The world's most expensive commercially available eggs are Kadaknath chicken eggs from India, which can sell for up to $10 each due to the breed's rarity and purported health benefits.
The Kadaknath is a chicken breed native to the Jhabua district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is one of a small number of chicken breeds in the world that exhibits fibromelanosis, a genetic condition that causes hyperpigmentation of connective tissue throughout the body. The Kadaknath's meat, bones, organs, and beak are black or dark grey. Its feathers are black. Its eggs are light brown or pinkish in shell color, but the breed's rarity and its purported nutritional properties have placed Kadaknath eggs at the top of India's specialty egg market, with retail prices reaching up to 100 rupees (approximately $1.20 USD) per egg domestically and higher in international premium markets. Reports of $10-per-egg pricing reflect the most premium retail positioning in specialized health food markets outside India.
## Fibromelanosis and the Black Chicken Phenomenon
Fibromelanosis is caused by a chromosomal rearrangement that results in overexpression of melanin throughout body tissues. The Kadaknath shares this trait with a small number of other breeds globally, including the Ayam Cemani of Indonesia, the Silkie of China (which shows internal pigmentation but white feathers), and a few South American breeds. In all of these, the condition produces striking visual characteristics that have historically been associated with ritual, medicinal, and symbolic value.
The Kadaknath has been documented in Indian agricultural records since the eighteenth century. It is the traditional chicken of the Bhil and Bhilala tribal communities of Jhabua, who have bred and maintained the population for generations. The breed's local name, *Kali Masi* (meaning "fowl having black flesh"), reflects the central visual characteristic.
The tribal communities of Jhabua have been involved in a geographical indication dispute over the Kadaknath breed. In 2018, the state of Chhattisgarh sought a GI tag for the breed alongside Madhya Pradesh, which had held the designation since 2011. The dispute went to the GI Registry and was resolved in favor of Madhya Pradesh, establishing Jhabua as the breed's place of origin for GI purposes. The GI tag is economically significant because it affects which producers can market eggs and meat under the Kadaknath designation.
## Nutritional Claims and the Health Premium
The high price of Kadaknath eggs is largely driven by health and nutritional claims, some substantiated and some not. Kadaknath meat has been documented to have a lower fat content than standard commercial broiler chicken, and a higher proportion of certain amino acids. The protein content is comparable to standard chicken. These differences are real but modest.
The egg market is more complicated. The nutritional difference between a Kadaknath egg and a standard commercial egg is not as well documented as for the meat, partly because fewer studies have focused specifically on the egg composition. Marketing claims for Kadaknath eggs in Indian health food markets emphasize protein content, lower cholesterol than standard eggs, and various traditional medicine associations from Ayurvedic and tribal healing traditions. The cholesterol claim is contested: some analyses show comparable cholesterol to standard eggs, others show modest differences. The traditional medicine associations predate modern nutrition science and cannot be directly evaluated by clinical criteria.
The price premium is sustained by rarity and marketing, not primarily by documented nutritional superiority. The breed is genuinely rare: Kadaknath chickens are slow-growing, produce fewer eggs per year than commercial layers (approximately 80 eggs annually versus 250-300 for commercial breeds), and require more land and management. The economics of producing a rare-breed egg from a low-output bird justify a higher price per unit regardless of any health claim.
## Rare Breed Eggs in the Global Specialty Market
The Kadaknath represents the extreme end of a global trend toward specialty and rare-breed eggs as premium food products. In the United States, heritage breed chicken eggs from Araucana, Marans, and Welsummer hens command significant premiums at farmers' markets and specialty retailers. In the United Kingdom, Burford Brown and other named varieties are marketed by shell color and breed as much as by production method. In France, Label Rouge certification for eggs reflects specific production standards and breed requirements.
The common thread across all of these is consumer willingness to pay for differentiation from the commodity egg, whether that differentiation is grounded in welfare, nutrition, aesthetics, or rarity. The Kadaknath egg is the most extreme example because it combines genuine rarity, breed-specific identity, regional provenance protected by GI designation, and health marketing into a single product. The $10 price point represents the ceiling of what the market will currently bear for a hen's egg.