Consumer interest in plant-based dairy alternatives has cooled somewhat, according to recent UK consumer research by Oddlygood Group. Key barriers include perceptions around cost, taste, and nutrition, with many consumers viewing traditional dairy as healthier. However, nearly half of those who have stopped buying plant-based drinks indicated they’re open to returning. Meanwhile, hybrid and precision fermentation dairy alternatives are gaining traction, and several established dairy brands are investing in “cow-free” ingredients. Regulatory, cost, and consumer-perception hurdles remain, but innovation hasn’t stalled.
Industry Insights
The dairy alternative category appears to be at a crossroads: while growth isn’t as explosive as a few years ago, there remains latent consumer demand that could be unlocked by product improvements, clearer labeling, and better communication of health and sustainability benefits. Taste and cost remain the major friction points—brands that successfully reduce price premiums and improve sensory qualities may reclaim “lapsed users” and convert skeptics.
Precision fermentation and hybrid products (blends of plant and dairy or novel protein) are emerging as strategic bets. They promise dairy-like flavor/texture with lower environmental footprint. But scaling, regulatory approval, and consumer trust in molecular or fermentation-derived ingredients are still developing.
For traditional dairy players, this moment offers both risk and opportunity. Risk in terms of market share erosion, especially among younger or more ethically/environmentally conscious consumers; opportunity in diversifying portfolios (e.g. launching hybrid ranges, investing in cow-free R&D) or improving sustainability credentials to stay relevant.
Finally, markets such as food service and coffee shops could be growth levers—as consumers are exposed to alternative milks in places where they try rather than commit long-term. With effective innovation, transparency, and pricing strategy, dairy alternatives may still prove to be a business goldmine rather than a busted flush.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Sep 21st 2025 Read it here