IN Brief:
- Arla cut its conventional price by 3.51ppl from 1 January 2026.
- Müller and First Milk have also confirmed further reductions into February.
- High volumes and soft demand are squeezing margins across the chain.
The UK dairy sector has entered 2026 under renewed pressure, as major processors push through further farmgate price reductions amid stubbornly high volumes and flat demand signals.
Arla has confirmed a 3.51ppl reduction to its conventional milk price from 1 January 2026, taking its headline price to 35.73ppl. The move follows a broader softening across dairy commodity markets, with processors seeking to rebalance returns as supply continues to outpace market pull. While aligned retail contracts have been more resilient, the general direction on non-aligned contracts remains down.
Müller has also signalled further cuts. From 1 February 2026, Müller Advantage suppliers are set to receive a farmgate price of 35.5ppl, a 3ppl reduction, after an earlier cut scheduled from 1 January that reduces prices by 1.5ppl to 38.5ppl. Richard Collins, agriculture director at Müller, said: “There is still considerable pressure across dairy markets. Our daily milk collection volumes are still much higher than this time last year, and we’re seeing further market price reductions.”
Manufacturing-focused buyers are not immune. First Milk has confirmed it will cut its milk price by 3.6ppl from January 2026, taking its standard manufacturing litre to 32.25ppl, including the member premium. Elsewhere, additional contract reductions have been recorded across cheese and manufacturing volumes, reinforcing the sense that the current downturn is not isolated to one segment of the market.
Supply remains the central issue. UK daily milk deliveries were tracking more than 5% above the previous year’s levels in mid-December, keeping pressure on processors that are already managing high throughput. The speed of decline is sharpening concerns among producers, particularly those not protected by cost-of-production-linked contracts. With input costs still elevated compared with historic norms, many farms are now operating at, or below, breakeven levels, and some are facing difficult choices on investment, herd health, and retention of skilled labour.
Imports are adding friction at the margin, particularly in categories where UK buyers can substitute with competitively priced product from abroad. Combined with soft retail demand, the result is a market that is struggling to clear surplus volumes without price adjustment, leaving little room for processors to hold the line.
The wider risk is structural. Continued margin compression tends to accelerate consolidation, and it can trigger exits among smaller producers, even if national output holds steady in the short term. For manufacturers and retailers, resilience in liquid supply depends on long-term confidence, not just this month’s availability, and rebuilding capacity is rarely quick once farms have been wound down.



