Frozen Mangos
Track prices for No Name frozen mangos.
Retail Frozen Mangos: Supply Chain Overview - Edmonton, Alberta
Mango is a tropical crop and is not produced commercially in Canada at any scale. Every kilogram of frozen mango on an Edmonton retail shelf is imported, and the supply chain is structured around two complementary growing windows in the Americas plus longer-haul backstop sources from Asia.
Mexico is the largest mango supplier to Canada by a wide margin. In 2024, Mexican mango shipments to Canada exceeded those of the second-largest supplier (Brazil) by roughly fivefold. Mexican production is geographically diverse, beginning in the southern states of Chiapas and Oaxaca in January and progressing north along the Pacific coast through Guerrero, Michoacán, Jalisco, Nayarit, and Sinaloa, with the export window peaking from May through August. Mexico's geographic adjacency to North American freezer infrastructure, paired with established cold chain logistics, makes it the lowest-friction source for frozen pack destined for Canadian retail.
Peru is the dominant counter-seasonal supplier. The Peruvian mango season runs from October through early April, peaking in December and January, which means Peruvian fruit fills the months when Mexican supply is at its low point. Peru has invested heavily in IQF (Individually Quick Frozen) capacity in the same regions that grow fresh mango — Piura, Lambayeque, and Áncash — and the United States, Canada, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Chile are the main destinations for Peruvian frozen mango. Peruvian frozen exports reached approximately 67,000 tonnes in the 2024/2025 campaign, and the introduction of the late-season Edward variety has extended the IQF production window into the autumn months.
India contributes meaningfully on the fresh side and is a structural source for processed mango pulp and IQF cubes, although the long sea-freight distance and pulp-versus-IQF processing mix make India a more relevant origin for ingredient-grade material than for retail bag pack. Vietnam is an emerging IQF mango exporter pursuing top-ten global status, and adds further sourcing optionality for buyers looking to diversify away from a Mexico-Peru duopoly.
Frozen mango is a seasonal pack, year-round drawdown category. Processors freeze during their local harvest window and store inventory for the rest of the year. The complementary timing of Mexico (January through October, exports peaking May to August) and Peru (October through April, peaking December and January) means that with disciplined inventory planning, retailers in Canada can hold continuous IQF supply without needing to source outside the Americas. The risk in this structure is concentration: a poor crop in either origin in a given year tightens supply and lifts wholesale prices for the full following year, because the frozen inventory drawn down through the off-season has to be rebuilt from a smaller pack.
Peruvian growers reported a tighter outlook for the 2025 season, with supply crunches projected to push prices higher into the autumn. Mexican production was running strong over the same window, partially offsetting the Peruvian shortfall, but the year illustrated how dependent Canadian frozen mango prices are on the timing and yield of two harvests on opposite sides of the equator.
Retail frozen mango is processed almost exclusively via Individually Quick Freezing. Mangos are washed, peeled, pitted, diced or sliced, and passed through a freezing tunnel at temperatures sufficient to lock in cellular moisture before large ice crystals can form. IQF preserves texture, colour, and nutritional value without chemical preservatives, and the resulting free-flowing pieces are essential for retail bag formats where consumers expect to portion the product without thawing the whole bag.
IQF processing is energy- and capital-intensive, and packaging is not a minor cost: retail-ready stand-up bags carry significantly higher per-kilogram packaging costs than industrial cartons sold to foodservice or ingredient buyers. Processors grade their output across tiers — premium chunks, dice, slices, purée — and the same plant can shift allocation between cuts based on which channel is paying the best margin in a given week. Buyers specifying premium retail-grade IQF chunks are therefore competing against ingredient channels (smoothie chains, foodservice, dairy and bakery applications) for the same processor output.
Access to demanding markets including Canada, the EU, the United States, and Japan is contingent on IQF processing meeting market-specific quality and food safety requirements. This concentrates supply among a smaller group of audited, certified processors and limits the ability of buyers to shop the spot market on price alone.
Nature's Touch, headquartered in Montreal with processing and packaging operations in Montreal and Abbotsford, British Columbia, holds approximately 70 to 75 percent of consumer retail frozen fruit market share in Canada and is the dominant supplier of frozen mango into Canadian grocery. The Abbotsford facility services western Canada, and Edmonton retail is supplied primarily through this western node. Nature's Touch's reach was further expanded by its acquisition of the frozen fruit operations of SunOpta's Sunrise Growers subsidiary, adding facilities in Kansas and Jacona, Mexico, which is particularly relevant to mango: the Mexican plant brings Nature's Touch closer to source and shortens cold-chain exposure on the largest origin for Canadian frozen mango supply.
