Reports

Progress on the Plate: 2026 U.S. Food Waste Report

ReFED | April 7, 2026

As affordability and food prices remain top of mind for Americans, a harsh reality remains true: in the United States, nearly one third of all food is lost or wasted as it makes its way from farm to fork. But as you’ll see throughout this report, progress on food waste is not only possible—it’s happening. Pulling together ReFED data analysis and modeling with external research and supported by narratives developed through our work with partners across the food waste ecosystem, this report is intended to help the food system understand food waste and what can be done to solve it.

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How Much Are We Wasting

ReFED’s modeling and analysis show that total surplus food in 2024 (the latest year for which data is available) was 70 million total tons—about 29% of the U.S. food supply. That's a 2.2% reduction in total surplus food from 2023, and the first time since a pandemic-related dip that we’re seeing meaningful reductions in food waste from year-to-year.

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How Much Are We Wasting

What Are the Impacts?

The cost of food remains high, which means the cost of wasting it is high too. Food that is produced but never eaten still requires enormous resources to grow, harvest, transport, cool, and cook or otherwise prepare. It’s an imprudent use of our food supply chain, and it has enormous impacts on the economy and climate, and for those struggling with food insecurity.

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What's Working

Food waste happens across the entire food supply chain, which means that there’s not just one single solution that will solve it—but the good news is that multiple solutions already exist. ReFED has analyzed dozens of them to determine which work best to deliver specific impacts, including the amount of waste diverted, benefits for the economy and climate, jobs created, and more.

What's Working

To see ReFED’s modeling and analysis of 47 different food waste solutions, visit the ReFED Insights Engine.

Success Stories

We’re not just seeing progress in homes. Businesses across the supply chain are committing to food waste action like never before, momentum behind food waste policy is building in state houses across the country and in Washington D.C., private funding to U.S. food waste solutions increased for the first time in four years, and more.

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2026 Outlook

The 2.2% reduction in total surplus food from 2023 to 2024 marks a significant milestone and an inflection point, and we're optimistic that we've moved beyond "peak food waste." The foundation for success has been built and momentum is growing, making greater progress possible. In 2026, we’ll be keeping our eye on continued progress in the restaurant and foodservice sector, the potential impact of the Making America Healthy Again movement, the growing influence of GLP-1s, and more.

Who is the Report For?

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Food Businesses

Discover how businesses like yours are cutting waste and cutting costs. Find out what's working and how you can benefit.

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Capital Providers

Total food waste sector funding grew 6% to $794M in 2025. See where private capital is flowing and which solution categories are scaling fastest.

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Solution Providers

From AI-powered demand planning to organics diversion infrastructure, find out where innovation is needed most—and what the data says about impact.

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Policymakers

Explore the policy landscape, including 110 state bills introduced in 2025 and the growing case for the federal Food Date Labeling Act.

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