- South Africa
- Saudi Arabia
- Rest of Middle East and Africa
- North America
Geography Analysis
Asia-Pacific accounted for 50.48% of the palm sugar market in 2025, led by Indonesia, which accounted for approximately 90% of the global coconut palm sugar supply. The Greater Banyumas region in Central Java alone accounts for 80% of Indonesian production, and district authorities initiated a transition from tall coconut trees to dwarf varieties in 2025, allowing tappers to harvest up to 100 trees per day versus 25 for generic trees, quadrupling productivity and improving worker safety, according to ANTARA. Thailand and the Philippines contribute additional supply, with Thailand's Palmyra palm sector demonstrating a benefit-cost ratio of 11.30 and an internal rate of return of 28%, making it economically attractive for smallholders. However, the region faces infrastructure constraints: approximately 1,400 plantations experienced production disruptions in 2024 due to labor shortages. The Indonesian Ministry of Industry partnered with PalmCo and Gerak Nusantara Producers Cooperative in April 2025 to promote palm sugar production from oil palm trunks, estimating net profit of IDR 18 million to IDR 25 million (approximately USD 1,150 to USD 1,600) per farmer, but basic sap-processing equipment requires an estimated IDR 25 million (approximately USD 1,600) per hectare, a prohibitive upfront cost for smallholders without access to credit, according to the Palm Oil Magazine. China, India, Japan, and Australia represent growing demand centers within Asia-Pacific, driven by rising health consciousness and adoption of plant-based diets.North America is the fastest-growing region at 5.48% CAGR through 2031, reflecting accelerated import growth and premium positioning in health-food and specialty channels. Canada and Mexico are also expanding, with Mexico serving as a re-export hub for Latin American markets. Europe is growing steadily, with Germany, the United Kingdom, Italy, France, Spain, and the Netherlands leading demand, driven by the EUR 47 billion organic market and stringent clean-label regulations. The EU Deforestation Regulation, effective since 2023, mandates geolocation data and proof of no deforestation after December 31, 2020, adding compliance complexity for exporters targeting European buyers. Big Tree Farms launched a blockchain traceability platform in 2024 to meet these requirements, and 56 exporters adopted blockchain for origin verification.
South America, led by Brazil and Argentina, represents an emerging opportunity, with specialty and gourmet producers adopting palm sugar in artisan bakery and confectionery applications, though volumes remain modest. The Middle East and Africa, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and South Africa, are expanding as halal certification and health-conscious consumer segments drive demand, but market penetration is constrained by limited distribution infrastructure and consumer awareness. The Philippines exported muscovado (non-centrifugal sugar) at approximately USD 2.25 per kilogram to Europe and Japan, where buyers are willing to pay premium prices, versus PhP 130 per kilogram (approximately USD 2.30) domestically, highlighting the pricing arbitrage available in export markets, according to the Centre for the Promotion of Imports, Europe. The geographic segmentation underscores a structural dynamic: Asia-Pacific will retain production dominance, but value capture is migrating to North American and European retail and foodservice channels that command higher per-kilogram pricing for certified organic and single-origin products.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Big Tree Farms
- Medikonda Nutrients
- PMA Organics (Lewi's Organics)
- Asia Palm Coco
- Prima Nusantara
- Tarnburi Food
- The Divine Foods
- Nature Orgayouth LLP
- PT Agro Nusa Kreasi
- Italco Food Products Inc.
- Puritan's Pride (Navitas Organics)
- Mahtuva
- Real Raw Food
- Gulare
- Madhava Ltd
- Betterbody Foods & Nutrition LLC
- SCS Food Manufacturing SDN BHD.
- Future Organics
- PT Mitra Aren Internasional
- Rimba Agro Nusantara
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Big Tree Farms
- Medikonda Nutrients
- PMA Organics (Lewi's Organics)
- Asia Palm Coco
- Prima Nusantara
- Tarnburi Food
- The Divine Foods
- Nature Orgayouth LLP
- PT Agro Nusa Kreasi
- Italco Food Products Inc.
- Puritan's Pride (Navitas Organics)
- Mahtuva
- Real Raw Food
- Gulare
- Madhava Ltd
- Betterbody Foods & Nutrition LLC
- SCS Food Manufacturing SDN BHD.
- Future Organics
- PT Mitra Aren Internasional
- Rimba Agro Nusantara

