News
Tomato products: Navigating global markets, consumer insights and product dynamics
Anastasija Nadezdina is a research analyst specializing in marketing and market analytics, having graduated from Higher School of Economics. With over 1.5 years of experience, she has been an integral part of the Food and Nutrition team at Euromonitor International, specializing in research for Nordic and Eastern European markets. Prior to her current role, Anastasija honed her marketing skills while working with startups in Estonia along with studies at Estonian Business School during her exchange year.
Euromonitor International is a market research company that operates and has offices in 16 countries; it focuses on conducting in-depth analysis on consumer goods and service industries in 100 countries and operates demographic, macro- and socio-economic data on consumers and economies in 210 countries and territories.
“The processed tomato market is estimated at USD 51.8 billion in 2023, out of which the biggest part are frozen and chilled pizza, estimated at 20.3 USD billion; pasta sauces come second with a market value of USD 11.7 billion, ahead of tomato paste and purees (USD 8.2 billion), ketchup (USD 7.4 billion) and shelf-stable tomatoes (canned tomatoes, USD 4.2 billion).

Meanwhile, pasta sauces showed the fastest growth over the period with an annual rate (CAGR) of 3.6%; the performance of ketchups is slightly lower, with an annual increase of 2.1%, ahead of that of tomato pastes and purees (CAGR: 1.5%) and refrigerated and frozen pizzas (CAGR: 1.4%).



Looking at this graph we can see that 33 to 34% of shelf-stable tomatoes products are actually private label; the highest growth was allocated to tomato paste and purees for the last 5 years, and overall we can see that for all categories the share of private labels is quite high and this is growing consistently (26.1% of pizza products were private labels with positive CAGR (6.9%) over the last 5 years).

We asked the industry professionals what, according to them, was going to influence food sales across the next five years, in packaged food. Obviously, it is inflation costs, and cost of living crisis, but also health and wellness, sustainability, shift in eating patterns and sugar reduction.
Here are defined the key industry trends, which are “Better for me” claims, “clean labels”, “plant-based” and “sustainability”; according to Euromonitor’s survey, 37.5% of consumers stated that they are trying to limit their intake of refined sugar while 33.8% are trying to limit their intake of salt.
Clean labels: according to our survey, 52% of consumers are trying to eat less processed food, 33% are searching for products that are free from preservatives and 29.7% are looking for the products that are all natural. Reasons why they do that are because they believe it’s better for them, because it makes them feel healthier and because, once again, they read or heard that it’s better.

Here is the share of products with plant-based-related claims in tomato products and we can see that plant-based share is very small, while vegan and vegetarian claims still remain on a quite high level and it can be seen that new launches are meeting the demand.


Good news that the industry is expected to continue growing both in volume and value: we estimate at 2.2% global market volume CAGR forecast for processed tomato products and 6.9% global market value CAGR forecast for processed tomato products, over the 2023-2028 period.


The processed tomato market has been growing over the last five years and is set to continue growing over forecasted period. In response to increased cost of living, private labeling is taking over shares and it is something that consumers are interested in, because private label is not seen as something reliable but just products with a good quality for a lower price.
Health and wellness trends: consumers again are getting more conscious about their health and what they eat and they try to follow healthy diets, which leads to increase the demand for products that are healthier, natural, with less sugar or salt or plant-based.
Sustainability is still an area for the growth but more and more consumers care about their environment, and claims is a highly potential area for development as it is something that actually consumers are paying attention to and looking for.”



























