Global Processed and Frozen Vegetables Market Trends and Insights
Rising demand for convenient and ready-to-cook meals
In developed markets, convenience has shifted from being a secondary consideration to the primary driver for the surge in frozen vegetable sales. According to Conagra Brands' 2025 Future of Frozen Foods report, premium frozen vegetable side dishes, like butter-sauced corn, cheesy broccoli florets, and globally-inspired medleys, saw an 11% volume increase. Overall, premium frozen sides experienced a 3% growth during the same timeframe. This trend indicates a market evolution, moving away from basic frozen peas and beans to meal components that rival restaurant-quality sides, leading to a noticeable price-tier expansion in the category. Foodservice operators are capitalizing on this trend: using pre-portioned frozen ingredients not only cuts down kitchen prep time but also standardizes plate costs. This becomes increasingly vital as minimum wage standards rise in the US and Western European foodservice sectors. Manufacturers at the forefront of sauce innovation and global flavor profiles, be it Mediterranean blends, Asian stir-fry medleys, or Latin-inspired mixes, stand to gain significantly from this premiumization trend. Supermarket chains are responding by allocating more shelf space to these higher-margin, sauce-bundled SKUs, ensuring they drive repeat customer visits.Expansion of cold chain and frozen retail infrastructure
Emerging markets' cold-chain expansion is not just boosting frozen vegetable consumption; it's introducing entirely new consumer groups to the frozen category. In India's Union Budget for 2025-26, the Ministry of Food Processing Industries received an allocation of INR 4,364 crore (around USD 505.70 million). This includes direct backing for the Integrated Cold Chain and Value Addition Infrastructure scheme, part of the Pradhan Mantri Kisan SAMPADA Yojana. Such financial moves are streamlining the journey from farm to freezer and minimizing quality discrepancies. This allows Indian processors to consistently meet export-grade standards for year-round contracts with global buyers. Meanwhile, on the supply front, Greenyard's EUR 50 million expansion of its IQF capacity in Belgium, coupled with a EUR 260 million alliance with Eureden in France, is reshaping the landscape. This alliance is consolidating a Brittany-origin frozen vegetable entity across four production sites, showcasing how European processors are ramping up IQF throughput and consolidating their supply base to cater to rising retail demand. Looking ahead, the supply landscape is set to evolve: the APAC region is shifting from being primarily export-focused to a market that both supplies and consumes, while European expansions are elevating IQF quality standards, positioning them in premium tiers that previously lacked a frozen counterpart.Energy-intensive freezing and refrigeration cost inflation
The European energy price surge has disproportionately impacted production costs in processed vegetable supply chains, particularly in refrigeration and freezing. A 2024 study in MDPI Sustainability highlighted that storage costs for frozen vegetables are about 3.8 times higher than their fresh counterparts on a per-kilogram basis. This disparity is largely due to the stringent temperature maintenance and extended storage durations required for frozen goods. Mid-tier processors, often relying on older refrigeration systems, feel the brunt of these rising costs. Upgrading for energy efficiency demands significant capital, a challenge for smaller operators in today's high-interest climate. In response, industry-led initiatives like the Move to -15°C coalition, championed by Birds Eye (under Nomad Foods) and Sunswap's electric transport refrigeration, aim for a 20% energy cut in frozen food transport. Notably, Birds Eye's solar-powered trailer fleet boasts an impressive annual reduction of around 24 tonnes of CO₂ emissions. Additionally, the EU's Extended Producer Responsibility mandates on packaging further strain manufacturers. They are now tasked with creating mono-material cold-chain films that simultaneously meet recyclability and barrier-property standards.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Growth in plant-based and flexitarian eating patterns
- Year-round availability versus seasonal supply volatility
- Consumer bias toward fresh produce in premium segments
Segment Analysis
In 2025, frozen vegetables captured a 33.71% market share, driven by advancements in IQF technology and a robust retail cold-chain infrastructure in Europe and North America. IQF's ability to flash-freeze and preserve vitamins and cellular texture at harvest differentiates it from canning and drying, particularly in premium supermarkets where frozen broccoli and spinach are marketed as nutritional equivalents to fresh produce. Canned vegetables maintain steady demand in emerging markets and institutional purchases, especially in regions like sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and parts of Southeast Asia, where cold-chain access is limited. Their affordability, 20-30% cheaper than frozen options, sustains demand among price-sensitive consumers.Dried vegetables are projected to grow at a 6.06% CAGR from 2026 to 2031, driven by demand from packaged-meal manufacturers and out-of-home catering services seeking shelf-stable ingredients. Manufacturers are investing in advanced dehydration methods like freeze-drying, vacuum drying, and spray drying, which improve nutrient retention compared to traditional hot-air drying. Freeze-drying, in particular, preserves cellular structure, color, and phytochemical content, commanding higher price premiums in premium ingredient markets. This shift in investment toward dried vegetables is reducing frozen capacity expansion at mid-tier European processors facing high refrigeration energy costs. If sustained, this trend could tighten IQF supply and support frozen vegetable prices in European retail. Additionally, the "Other Process Type" segment, including minimally processed and sous-vide methods, is gaining traction among premium foodservice operators and meal-kit providers targeting restaurant-quality offerings.
Distinct end-use occasions characterize the product mix, with spinach riding the wave of the plant-based protein trend. This versatile leafy green finds its way into smoothie packs, frozen curries, and pasta sauce blends. Broccoli, boasting a nutritional profile rich in vitamins C and K, dietary fiber, and phytochemicals, is the fastest-growing product type, projected to expand at a 6.11% CAGR from 2026 to 2031. Its growth is fueled by its alignment with flexitarian meal formats and its rising popularity in restaurant-style frozen preparations, such as roasted-style floret packs and multi-vegetable meal bases. Emerging product formats, like Conagra's Birds Eye Steamfresh Mediterranean and Tuscan-style blends, launched in early 2026, showcase broccoli paired with cauliflower, carrots, and leafy greens. These medleys aim to elevate frozen vegetables from mere side dishes to the centerpiece of dinner plates. Meanwhile, mushrooms and asparagus carve out a premium niche, gracing high-end supermarket shelves and restaurant menus, where their farmgate cost premiums find justification in retail price tiers absent in commodity markets.
