Plain Yogurt
Compare prices for plain yogurt across brands and fat percentages.
Plain Yogurt: Supply Chain — Edmonton, Alberta
Yogurt sold at retail in Canada is, almost without exception, made from Canadian milk. This is not a marketing position but a structural feature of the dairy sector: Canada operates a supply management system that limits domestic production through farm-level quota, sets farmgate prices through a national formula, and uses high over-quota tariffs to control imports of fluid milk and most dairy products. The result is that the raw input for a Balkan-style or Greek yogurt processed in Canada is sourced almost entirely from Canadian dairy farms operating under provincial marketing boards.
For yogurt processed and sold in Western Canada, the milk pool is the P5/P10 system; western producers are coordinated through Alberta Milk, SaskMilk, Dairy Farmers of Manitoba and the BC Dairy Industry Development Council. Alberta has roughly 500 dairy producers, and the province has historically been short on processing capacity relative to raw milk volume — a constraint that shapes how far raw milk has to travel before it ends up as a yogurt cup on an Edmonton shelf.
Greek yogurt is structurally more milk-intensive than Balkan or stirred-style yogurt because of the straining step: producing one kilogram of Greek yogurt typically requires two to four kilograms of milk, with the remainder leaving the process as acid whey. That ratio is the single biggest reason Greek SKUs sit at a higher per-100g price than Balkan or stirred plain yogurt at the same fat percentage, before any brand premium is applied.
The Canadian Dairy Commission (CDC) sets farmgate milk prices for the industrial milk classes that feed into yogurt manufacturing. Pricing is governed by the National Pricing Formula, which weights dairy farmers' cost of production against the consumer price index. Following the CDC's October 2025 review, the farmgate milk price is scheduled to rise 2.3255% on February 1, 2026, citing sustained pressure from animal feed and labour costs. Because raw milk is the dominant input cost for yogurt, formula-driven farmgate adjustments flow through directly to wholesale yogurt prices on a roughly annual cadence, with retail typically following within one to two pricing cycles.
The Canadian Milk Supply Management Committee sets the national Market Sharing Quota for industrial milk and allocates it to provinces, which means total industrial milk volume — the pool from which yogurt processors draw — is a deliberately managed quantity rather than a free-market output. For yogurt buyers, this dampens both upside and downside volatility relative to commodity dairy markets in the U.S. or Europe, but it also removes the option for processors to import bulk fluid milk in response to a domestic price spike.
Under the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement (CUSMA), Canada provides limited tariff-rate quota (TRQ) access for U.S. dairy products, including a yogurt and buttermilk TRQ that reaches 4,135 metric tonnes by year six of the agreement and grows one percent annually for an additional 13 years. Imports within this quota enter at preferential or zero rates; over-quota imports face the standard supply management tariffs, which for yogurt run in the high double digits as a percentage of value and effectively block volume imports.
This quota is small relative to total Canadian yogurt consumption, which is measured in hundreds of thousands of tonnes per year, so the TRQ does not meaningfully discipline the domestic price. Its main practical effect on Edmonton shelves is to allow a narrow band of imported specialty yogurts (often premium U.S. Greek brands or specific flavoured SKUs) to be carried alongside domestic product. A January 2022 CUSMA dispute panel ruled that Canada's method of allocating dairy TRQs — reserving a share for domestic processors — was inconsistent with its obligations, and Canada has since revised its allocation policy. A second dispute and panel decision in 2023 again found Canada's revised allocation approach non-compliant. The functional effect on consumer pricing remains modest, but the disputes are a recurring point of trade friction that retailers and processors track when planning private label and import programs.
The Canadian dairy processing sector is heavily concentrated. Saputo, Lactalis Canada, and Agropur together hold roughly 56.5% of national retail dairy value, and Danone Canada is set to overtake Kraft Heinz Canada into fourth place on the strength of its yogurt and plant-based dairy growth. For yogurt specifically, the same four companies account for the majority of branded retail volume.
Lactalis Canada — the Canadian arm of the French Lactalis Group — is the parent of the Astro brand. Astro yogurt is produced at a single Canadian plant in Etobicoke, Ontario, which has been the home of the brand's Balkan-style line for roughly five decades. Western Canadian distribution therefore involves long-haul refrigerated transport from southern Ontario into the prairies, layered onto the cold chain costs already inherent to a chilled dairy product with a typical 30 to 45 day shelf life. Lactalis also operates additional Canadian plants under its other brands (Beatrice, Lactantia, Black Diamond, Cracker Barrel, Balderson), and in 2024 entered a joint arrangement with Nestlé Canada to expand into frozen yogurt under the iÖGO and iÖGO nanö lines.
