The American Egg Board’s mission is to support America’s egg farmers and increase demand for eggs and egg products.
The American Egg Board (AEB) was created by an Act of Congress in 1976 at the request of America’s egg farmers, who desired to pool resources for national category-level egg marketing. Home to The Incredible Egg and Egg Nutrition Center, AEB is dedicated to increasing demand for all U.S. eggs and egg products. For more than 40 years, America’s egg farmers have supported this mission by funding the AEB. The AEB is 100 percent farmer-funded, and those funds directly support the research, education and promotion necessary to market eggs. We are honored to serve America’s egg farmers.
The American Egg Board (AEB) was created by an Act of Congress in 1976 at the request of America’s egg farmers, who desired to pool resources for national category-level egg marketing.
Home to The Incredible Egg and Egg Nutrition Center, AEB is dedicated to increasing demand for all U.S. eggs and egg products. For more than 40 years, America’s egg farmers have supported this mission by funding the AEB. The AEB is 100 percent farmer-funded, and those funds directly support the research, education and promotion necessary to market eggs.
We are honored to serve America’s egg farmers.
Investment in the AEB benefits egg farmers many times over. An independent five-year study of efforts from 2011-2016 (published in February 2018) determined that America’s egg farmers earned a return of $9.04 for every marketing dollar invested in the AEB.
The AEB is committed to maintaining a transparent, collaborative relationship with the farmers it represents. AEB documents are publicly available and AEB meetings are open to the public.
Access the last 10 years OF the AEB’s Annual Report
Learn more about where eggs come from and how farmers take of our communities, hens and planet.
Joe Patmos manages egg operations at Sunrise Acres Farm in Hudsonville, MI.
Learn how the egg industry has adapted to challenges and evolved over the years.
The Egg Nutrition Center (ENC)is the science and nutrition education division of the American Egg Board. ENC is dedicated to providing balanced, accurate information on the complex issues surrounding eggs, nutrition, and health.
The Egg Nutrition Center (ENC) is the science and nutrition education division of the American Egg Board. ENC is dedicated to providing balanced, accurate information on the complex issues surrounding eggs, nutrition, and health.
The AEB is the national marketing checkoff program for U.S. egg farmers. It exists only to increase demand for U.S. eggs and egg products through research, education and promotion.
The AEB was created in 1976 by an Act of Congress at the request of America’s egg farmers, who then voted by a supermajority to be bound by a commodity checkoff program in order to fund national category-level egg marketing programs.
The AEB represents the interests of all U.S. egg farmers. All egg farmers — whether they pay into the AEB or not — benefit from the AEB’s national egg category marketing programs, and smaller egg farms benefit more from the AEB because of their limited marketing resources.
The AEB is governed by a board of 36 egg farmers — 18 members and 18 alternates — appointed by the U.S. Secretary of Agriculture. Appointments are not based on the size of the organization, and larger farms do not have any more or less influence than smaller farms. The AEB’s daily operations are managed by its CEO and staff.
Every five years, the AEB is required to fund a return on investment (ROI) study conducted by an independent, third-party economist. The results must by analyzed and approved by the USDA. The most recent study determined that America’s egg farmers earned a return of $9.04 for every marketing dollar paid into the checkoff.
Every five years, the AEB is required to fund a return on investment (ROI) study conducted by an independent, third-party economist. The results must by analyzed and approved by the USDA. The most recent study determined that America’s egg farmers earned a return of $9.04 for every marketing dollar paid into the checkoff.
No. By law, checkoff funds cannot be used to influence government policy or action, including lobbying. The AEB and all other commodity checkoff programs are prohibited from lobbying, fundraising, favoring or disparaging any commodity or product.
The AEB’s national consumer marketing programs have contributed to decades of consecutive year-over-year increases in U.S. egg consumption per capita and growth in sales of shell eggs at retail. The AEB’s Egg Nutrition Center (ENC) has driven peer-reviewed research from top universities that has transformed thinking around eggs in the diet. And the AEB conducts business-to-business market development, annually driving more egg servings in foodservice and in schools and helping to expand U.S. egg exports into new international markets..