In 2025, peas commanded a 33.62% share of the product type market. Their widespread appeal stems from commodity-scale production, deep retail penetration, and versatility across retail, foodservice, and industrial processing. As a testament to their significance, Mother Dairy's Safal brand in India, a pioneer of frozen peas since the 1990s, boasts a combined processing capacity of 17,000 MT per annum across its Delhi and Ranchi facilities, following a 2026 expansion. This underscores peas' role as the entry point for consumers venturing into the world of frozen vegetables, especially as cold-chain infrastructure expands into new regions. Meanwhile, premium retail is witnessing a surge in mixed vegetable blends. Curated "power blend" formulations are positioning frozen produce as functional food, appealing to health-conscious consumers who prioritize meal-planning simplicity without compromising on nutritional diversity.
Complete Report Scope:
- Process Type
- Frozen Vegetables
- Canned Vegetables
- Dried Vegetables
- Other Process Type
- Product Type
- Peas
- Corn
- Broccoli
- Cauliflower
- Green Beans
- Spinach
- Mushrooms
- Asparagus
- Mixed Vegetables
- Other Product Types
- Nature
- Conventional
- Organic
- Distribution Channel
- Foodservice
- Retail
- Supermarkets/Hypermarkets
- Convenience Stores
- Online Retail
- Other Distribution Channels
- Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- Rest of North America
- Europe
- United Kingdom
- Germany
- France
- Italy
- Spain
- Sweden
- Belgium
- Poland
- Netherlands
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- Japan
- India
- Thailand
- Singapore
- Indonesia
- South Korea
- Australia
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- South America
- Brazil
- Argentina
- Colombia
- Peru
- Chile
- Rest of South America
- Middle East and Africa
- United Arab Emirates
- South Africa
- Saudi Arabia
- Nigeria
- Egypt
- Morocco
- Turkey
- Rest of Middle East and Africa
- North America
Geography Analysis
In 2025, Europe held a 36.4% share of the processed and frozen vegetables market, making it the largest regional player. This dominance stems from Europe's mature cold chain infrastructure, high per-capita vegetable consumption, and strong processing hubs in France, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, and the United Kingdom. In February 2026, Greenyard finalized a strategic alliance with Eureden, approved by France’s competition authority. The merger created a frozen vegetable entity with pro forma revenue exceeding EUR 260 million across four Brittany sites and 900 employees. Birds Eye’s Steamfresh range in the UK achieved a 10% increase in category penetration over the 52 weeks to January 2026, highlighting that innovation outperforms pricing as a share driver in mature Western European markets. North America, the second-largest regional cluster, continues to see U.S. households adopt convenience-based vegetable formats, particularly premium options beyond staples like peas and corn.Asia-Pacific is projected to grow at a 7.0% CAGR through 2031, making it the fastest-growing region in the processed and frozen vegetables market. Growth is driven by expanding cold-chain infrastructure, rising urban incomes, and stronger government support for food processing. India plays a key role, with the Union Budget 2025-26 allocating INR 4,364 crore (USD 505.7 million) to the Ministry of Food Processing Industries to enhance processing and cold-chain infrastructure. This investment improves supply consistency across agricultural zones and supports domestic sales and exports. China remains a leading exporter of frozen corn and carrots while expanding its domestic frozen retail market as urban consumers increasingly combine fresh and frozen purchases.
South America, the Middle East, and Africa are smaller segments of the processed and frozen vegetables market but hold strategic importance. Brazil and Argentina drive South American growth with expanding organized retail and improved cold-chain logistics, while also supporting counter-seasonal sourcing for Northern Hemisphere processors. Colombia, Peru, and Chile, though early-stage markets, benefit from urbanization and proximity to vegetable-growing zones that support regional processing. In the Middle East and Africa, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Morocco show strong import demand due to hospitality and foodservice needs for consistent quality and year-round volume. Nigeria and South Africa are building a more visible frozen retail presence, though canned and dried vegetables still dominate much of sub-Saharan Africa, with frozen penetration concentrated in urban areas with reliable refrigeration.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Bonduelle S.A.
- Greenyard NV
- Conagra Brands, Inc.
- General Mills, Inc.
- Nomad Foods Limited
- McCain Foods Limited
- J.R. Simplot Company
- Ardo Group NV
- Birds Eye Limited
- B&G Foods, Inc.
- Goya Foods, Inc.
- SunOpta Inc.
- The Pictsweet Company
- Iceland Foods Limited
- Agrarfrost GmbH & Co. KG
- Gelagri Bretagne SA
- FRoSTA AG
- Hortex Holding S.A.
- Mother Dairy Fruit & Vegetable Private Limited
- ITC Limited
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:
- Bonduelle S.A.
- Greenyard NV
- Conagra Brands, Inc.
- General Mills, Inc.
- Nomad Foods Limited
- McCain Foods Limited
- J.R. Simplot Company
- Ardo Group NV
- Birds Eye Limited
- B&G Foods, Inc.
- Goya Foods, Inc.
- SunOpta Inc.
- The Pictsweet Company
- Iceland Foods Limited
- Agrarfrost GmbH & Co. KG
- Gelagri Bretagne SA
- FRoSTA AG
- Hortex Holding S.A.
- Mother Dairy Fruit & Vegetable Private Limited
- ITC Limited

