Swiss Retail Sees Sharp Decline in Meat Substitute Sales
Sales of meat alternatives dropped 10% in Switzerland last year, while dairy substitutes grew by 5%, revealing shifting consumer preferences in the sustainable food market.
Sales of meat alternatives dropped 10% in Switzerland last year, while dairy substitutes grew by 5%, revealing shifting consumer preferences in the sustainable food market.

"Alternatives to sliced meat, schnitzel and charcuterie are particularly popular."
"Sales of meat substitutes fell by 10% last year."
The plant-based honeymoon is officially over for fake meat in Switzerland. In a staggering market correction, sales of meat substitutes crashed by 10% last year, signaling a definitive shift in consumer appetite. The "Plant Based Food Report 2025," compiled by retail giant Coop alongside heavyweights YouGov and Nielsen, paints a stark picture of a sector grappling with stagnation. While the industry managed to generate CHF 78 million ($85 million) in turnover, the downward trajectory is undeniable and accelerating.
This isn't a momentary blip; it is a trend. Sales had already begun to slide the previous year, but this double-digit drop exposes a deepening crack in the foundation of the meat-alternative market. Swiss shoppers, once curious about novel proteins, are voting with their wallets and leaving plant-based patties on the shelves. The initial hype cycle has crashed into the hard reality of consumer retention, forcing retailers to confront an uncomfortable truth: the demand for imitation meat is shrinking rapidly.
While the meat-mimic market bleeds revenue, the dairy-free sector is thriving. In a dramatic divergence of fortunes, sales of dairy alternatives surged by 5% last year, cementing their status as the true powerhouse of sustainable Swiss retail. This sector is not just growing; it is dominating. With a turnover of CHF 141 million, the market for oat milk, soy yogurt, and other dairy substitutes is now nearly double the size of the struggling meat substitute industry.
This contrast reveals a sophisticated evolution in Swiss consumption habits. Shoppers aren't abandoning sustainability; they are refining it. The success of products like oat milk suggests that consumers are looking for functional, daily staples that integrate seamlessly into their lives, rather than occasional novelty proteins. The data is clear: the future of plant-based retail in Switzerland is currently liquid, white, and pouring into coffee cups across Zurich and Geneva.
Amidst the gloom of falling sales figures, specific product categories are proving to be bulletproof. The report highlights that alternatives to sliced meat, schnitzel, and charcuterie remain particularly popular, defying the broader market slump. Swiss culinary tradition appears to be the anchor here; consumers are still willing to purchase plant-based versions of cultural staples that fit familiar meal formats, even as they turn their backs on generic burger patties and mince.
This resilience in specific sub-categories offers a lifeline to manufacturers. It suggests that the issue may not be with the concept of plant-based food itself, but with the format and utility of the products. The Swiss consumer is discerning: they will buy a plant-based schnitzel that delivers on the promise of a quick, traditional dinner, but they are increasingly rejecting products that fail to justify their price or taste. The market isn't dying—it's specializing.
The retail landscape for 2025 is being redrawn by these diverging trend lines. The "Plant Based Food Report 2025" serves as a wake-up call for the industry: the "one size fits all" approach to plant-based growth is dead. Retailers must now navigate a complex reality where dairy alternatives command premium shelf space and steady growth, while meat substitutes fight for survival. The era of automatic growth for any product labeled "vegan" has ended.
For Swiss supermarkets, the strategy must shift immediately. The focus is moving toward the CHF 141 million dairy-alternative juggernaut, while the meat substitute aisle faces an inevitable consolidation. Only the highest quality, most culturally relevant products—like the resilient charcuterie alternatives—will survive the cull. As the gap between these two sectors widens, the message to the food industry is loud and clear: innovate on quality and utility, or face extinction on the shelf.