Tomatoes
Compare prices for fresh tomatoes across varieties.
Fresh Tomatoes: Supply Chain Overview — Edmonton, Alberta
Fresh tomatoes are one of the few produce categories where Canadian production carries the year-round retail core rather than a brief summer peak. The vine cluster (TOV) and beefsteak tomatoes on Edmonton shelves are predominantly Canadian greenhouse product; the roma and field-grown lines are predominantly Mexican, with a smaller share from California and Florida. Canada is the world's largest exporter of greenhouse tomatoes by value, and the domestic greenhouse vegetable industry exists at a scale that makes Canada a structural net exporter of TOV and beefsteak tomatoes — even as the country runs a deficit on field-grown romas and processing tomatoes. The cost stack reflects that split: natural gas heating, electricity, and CO2 supply set the floor on greenhouse pricing, while Mexican peso volatility, US antidumping duties, and long-haul refrigerated freight set the floor on field-grown supply.
Canada's commercial greenhouse vegetable sector is concentrated in three regions. Leamington and Kingsville in Essex County, Ontario host roughly two-thirds of national greenhouse vegetable acreage and are often described as the greenhouse capital of North America, with several thousand acres under glass and plastic between tomatoes, cucumbers, and peppers. Delta, Surrey, Abbotsford, and Langley in British Columbia's Lower Mainland host the second-largest cluster, and southern Alberta — particularly the Medicine Hat and Redcliff corridor, which benefits from low-cost natural gas and abundant sunlight — hosts a smaller but locally significant cluster that supplies prairie retail directly. Statistics Canada — Greenhouse, sod and nursery industries
Greenhouse tomatoes account for the majority of Canadian greenhouse vegetable revenue, with TOV (tomatoes on the vine) the largest single category by retail volume, followed by beefsteak, cocktail, and specialty varieties. The technology is high-input and high-yield: hydroponic substrates, LED or HPS supplemental lighting in winter, computerized environmental control, and CO2 enrichment from on-site cogeneration or external supply. Per-acre yield is an order of magnitude higher than field tomatoes, but per-acre capital and operating cost is also far higher, and the breakeven price floor is sensitive to natural gas, electricity, and CO2 cost.
The major Canadian greenhouse tomato brands are Mastronardi Produce (Sunset), Mucci Farms, NatureFresh Farms, and Pure Flavor (Pure Hothouse Foods), all four headquartered in Leamington. Houweling's Tomatoes operates greenhouses in Delta, BC and California. Mastronardi is the largest by combined Canadian and US acreage and has consolidated the segment substantially through acquisitions over the past decade. Greenhouse Canada — Industry overview
Price impact: Greenhouse cost economics — particularly heating fuel — set the price floor for the TOV and beefsteak SKUs that anchor Edmonton's tomato shelf for ten months of the year. Prairie greenhouses in Medicine Hat enjoy a freight-cost advantage into Edmonton compared to Leamington product, but Leamington still supplies a meaningful share of Edmonton-bound TOV under national grocery contracts.
Canadian field tomato production is short and concentrated. Ontario, Quebec, and Alberta produce field tomatoes from late July through early October; outside that window, virtually all field-grown romas, beefsteaks, and grape tomatoes are imported. Mexico is the dominant supplier of fresh field tomatoes to North America, accounting for the substantial majority of US tomato imports and a similar share of Canadian off-season supply, with Sinaloa and Jalisco the principal export-oriented growing regions. USDA Foreign Agricultural Service — Mexico fresh tomato US production from Florida (winter), California (summer), and the Carolinas supplies a secondary share, primarily for the eastern provinces.
Roma (plum) tomatoes are almost entirely field-grown and are the variety most exposed to Mexican import dynamics. Beefsteak tomatoes split between field and greenhouse depending on season. Vine cluster tomatoes are overwhelmingly greenhouse and overwhelmingly North American.
Price impact: Off-season roma pricing in Edmonton tracks Mexican peso movements, US border crossing volumes, and weather events in Sinaloa more closely than it tracks domestic Canadian supply conditions. A frost or hurricane in Sinaloa can move Edmonton roma shelf prices within two to three weeks.
