Key takeaways
- Peru is the world's No. 1 fresh asparagus exporter, at roughly $407 million FOB in 2024 and about 31% of global export value, ahead of Mexico, the United States, Spain, and the Netherlands.
- Supply is genuinely fragmented: in 2024 no fresh-asparagus exporter held even a tenth of the trade, with Agroexportaciones Nathanael near 9%, Danper Trujillo near 7%, and Kimsa Fresh near 5%, and the remaining four-fifths spread across a long tail of smaller packers of uneven caliber.
- The United States absorbs the bulk of fresh volume, around 72,000 tonnes (about 74% of fresh exports) in 2023, with Spain, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands the next tier, so European and counter-seasonal buyers compete for a thinner slice.
Buying 'Peru' Is Not the Same as Buying the Right Asparagus
Fresh asparagus is one of the most unforgiving fresh produce lines to source. It is a respiration-heavy spear that keeps growing after cut, loses sugar and firmness fast, and is graded tightly on caliber, tip closure, color, and straightness. A buyer who locks a price without locking a grade and a packer specification ends up arbitraging quality, and that gap shows up as rejected pallets, short shelf life on the retail shelf, and a program that misses its window.
Peru makes this harder precisely because it is so big. The country fields hundreds of growers and packers across roughly 28,000 hectares, and in 2024 no single fresh exporter held even a tenth of the trade. The leaders sat near 9%, 7%, and 5%, and the rest is a long tail of smaller operations whose caliber mix, cold-chain discipline, and certification status vary widely. Two pallets both labeled 'Peruvian green asparagus' can be very different products.
Add the operational reality. Air freight carries the premium counter-seasonal spears for speed, while ocean freight has swung as high as roughly $2 per kilogram in tight periods, so the wrong logistics choice quietly erodes the landed margin. Caliber and grade disputes, missing audits, and a packer who cannot hold spec across the harvest peak are the failure modes that cost importers real money.
Peru is the world's No. 1 fresh asparagus exporter by value, 2024
Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis
Why Peru Sits at the Center of the Fresh Asparagus Map
Peru's edge is structural, not promotional. Its dry coastal desert climate keeps the crop from going dormant, so harvest runs close to twelve months a year, with roughly 40% of the harvest landing between September and December. That gives importers a counter-seasonal supply into the autumn and holiday demand peaks when Northern Hemisphere fields are dark, which is why Peru, not Mexico or Spain, holds the No. 1 export position.
The scale backs it up. Peru shipped about $406.7 million of fresh asparagus in 2024, roughly 31% of the world's export value, and reaches more than 80 destination countries. Production is anchored in three coastal regions, La Libertad at about half of the planted area, then Lambayeque near a fifth and Ica near a fifth, with the top three regions making up close to 89% of cultivation. That concentration of know-how is what lets the best packers hold tight caliber across the year.
Quality is not uniform, though, and that is the point. Green asparagus dominates the fresh export trade while white asparagus is generally channeled into canned and preserved lines, and the spread between a top-tier grower-exporter and a marginal packer is real. The country that leads the world on volume still asks the buyer to make a grower-level decision.
Peru's fresh asparagus export value held near $400M through 2024
Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis
The Decision Is Which Grower, Not Whether Peru
For a serious importer the strategic question is settled: Peru is the deepest, most reliable, most year-round source of fresh asparagus on the planet. What is not settled is which of its growers and packers can actually hold your caliber spec, pass your retailer's audits, and ship on time through the September-to-December crush when demand and freight both peak.
That is a vetting problem, and it rewards on-the-ground diligence rather than a directory pull. The difference between an established grower-exporter like Danper Trujillo or Agroexportaciones Nathanael and an anonymous packer in the long tail is the difference between a program that runs and a program that bleeds claims. Matching the right tier of grower to your grade, volume, and certification needs is where the margin is won or lost.
The practical next step is a shortlist of vetted Peruvian asparagus growers matched to your specification, caliber, grade, target markets, certifications, and shipping mode, rather than a cold list of names. Start from a vetted introduction and you skip the expensive part of the learning curve.
No single exporter dominates fresh asparagus, the field is a long fragmented tail, 2024
Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis
Get a Vetted Shortlist of Peruvian Asparagus Growers Matched to Your Spec
Tell us your caliber, grade, target markets, certifications, and shipping mode. We vet growers and packers on the ground in La Libertad, Lambayeque, and Ica and hand you a short list of verified suppliers who can actually hold your program, plus direct introductions. No cold directory, no guesswork.
Request an introductionCommon questions
Does Peru really supply fresh asparagus year-round?
Close to it. Peru's dry coastal climate keeps the crop from going dormant, so growers harvest across roughly twelve months, with about 40% of the harvest concentrated between September and December. That counter-seasonal window into the autumn and holiday peak is the main reason Peru leads the world on fresh asparagus exports rather than seasonal competitors.
Where does most Peruvian fresh asparagus go?
The United States is by far the largest fresh market, taking roughly 72,000 tonnes, about 74% of fresh export volume in 2023, followed by Spain near 9%, the United Kingdom near 6%, and the Netherlands near 4%. In total Peru reaches more than 80 destination countries, so European and other counter-seasonal buyers compete for a thinner slice than the US program.
If Peru is No. 1, why does grower selection still matter so much?
Because the base is fragmented. In 2024 no fresh exporter held even a tenth of the trade, with the leaders near 9%, 7%, and 5%, and the rest is a long tail of smaller packers whose caliber mix, cold-chain discipline, and certifications vary widely. Two pallets both labeled Peruvian green asparagus can be very different products, so matching the right grower to your grade and spec is the real risk and the real opportunity.
About the data: Figures compiled from public trade and industry data for 2022 through 2025; fresh asparagus value reflects HS 070920 (fresh or chilled). Source: Peru Sourcing Partners analysis. Figures reflect Peru export data curated and classified by Peru Sourcing Partners.
Fresh produce sourcing intelligence on Peru, straight from the field
a short brief on Peru sourcing, sent occasionally.