By Reed Mangels, PhD, RD
A recently released survey of 995 households in the United States compared consumers who used plant milks with those using dairy milk. About 60% of the households surveyed used dairy milk exclusively or almost exclusively. About 23% of the households used plant milks, mainly almond milk, exclusively or almost exclusively. A little more than 15% of households surveyed use both dairy milk and plant milk.
These results, suggesting that more than a third of households use plant milks, are supported by trends in dairy milk consumption in the United States. Per capita dairy milk consumption declined by 41% between 1975 and 2018. We should note that overall per capita dairy product consumption has increased over this period. Plant-based yogurt, cheese, and butter are increasingly available, but have seemingly not yet had a large effect on consumption of dairy yogurt, cheese, and butter.
Survey respondents whose households used plant milks, either exclusively or along with dairy milk, tended to be younger than those whose households used dairy milks exclusively. This has potential implications for future trends in plant milk consumption. Those respondents whose households used plant milks either exclusively or partially were likely or somewhat likely to use plant milks in place of dairy milk as a beverage, in coffee or tea, in cooking, on cereal, in smoothies, in desserts, and for children.
Interestingly, almost 10% overall of the households that were surveyed said that at least one person in the household was vegetarian or vegan. Eleven percent of households almost exclusively using plant milks had at least one vegan or vegetarian in the household compared to 27% of households which used plant and dairy milk and 4% of households which exclusively used dairy milk. No information was provided as to how the survey defined “vegetarian” or “vegan.”
Reference:
Wolf CA, Malone T, McFadden BR. Beverage milk consumption patterns in the United States: Who is substituting from dairy to plant-based beverages? J Dairy Sci. 2020;103(12):11209-11217.
For nutrition information on coconut, nut, seed, pea, grain, and soy milks, see: https://www.vrg.org/nutrition/milk_alternatives/index.htm
For VRG’s national poll on what Americans expect from a beverage labeled as soymilk, see: https://www.vrg.org/blog/2020/10/30/what-do-american-adults-expect-from-a-beverage-labeled-soymilk-questions-asked-by-the-vegetarian-resource-group-in-a-national-poll/