By Guilherme Signorini
Early this year, the United States Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Statistics Service (USDA/NASS) released the 2024 annual production estimates for noncitrus fruits. The document series reports acreage, production, and value for 21 fruit crops of national importance. In its May 2025 edition, the document highlights a 2 percent increase in bearing acreage over all analyzed crops but a 2.8 percent production reduction in fresh equivalent amounts compared to a year ago. From a broader time horizon perspective, the USDA/NASS report feeds a long-lasting challenge and yet potentially transformative scenario for the U.S. fruit sector.
Putting in context, shrinking acreage, reducing production, and decreasing value persist as trends for numerous fruit crops grown in traditional regions at the same time that the U.S. deepens its reliance on fresh fruit and produce imports.