A new Circana study shows U.S. consumers believe reducing the need for antibiotics is a major motivator to purchase pork from gene-edited pigs.
The research, commissioned by PIC, was conducted in fall 2025 and polled more than 5,000 pork consumers from eight key countries, representative across genders and ages 18 to 70.
“Circana has conducted research on this topic for more than three years, consistently finding that gene-edited pork scores in the upper quintiles, which indicates average to above average purchase likelihood,” Staci Covkin, Circana Principal of Innovation, Consumer & Shopper Insights, says in a release.
In the Circana study, 94% of consumers indicated they are open to purchasing pork from gene-edited pigs. Meanwhile, 70% of consumers expressed a desire for greater transparency across all pork production, indicating that pork should always include additional information on the package