Nature's Touch operates an explicit private-label program, and major Canadian grocery private-label frozen mango SKUs (including President's Choice and Sobeys' Irresistibles lines) are produced through this program. No Name is Loblaw's value-tier private label and sits alongside the President's Choice tier within the same Loblaw private-label architecture, which means a No Name frozen mango bag is a price-positioned SKU within a private-label portfolio rather than a branded product with independent procurement. The bag pack, IQF specification, and origin mix on a No Name SKU are typically negotiated centrally and benefit from the volume leverage of the parent retailer.
The market structure has two consequences for retail price. First, with one supplier holding three-quarters of the category, there is limited price competition at the upstream end of the chain — retailers negotiate against an effective near-monopoly. Second, the private-label cost structure is highly transparent: Loblaw and competitors can see processor margin, packaging cost, and inbound freight, which lets them squeeze cost out of the chain but also exposes the cost stack to commodity volatility. When mango wholesale prices rise, there is little margin to absorb the increase, and the change passes to the shelf relatively quickly.
Frozen mango must be held at -18°C from the freezing tunnel through to the retail freezer case. Temperature excursions in transit do not necessarily spoil the product but cause clumping, drip loss on thaw, and colour or texture degradation, all of which become claims, downgrades, or markdowns somewhere in the chain. Mango is more sensitive than berries to thaw-refreeze cycles because of its higher sugar and water content, which makes cold-chain integrity a particularly load-bearing cost for this category.
Edmonton is an inland city with no port. Mango imports typically clear at Vancouver (for Pacific origin shipments from Peru, India, and Asian sources) or move overland from Mexico through U.S. land borders into western Canada, with redistribution from western distribution centres into Alberta. Each additional handling step — port to bonded cold storage, cold storage to LTL consolidation, LTL into a regional distribution centre, distribution centre to individual store — adds a charge and an opportunity for temperature exposure. Lineage Logistics operates three Edmonton-area facilities offering blast freezing, cold-chain warehousing, LTL consolidation, and customs coordination, and the Edmonton cold storage market has modernized in response to historical issues with driver shortages and inland port disruptions.
Refrigerated trucking and cold storage fees in Alberta carry a premium relative to markets closer to primary western distribution hubs, and fuel cost and winter operating conditions add additional load. Across the category, Edmonton frozen produce typically carries higher landed cost per unit than the same SKU in coastal British Columbia or southern Ontario.
Because Canada has no domestic mango industry to protect, mango is one of the cleaner produce categories from a tariff perspective. Fresh and frozen mango from Mexico enters Canada duty-free under CUSMA provided the goods qualify as wholly obtained in a CUSMA member country, which mango grown in Mexico does. Peruvian and other origin mango clears under separate Canadian preferential arrangements or Most-Favoured-Nation rates which, for mango product, are low to nil.
The most significant trade policy event of the recent period was the Canada-U.S. counter-tariff cycle of 2025. Canada imposed 25% counter-tariffs on approximately CAD $30 billion in U.S. goods effective March 4, 2025. Effective September 1, 2025, Canada removed most of those counter-tariffs in recognition of the U.S. allowing most Canadian goods tariff-free entry under CUSMA, with retained tariffs limited to steel, aluminum, and automobiles. Frozen mango that transits the United States in bulk before being repacked, or that originates from a U.S. processor sourcing Mexican fruit (a structurally common pattern), was exposed to elevated cost during the counter-tariff window and benefited from the September 2025 rollback.
The structural takeaway is that mango itself is largely a free-trade product into Canada, but the cold chain that delivers it routes through both U.S. and Mexican territory, so North American trade-policy noise affects landed cost even when the underlying tariff line on the product is low. Diversification into Peruvian and Asian origin, which clears outside the U.S. corridor, is a partial hedge that some Canadian buyers have been building.
Food safety compliance is a structural cost in this category and a real source of supply disruption. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) operates the National Chemical Residue Monitoring Program, testing both domestic and imported product across commodity groups including frozen fruit for pesticide residues and chemical contaminants. Compliance with CFIA standards, the Safe Food for Canadians Regulations, and retailer-specific food safety certifications (commonly BRCGS or SQF) is a precondition for retail listing and is enforced via supplier audits.
