📅This fact may be outdated

The 96 billion pound figure is outdated. Current EPA and USDA data shows the U.S. wastes approximately 120 billion pounds (60 million tons) of food annually across retail, food service, and residential sectors, with an additional 40 million tons from manufacturing. The USDA's 2010 estimate showed 133 billion pounds at retail and consumer levels alone. The fact should be updated to reflect current data.

Each year 96 billion pounds of food is wasted in the U.S.

The U.S. Wastes 120 Billion Pounds of Food Each Year

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Every year, the United States throws away approximately 120 billion pounds of food. To put that in perspective, that's enough to fill 450,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools, or roughly 1,000 pounds for every household in America.

This staggering waste happens at every level of the food system—from farms and factories to grocery stores and kitchen tables. And the problem is getting worse, not better.

Where Does All This Wasted Food Come From?

The EPA breaks down food waste into distinct sectors. Residential waste—what we throw away at home—accounts for a massive portion, with Americans discarding an average of 349 pounds of food per person annually. That's nearly a pound per day for every man, woman, and child.

Retail stores contribute about 16 billion pounds each year. Picture the produce section at your local grocery store: any fruit or vegetable that's slightly bruised, misshapen, or simply doesn't sell by its "best by" date gets tossed.

Then there's food service—restaurants, cafeterias, and catering operations—which generates billions more pounds of waste from uneaten meals, kitchen scraps, and overproduction. Add in manufacturing and processing facilities (another 40 million tons), and you've got a full supply chain hemorrhaging perfectly edible food.

The Real Cost of Wasted Food

This isn't just an environmental problem—it's economic carnage. The total value of wasted food in the U.S. reached $339 billion in 2024. That's more than the GDP of many countries, literally thrown in the trash.

For the average American household, food waste costs about $1,500 per year. Think about that next time you're scraping leftovers into the garbage disposal.

Why This Matters

When food goes to landfills, it doesn't just disappear—it rots and produces methane, a greenhouse gas far more potent than carbon dioxide. Food waste is responsible for 8-10% of global greenhouse gas emissions.

Meanwhile, more than 34 million Americans—including 9 million children—face food insecurity. The cruel irony is impossible to ignore: we waste enough food to feed every hungry person in the country several times over.

The U.S. government has set an ambitious goal to reduce food waste by 50% by 2030, aligning with the United Nations' sustainability targets. That would bring waste down to about 164 pounds per person annually. But we're running out of time, and the trend lines aren't encouraging.

Every meal we don't waste, every leftover we actually eat, every grocery shopping trip where we buy only what we need—these aren't just small gestures. They're steps toward fixing one of the most solvable crises of our time.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much food does America waste each year?
The United States wastes approximately 120 billion pounds of food annually across all sectors, including households, restaurants, retail stores, and food manufacturing.
How much money does food waste cost American families?
The average American household wastes about $1,500 worth of food each year. Nationally, wasted food is valued at $339 billion annually.
What happens to wasted food in landfills?
When food waste breaks down in landfills, it produces methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Food waste accounts for 8-10% of global greenhouse gas emissions.
How much food does the average American throw away?
The average American wastes about 349 pounds of food per person each year, which equals roughly one pound of food per day.
What is the US government doing about food waste?
The U.S. has set a goal to reduce food waste by 50% by 2030, which would bring per-person waste down from 349 pounds to 164 pounds annually.

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