Hens walking freely in a bright cage-free barn for an article about cage-free egg pledges

Over 1,400 companies worldwide have made cage-free egg pledges

A quiet but sweeping shift is underway in the global food industry. More than 1,400 companies across dozens of countries have now made formal commitments to source only cage-free eggs — and many of those pledges are hitting their 2025 deadlines, turning corporate promises into real changes on farms where hundreds of millions of hens spend their lives.

At a glance

  • Cage-free egg pledges: Over 1,400 companies globally have made formal commitments to eliminate conventional battery cages from their egg supply chains, with most targeting 2025 as their deadline.
  • Animal welfare impact: Cage-free systems allow hens to walk, stretch their wings, nest, and dust-bathe — behaviors denied in battery cages, where each bird typically lives in a space smaller than a sheet of paper.
  • Global reach: Corporate commitments now span North America, Europe, Asia, Latin America, and Africa, signaling that humane sourcing standards are becoming a worldwide norm rather than a regional preference.

How consumer pressure moved an industry

The cage-free shift didn’t begin with government regulation. It began with people asking where their food came from.

Over the past decade, animal welfare organizations — coordinated in part through the Open Wing Alliance — ran sustained campaigns targeting major food brands. Retailers, fast food chains, and food service companies began making pledges in large numbers around 2015 and 2016. The momentum built quickly.

When enough major buyers commit to cage-free sourcing, farmers receive a clear market signal to invest in new housing. That cycle — pledge, pressure, infrastructure — has proven more efficient than waiting for legislation to catch up. Organizations like The Humane League tracked compliance and kept companies publicly accountable, making the process unusually transparent for an industry not historically known for openness.

What life looks like in a cage-free barn

Battery cages, still legal in many countries, confine hens so tightly they cannot spread their wings. Cage-free systems aren’t perfect — flock density and management still vary widely — but the baseline conditions are meaningfully better.

Hens in cage-free environments can perch, nest, and move across a floor or multi-tier aviary system. Research reviewed by the Humane Society of the United States has found improvements in bone strength and reductions in the severe feather loss associated with cramped confinement. Animals prevented from performing instinctive behaviors show measurable signs of chronic stress — a dimension of welfare that matters alongside the physical.

For consumers, the shift also builds trust. Companies that follow through on welfare commitments tend to earn stronger customer loyalty — and those that don’t are increasingly named publicly by advocacy groups monitoring compliance.

The accountability challenge heading into 2025

Deadlines create pressure, but they don’t guarantee delivery. Advocacy groups are closely watching which companies meet their commitments and which quietly push timelines back.

Supply chain disruptions, construction costs, and regional variations in farmer readiness have slowed progress in some markets. Compassion in World Farming notes that compliance rates vary significantly by region, with parts of Asia and Latin America still in early transition stages. A pledge made in a corporate headquarters doesn’t automatically translate to changed conditions on a farm in another country — the distance between commitment and implementation is where the real work happens.

Still, the direction is clear. U.S. Department of Agriculture data shows domestic cage-free capacity growing steadily, and global tracking by the Open Wing Alliance shows more companies in compliance each year than the year before.

A model for broader change

The cage-free movement offers something rare: a documented case study in how persistent, coordinated advocacy can move an entire global industry without waiting for governments to act first.

That playbook — identify a concrete harm, set a measurable standard, recruit major buyers, track compliance publicly — is already being applied to other areas of farm animal welfare, including broiler chicken welfare and fish sourcing. It also fits a broader pattern of consumer-driven supply chain reform. The same market logic that drove renewables past 49% of global power capacity is at work here: when enough large buyers shift their purchasing, the economics of the old system start to erode.

Progress in how we treat animals has historically moved slowly. But 1,400 companies, dozens of countries, and billions of eggs suggest that when the conditions are right, large-scale change can move faster than most people expect.

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For more on this story, see: Good News for Humankind — original reporting

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