Danone Canada owns the Oikos and Activia franchises and has anchored Greek and high-protein expansion in this market — including the Oikos PRO line of high-protein, no-added-sugar Greek yogurt — with packaging investment such as a $9 million upgrade at its Boucherville, Quebec plant to produce recyclable PET cups using 30% recycled content. Saputo and Agropur both operate large multi-plant networks across Canada and supply both branded and private-label yogurt.
President's Choice plain Greek yogurt is a Loblaw private-label SKU manufactured in Canada under contract with one of the major domestic processors. Private label yogurt typically prices below national brands at equivalent format and fat percentage, reflecting reduced marketing spend and category-management positioning rather than a different milk source — the underlying raw material is drawn from the same supply-managed pool.
A long-running constraint on Alberta dairy economics is that the province produces more raw milk than its processors can absorb, which has historically forced some milk volume to be shipped out of province for processing or downgraded to lower-value classes. The $75 million Dairy Innovation West "dewatering" plant in Blackfalds — between Red Deer and Edmonton — is intended to address this directly. Operational from spring 2025, the facility can concentrate up to 300 million litres of milk per year, reducing volume by as much as 75% and cutting per-litre transport costs to processors that turn the concentrate into skim milk powder, cheese, butter, and other ingredients.
The dewatering plant does not produce yogurt itself, but it changes the economics of the western Canadian milk pool by lowering the cost to ship raw material to ingredient processors, which indirectly affects the milk-class pricing environment that yogurt manufacturers operate within. For Edmonton retailers, the practical implication is a more resilient regional dairy supply chain over the medium term, even as most branded yogurt continues to arrive from out-of-province plants.
The Astro Original Balkan Style line is positioned as a heritage product: a set-style yogurt made with three ingredients — Canadian milk, cream, and bacterial cultures — at the same Etobicoke plant for roughly fifty years. Balkan-style yogurt is set in the cup rather than stirred, has a firm body, and historically has been positioned at a moderate price point. Astro has leaned into a "So Canadian" national-origin marketing campaign, which dovetails with the structural reality that supply-managed dairy is necessarily Canadian-sourced.
Greek yogurt is the growth segment. North American yogurt is forecast to grow at roughly 3.6% CAGR, with Greek and high-protein formats taking the dominant share of new product launches; more than one in three new yogurt launches in North America carry a protein claim. President's Choice plain Greek 2% sits in this segment as a private-label entrant priced below the national Greek brands (Oikos, Liberté). The price gap between PC plain Greek 2% and Astro Balkan 2% on a per-100g basis primarily reflects the milk-to-yogurt yield difference described above, with brand and packaging differentials layered on top. Astro Balkan 6% commands a premium over the 2% line driven by the higher cream input — cream is priced at a higher milk class than skim solids under CDC pricing.
- Canadian Dairy Commission — National milk production target for Canada: https://cdc-ccl.ca/en/node/653
- Canadian Dairy Commission — 2026 farmgate milk price increase: https://cdc-ccl.ca/en/2026-increase-farmgate-milk-price-aligned-inflation
- Wikipedia — Dairy and poultry supply management in Canada: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dairy_and_poultry_supply_management_in_Canada
- Government of Canada — Key dates and access quantities 2025-2026: TRQs for supply-managed products: https://www.international.gc.ca/trade-commerce/controls-controles/trq-dates-ct.aspx?lang=eng
- USTR — USMCA Market Access and Dairy Outcomes Fact Sheet: https://ustr.gov/trade-agreements/free-trade-agreements/united-states-mexico-canada-agreement/fact-sheets/market-access-and-dairy-outcomes
- Cornell Chronicle — Renegotiated trade deal benefits US dairy producers: https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2025/03/renegotiated-trade-deal-benefits-us-dairy-producers
- Mordor Intelligence — Canada Dairy Market Size & Share Outlook to 2031: https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/canada-dairy-market
- Astro — Our Story: https://astro.ca/our-story/
- SupportOntarioMade — Astro Yogourt | Lactalis Canada: https://supportontariomade.ca/explore-products/astro-yogourt
- Newswire — Astro "So Canadian" Campaign: https://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/astro-yogurt-is-literally-shouting-from-the-rooftop-with-a-bold-new-so-canadian-campaign-889113406.html
- Dairy Global — First-of-its-kind dairy processing plant in Alberta: https://www.dairyglobal.net/industry-and-markets/market-trends/first-of-its-kind-dairy-processing-plant-in-alberta-canada/
- Red Deer Advocate — Central Alberta dairy processing plant a "game changer": https://reddeeradvocate.com/2024/04/12/central-alberta-dairy-processing-plant-a-game-changer/
- Future Market Insights — High Protein Yogurt Market: https://www.futuremarketinsights.com/reports/high-protein-yogurt-market
- Innova Market Insights — Yogurt trends in the US and Canada: https://www.innovamarketinsights.com/trends/yogurt-trends-in-the-us-and-canada/