INDIANAPOLIS — If you often buy ground beef at the grocery store, you might have beef with how high the prices have climbed lately. The cost will likely not decrease anytime soon.

The average price of ground beef across the United States reached a record high of $6.12 per pound in June, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. In comparison, the average cost was slightly more than $5 per pound in January 2024.
Indiana Business Research Director Carol Rogers said the surging cost of ground beef has a cause with no easy fix.

"There are fewer ranches, and severe droughts back in 2021 and 2022 killed off a lot of cattle," Rogers said. "The concern is going to be, 'Do we have enough capacity to raise our own beef?"
She believes the cost will keep climbing while ranchers try to solve the cattle crisis.
"Beef prices are probably going to continue being high until early 2026," Rogers said. "If you have three kids, I don't think you're going to give them an eight-dollar-per-pound hamburger."

WRTV researched 80/20 ground beef prices at four neighboring markets in Southport: Meijer, Aldi, Target, and Kroger.
Aldi offered the lowest cost at $4.29 per pound, but only offered two-pound portions of ground beef.

Meijer's ground beef came in below the national average at $5.79 per pound.
Kroger and Target both eclipsed the $6 barrier. Kroger priced its ground beef at $6.33 per pound, while Target had the most expensive beef at $6.69 per pound.
Rogers said customers may soon reach a point where they leave the ground beef in the cooler.

"Higher prices will definitely make households decide to go to pork or fish or poultry," Rogers said.
-
Scam targets Brownsburg animal clinic seeking rezone of land
A nonprofit animal clinic was nearly scammed out of thousands of dollars by a tactic investigators are increasingly seeing across the country.
Indiana audit of Medicaid attendant care program flags widespread violations
A sweeping audit by the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration found nearly $200 million in improper payments tied to home- and community-based attendant care services.
Raiders select Fernando Mendoza No. 1 overall in NFL Draft
Former IU quarterback Fernando Mendoza has been selected No. 1 overall in the 2026 NFL Draft by the Las Vegas Raiders.
Directors of iCare Food Ministry in Seymour charged with child molestation
A couple from Seymour has been arrested and facing multiple felonies following a nearly two-week investigation, Indiana State Police said on Thursday.