Frozen mango has had a high-profile incident in the recent Canadian record. In July 2021, Nature's Touch Frozen Food Inc. issued a national recall of frozen mango products after an outbreak of Hepatitis A infections, with confirmed cases in Quebec and Nova Scotia and product distributed across Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, and Saskatchewan. The incident affected the dominant supplier in the category and reinforced retailer demand for upstream traceability, intensified pesticide and microbiological testing programs, and tighter approved-supplier lists. The fixed cost of these compliance programs is amortized across all bags sold and is a non-trivial component of shelf price.
The global frozen mango market was valued at approximately USD $660 million in 2023 and is projected to reach roughly USD $990 million by 2031, growing at a compound annual rate of approximately 5.2%. Demand is driven by smoothie consumption, dessert applications, and broader interest in tropical fruit for at-home preparation. North American demand is a major contributor, and Canadian retail volumes have grown alongside the broader frozen fruit category.
Wholesale price signals heading into 2026 point upward. The Peruvian 2025 harvest tightened on the back of weather-driven yield pressure, and recent year-over-year frozen mango import price shifts at the country level have been volatile, with several origins recording double-digit movement in either direction. Canadian food inflation more broadly has stayed elevated — store-purchased food rose 5.0% year-over-year in December 2025 — and frozen mango is exposed to that backdrop on both raw material and cold-chain operating cost.
The combined effect of upstream supplier concentration, exposure to two harvests with opposite-hemisphere risk, an inland cold chain into Edmonton, and persistent food inflation all create upward pressure on retail frozen mango prices. Private-label SKUs at the value tier have the thinnest cushion to absorb cost increases, so movement in upstream wholesale tends to surface relatively quickly on the shelf.
- IndexBox — Canada Mango and Mangosteen Market Report 2025: https://www.indexbox.io/store/canada-mangoes-mangosteens-and-guavas-market-analysis-forecast-size-trends-and-insights/
- FreshFruitPortal — Frozen Peruvian Mango Comeback: https://www.freshfruitportal.com/news/2025/05/28/frozen-peruvian-mango-is-making-a-comeback/
- FreshFruitPortal — Peruvian Mango Supply Crunch 2025: https://www.freshfruitportal.com/news/2025/07/17/peruvian-mango-supply/
- Noon Food Network — Peru Edward Variety IQF Production: https://noonfoodnetwork.com/blog/2025/07/perus-edward-variety-mango-season-begins-iqf-production-set-for-fall/
- FreshPlaza — Mexican Mango Season Ramps Up: https://www.freshplaza.com/north-america/article/9818249/mexican-mango-season-ramps-up-as-peru-winds-down/
- ProducePay — Mexico and Peru Mango Production: https://producepay.com/resources/mexico-and-peru-leading-mango-production-and-exports-in-latin-america-2/
- Tendata — Global Major Mango Exporters 2025: https://www.tendata.com/blogs/export/10615.html
- HungHau Foods — Vietnam Frozen Mango Exports: https://hfoods.vn/how-long-until-vietnams-frozen-mango-exports-reach-the-global-top-10/
- Tridge — Frozen Mango Market Overview 2026: https://www.tridge.com/market-overview/frozen-mango
- Data Bridge Market Research — Global Frozen Mango Market: https://www.databridgemarketresearch.com/reports/global-frozen-mango-market
- Nature's Touch — Private Label Program: https://naturestouch.com/private-brands/
- Canadian Manufacturing — Nature's Touch Acquires Sunrise Growers: https://www.canadianmanufacturing.com/manufacturing/natures-touch-expands-with-acquisition-of-certain-assets-of-sunrise-growers-295336/
- Government of Canada — Frozen Mangoes Hepatitis A Recall: https://recalls-rappels.canada.ca/en/alert-recall/various-frozen-mangoes-recalled-due-hepatitis
- Government of Canada — Canada's Response to U.S. Tariffs: https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs.html
- Tradecommissioner.gc.ca — Understanding CUSMA Compliance: https://www.tradecommissioner.gc.ca/en/market-industry-info/search-country-region/country/canada-united-states-export/us-tariffs/understanding-cusma-compliance.html
- Lineage Logistics — Edmonton Facilities: https://www.onelineage.com/facilities/edmonton-north-alberta
- Statistics Canada — Consumer Price Index, December 2025: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-quotidien/260119/dq260119a-eng.htm