The most significant policy development in the North American tomato trade in 2025 was the United States' termination of the 2019 Tomato Suspension Agreement with Mexico. The Suspension Agreement had, since the 1990s in successive versions, replaced a US Department of Commerce antidumping investigation with a negotiated reference-price floor and inspection regime. On July 14, 2025, the US Department of Commerce withdrew from the agreement and reinstated antidumping duties of 17.09% on most fresh tomatoes imported from Mexico. US Department of Commerce — Tomato Suspension Agreement termination Reuters — US ends tomato deal with Mexico, July 2025
The duty applies at the US border, not the Canadian border, so its direct effect on Canadian retail is indirect — but the indirect effects are large and bidirectional. First, the duty reduces the competitiveness of Mexican tomatoes in the US market, freeing up Mexican supply that may seek a Canadian destination at slightly softer prices. Second, US buyers displaced from Mexican supply are now pulling harder on Canadian greenhouse tomatoes — particularly Leamington TOV — which has tightened North American greenhouse supply and supported firmer pricing for the same Canadian product on Canadian shelves. Third, US domestic field tomato producers in Florida and California have benefitted from the duty, and US wholesale field tomato prices firmed measurably in the second half of 2025. The Packer — Tomato market dynamics post-suspension
The net effect on Edmonton has been mixed: roma and other field-grown imports have seen modest price relief from diverted Mexican supply, while Canadian greenhouse TOV and beefsteak — the larger share of Edmonton's shelf — have firmed under stronger US export demand on Leamington product.
CUSMA tariffs on fresh tomatoes between the three signatories remain at zero, and the 2025 episode of broader US tariff threats and Canadian counter-tariffs largely bypassed fresh produce. Canada's counter-tariffs imposed in March 2025 were narrowed in September 2025 to steel, aluminum, and automobiles only, with fresh and frozen produce returning to tariff-free status under CUSMA compliance. Government of Canada — Counter-tariff list, September 2025
Greenhouse tomato production is energy-intensive. A typical Canadian greenhouse runs on natural gas heating with cogeneration, capturing waste heat for warming and waste CO2 for enrichment of the growing environment to roughly 800 to 1000 ppm — three times atmospheric concentration — which substantially boosts plant productivity. Natural gas can represent 25 to 35 percent of variable cost in a Canadian greenhouse operation, and the AECO benchmark price (the principal western Canadian gas hub) is the input price most directly relevant to Edmonton-supplying Alberta and BC greenhouses. Alberta Energy Regulator — Natural gas prices Statistics Canada — Greenhouse, sod and nursery industries
AECO has traded at substantial discounts to the US Henry Hub benchmark for most of the past several years due to limited Canadian export pipeline capacity, structurally favouring Alberta greenhouses on heating cost relative to Ontario greenhouses on Dawn-pricing gas. With LNG Canada export volumes ramping through 2025 and into 2026, AECO has begun to firm relative to Henry Hub, narrowing that historical advantage.
Electricity for supplemental winter lighting is the second meaningful energy line. Ontario greenhouses operate within the IESO market and have benefitted from periodic Class A demand response programs. Alberta and BC greenhouses face their respective provincial electricity markets; BC's BC Hydro rates are stable and low, Alberta's deregulated market introduces more price volatility.
Price impact: Heating fuel costs feed directly into the breakeven price for Canadian greenhouse tomatoes. Cold winter weeks visibly raise marginal cost, which is one reason TOV and beefsteak retail prices typically firm from December through February even before accounting for any holiday demand.
Canadian greenhouse tomatoes destined for Edmonton move predominantly through three lanes. Leamington product moves by refrigerated truck to national grocer distribution centres in Calgary and on to Edmonton, a roughly 3,400-kilometre haul that takes three to four days under typical conditions. BC product moves over the Coquihalla Highway and through the Rockies, exposed to weather closures in winter. Southern Alberta greenhouse product moves a far shorter distance — under 600 kilometres from Medicine Hat or Redcliff to Edmonton — and arrives within a day, often through prairie-focused distribution agreements with the major banners.
Mexican romas and other field tomatoes move primarily through Texas border crossings (Pharr, Laredo) into US distribution centres, with Canadian-bound product transferred to Canadian carriers at the US-Canada border. Edmonton sits at the far end of that lane, and per-pallet freight costs are accordingly higher than for Toronto or Vancouver. Field tomatoes are sensitive to chill damage below 10°C and require carefully managed reefer temperatures, particularly through Canadian winters.
