‘It won’t be easy’: Food industry faces uphill growth battle in 2026

This audio is generated automatically. Please let me know if you have any comments.

High costs and slowing consumer spending are setting up 2026 for a challenging year for food manufacturers, leaving them with little choice but to downsize, cut prices or rethink their approach to innovation to stay relevant.

The bleak outlook for the new year comes after a bruising 2025 forced many food and beverage companies to cut jobs, close manufacturing plants or sell underperforming brands. With the same headwinds still present, the industry is bracing for further contraction while leaving growth opportunities open.

“It’s going to be a much more challenging operating environment in every way,” said Brian Choi, managing partner and CEO of The Food Institute. “It’s hard to see a food and beverage sector that has a really long runway. It’s not going to be easy.”

Circana recently lowered its 2026 growth forecast. Retail food and beverage sales fell 2% to 4% in August, compared to the 3% to 5% range expected in August. The company noted that shoppers are spending less and seeking more value through “serious” price competition and the use of AI-assisted technology to help curb consumer price increases “even while cost pressures persist.”

A snack brand made by PepsiCo's Frito-Lay division on grocery store shelves in Washington, D.C.

optional captions

Christopher Doering/Food Dive

Sally Lyons Wyatt, Global Vice President and Chief Counsel, Circana said in a statement teaThe hat brands and retailers best positioned to succeed prioritize affordability, channel flexibility, and personalized experiences.

“Our revised 2026 outlook reflects a tightening and more challenging market, but not without growth vectors,” Lyons Wyatt said. “While pricing pressures and cautious consumer sentiment are shaping a more measured growth trajectory, the food and beverage sector continues to demonstrate resilience and adaptability.”

Food companies are also cautiously presenting their outlook for this year.

Nestle, the world’s largest food company, is bracing for a “slowdown” in sales in many of the categories it operates in, with growth in those categories expected to average 1 to 2 percent by 2026. Nestle USA CEO Marty Thompson said the maker of Stouffer, Nescafe and Hot Pockets is benefiting from lower input costs for coffee, cocoa and other goods, but the broader operating environment remains difficult.

“If you say, ‘What do you think about the midterms?’ I would say things will bounce back, but I don’t think that will happen until next year or so,” he said.

Cost savings and prices?

High costs and low margins are forcing food and beverage companies to drastically restructure their businesses to prepare for the future. With consumer prices becoming more sensitive than ever, many companies are choosing to scale back operations to preserve profits.

Last year, about a dozen prominent food and beverage companies laid off employees or closed manufacturing facilities. nestle, general mills, molson coors and Hormel Foods. PepsiCo announced last year that it would close its stores in Orlando, Detroit, and Rancho Cucamonga, California. It is reported that additional layoffs are planned to be announced. In North America.

“The lowest hanging fruit right now is cost reduction,” Choi said. “We’re going to see more layoffs across the board.”

But at some point, there’s nothing left to cut. That means companies must find other avenues to foster growth. To bring back consumers, companies must strengthen their value proposition to consumers by adjusting prices or using newer ingredients that justify higher costs.

Nestle's Tombstone French Fry Style Crust Pizza

optional captions

Provided by Nestle

To help their products stand out and attract shoppers’ attention for less, companies will prioritize innovation, turn to unique forms of marketing, such as partnering with influential media, and launch package sizes that are more affordable to consumers.

For example, Nestle Single Count Hot Pocket launched Last year, it proved useful in attracting new, price-sensitive consumers to the brand.