Price impact: Freight is a secondary cost line for greenhouse product but a meaningful one for romas and other long-haul field-grown imports. Diesel costs and reefer trailer availability — particularly tight during the holiday produce season — add a measurable Edmonton premium over central-Canadian markets.
Light deprivation through the deep prairie winter remains the structural challenge for Canadian greenhouse production north of 50°N. LED supplemental lighting has narrowed the gap meaningfully over the past decade and has enabled twelve-month production schedules in some Leamington and Delta operations, but the operating cost of running lights through January and February is high, and even a fully lit Canadian operation still produces less in winter than in summer. The Mexican import share of total Canadian tomato consumption therefore peaks in February and March, regardless of greenhouse expansion.
Looking forward, three forces shape Edmonton retail tomato pricing into 2026. First, the post-Suspension-Agreement antidumping duty on Mexican tomatoes is firmly in place and US producers are pressing to preserve it, meaning greenhouse demand from US buyers on Canadian product is likely to remain elevated. Second, AECO natural gas pricing is firming as LNG Canada exports ramp, narrowing the Canadian greenhouse cost advantage relative to US producers. Third, Canadian greenhouse acreage continues to expand modestly, with new builds concentrated in southern Ontario and southern Alberta — the latter increasingly visible in Edmonton retail through prairie-direct supply.
The category outlook for Edmonton is upward but bifurcated. Greenhouse-anchored varieties — TOV and beefsteak — face firm-to-rising prices through 2026 driven by US export demand on Leamington product and rising AECO gas. Roma and other field-grown varieties may see modest relief from Mexican supply diversion northward, though that effect is partly offset by long-haul freight costs and ongoing peso volatility.
| Stage | Primary Cost Drivers | Near-Term Price Pressure |
|---|---|---|
| Greenhouse Growing | Leamington, BC, southern Alberta acreage; Mastronardi, Mucci, NatureFresh, Pure Flavor | Firm — strong US export pull on Canadian TOV and beefsteak |
| Field Imports | Mexican Sinaloa/Jalisco roma supply; California and Florida secondary | Slight relief — supply diverted from US to Canada |
| Trade Policy | Termination of US-Mexico Tomato Suspension Agreement; 17.09% antidumping duty | Mixed — firms greenhouse, softens roma |
| Energy | AECO and Dawn natural gas; CO2 enrichment; supplemental lighting electricity | Upward — AECO firming with LNG Canada exports |
| Distribution | Refrigerated truck from Leamington/BC/Medicine Hat; long-haul Mexican imports | Stable to slight upward — fuel and reefer capacity |
| Seasonality | Domestic field season July–October; Mexican import peak February–March | Cyclical — winter premium structural |
- Statistics Canada — Greenhouse, sod and nursery industries. https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/22-202-x/22-202-x2023001-eng.htm
- Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada — Canadian vegetable industry overview. https://agriculture.canada.ca/en/sector/horticulture/reports/statistical-overview-canadian-vegetable-industry
- Greenhouse Canada — Industry trade publication. https://www.greenhousecanada.com/
- USDA Foreign Agricultural Service — Mexico fresh tomato annual. https://fas.usda.gov/data/mexico-fresh-tomato
- US Department of Commerce — Tomato Suspension Agreement termination, July 2025. https://www.trade.gov/
- Reuters — US ends tomato suspension agreement with Mexico, July 14 2025. https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/us-ends-tomato-suspension-agreement-mexico-2025-07-14/
- The Packer — Tomato market coverage. https://www.thepacker.com/
- Government of Canada — Counter-tariff list, September 2025. https://www.canada.ca/en/department-finance/programs/international-trade-finance-policy/canadas-response-us-tariffs/complete-list-us-products-subject-to-counter-tariffs.html
- Alberta Energy Regulator — Natural gas pricing. https://www.aer.ca/
- Mastronardi Produce — Sunset brand. https://www.sunsetgrown.com/
- Mucci Farms. https://www.muccifarms.com/
- NatureFresh Farms. https://www.naturefresh.ca/
- Pure Flavor — Pure Hothouse Foods. https://pure-flavor.com/
- Houweling's Tomatoes. https://houwelings.com/