이 제품에 대해 글로벌 공급망 인텔리전스 네트워크에 수출업체 2,835개와 수입업체 3,090개가 색인되어 있습니다.
17,704건의 공급업체 연계 거래가 상위 20개 국가에 걸쳐 요약되어 있습니다.
현재 프리미엄 공급업체 3개와 카탈로그 항목 0개가 등록되어 있습니다.
도매 샘플 항목: 5건; 산지가 샘플 항목: 0건.
이 페이지 데이터셋의 최신 기준 연도는 2026입니다.
페이지 데이터 최종 업데이트일: 2026-05-10.
밀크 초콜릿에 대한 글로벌 공급업체 거래, 수출 활동 및 가격 벤치마크
상위 20개 국가에 걸친 공급업체 연계 거래 17,704건을 분석하고, 월간 단가 벤치마크로 밀크 초콜릿의 수출 경쟁력과 소싱 리스크를 추적하세요.
밀크 초콜릿 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 수출 모멘텀 전년 대비 변화
밀크 초콜릿의 긍정적/부정적 전년 대비 변화를 비교해 성장하는 공급 시장과 약화되는 수출 경로를 식별하세요.
밀크 초콜릿의 YoY 변동 상위 국가는 스위스 (+134.7%), 미국 (+121.9%), 네덜란드 (+118.0%)입니다.
밀크 초콜릿 국가별 공급업체 거래 및 단가 요약
2025-06 기준으로 밀크 초콜릿 국가별 거래 건수와 월간 단가/물량을 비교해 공급업체 및 수출 시장 우선순위를 정하세요.
2025-11 기준, 노출 가능한 밀크 초콜릿 거래 단가가 있는 국가는 페루 (13.40 USD / kg), 멕시코 (13.02 USD / kg), 네덜란드 (10.82 USD / kg), 독일 (10.42 USD / kg), 말레이시아 (10.03 USD / kg), 외 15개국입니다.
Milk chocolate is a globally traded confectionery product whose international definitions and compositional requirements are anchored by Codex standards, with trade commonly captured in HS heading 1806 (chocolate and other cocoa-containing preparations). Finished-product exports are concentrated in Europe—especially Germany, Switzerland, Belgium, Italy, Poland, and the Netherlands—while major import demand is led by the United States and large European consumer markets. Despite being shelf-stable, milk chocolate is quality-sensitive to heat and moisture, making storage and distribution conditions material for trade. The most consequential global market driver for milk chocolate remains upstream cocoa risk: production is highly concentrated in West Africa and vulnerable to weather, pests/diseases, and sustainability-linked regulatory requirements that can disrupt supply and pricing.
Major Producing Countries
독일Major industrial manufacturer and exporter of chocolate preparations in HS 180632/180631 trade statistics.
스위스High-value chocolate manufacturing hub; among leading exporters in HS 180632.
벨기에Major chocolate manufacturing and trading hub; among leading exporters in HS 180690 and a key intra-EU supplier.
이탈리아Large exporter in HS 180690 and major EU confectionery producer.
폴란드Large-scale manufacturer; among leading exporters in HS 180690/180632/180631.
네덜란드Key EU logistics and food manufacturing hub; among leading exporters in HS 180631 and major importer in HS 1806.
Major Exporting Countries
독일Top exporter in HS 180632 (chocolate bars, not filled) and a leading exporter in HS 180631/180690.
스위스Leading exporter in HS 180632 (chocolate bars, not filled), reflecting strong premium manufacturing base.
폴란드Leading exporter across HS 180690 and notable exporter in HS 180632/180631.
벨기에Leading exporter in HS 180690 and major supplier within Europe.
캐나다Notable exporter in HS 180632/180631 (regional supply into North America).
Major Importing Countries
미국Top importer by value of HS 1806 in 2024 (UN Comtrade via WITS).
독일Among top importers by value of HS 1806 in 2024; also a major intra-EU hub (UN Comtrade via WITS).
영국Among top importers by value of HS 1806 in 2024 (UN Comtrade via WITS).
프랑스Among top importers by value of HS 1806 in 2024 (UN Comtrade via WITS).
네덜란드Among top importers by value of HS 1806 in 2024 (UN Comtrade via WITS).
캐나다Among top importers by value of HS 1806 in 2024 (UN Comtrade via WITS).
Supply Calendar
Côte d’Ivoire (cocoa beans):Oct, Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, May, Jun, Jul, AugUpstream cocoa has two harvest periods (main crop Oct–Mar; mid-crop May–Aug) that can influence cocoa ingredient availability and pricing.
Ghana (cocoa beans):Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, May, Jun, Jul, AugUpstream cocoa has two harvest periods (main crop Sep–Mar; mid-crop May–Aug) that can influence cocoa ingredient availability and pricing.
Ecuador (cocoa beans):Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Oct, Nov, Dec, Jan, FebUpstream cocoa main crop Mar–Jun and mid-crop Oct–Feb; Ecuador is also a notable origin for fine-flavour cocoa.
Indonesia (cocoa beans):Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, JulUpstream cocoa main crop Sep–Dec and mid-crop Mar–Jul; harvest timing varies by island and rainfall patterns.
Specification
Major VarietiesMilk Chocolate (plain bars/tablets), Filled Milk Chocolate, Milk Chocolate with inclusions (nuts, wafers, caramel pieces), Milk Chocolate Couverture (for enrobing/industrial use), Family Milk Chocolate (higher milk solids variant under Codex)
Physical Attributes
Smooth mouthfeel and glossy appearance when properly tempered; vulnerable to fat bloom under temperature cycling
Aroma is sensitive to odor pickup, so packaging odor barriers and clean storage environments are important
Compositional Metrics
Codex CXS 87-1981 defines Milk Chocolate as containing (dry matter basis) at least 25% cocoa solids (including at least 2.5% fat-free cocoa solids) and a specified minimum of milk solids between 12% and 14% (including milk fat between 2.5% and 3.5%), as applied by the authority having jurisdiction.
Codex CXS 87-1981 limits added vegetable fats other than cocoa butter (when permitted) to not exceed 5% of the finished product (after deduction of certain added edible foodstuffs), with associated labelling provisions.
Grades
Ingredient-grade / industrial (couverture and couvertures used for enrobing, bakery, and dessert manufacturing)
Premium and artisanal positioning (often based on cocoa origin claims, cocoa % positioning within milk chocolate definitions, and sensory profiles)
Packaging
Foil and paper/film wraps for bars and tablets
Flow-wrap and multi-packs for bite-size and countline products
Pouches or tubs for baking chips and inclusions
Carton boxes for assortments and seasonal gifting formats
ProcessingParticle size reduction (refining) and conching time/temperature strongly influence texture and flavor developmentTempering and controlled cooling are critical to stable cocoa butter crystallization and bloom resistanceAllergen control and cross-contact prevention are central for milk-containing and nut-containing variants
Supply Chain
Value Chain
Cocoa farming (pod harvest) → fermentation and drying → export of cocoa beans → grinding into cocoa liquor/butter/powder → formulation with sugar and milk ingredients → refining and conching → tempering → molding/enrobing → packaging → ambient distribution and retail/foodservice
Demand Drivers
Everyday snacking and impulse purchases (bars, countlines, bite-size)
Dessert use cases (inclusions, toppings, baking chips) and home baking
Seasonal and gifting demand spikes (boxed assortments, holidays)
Premiumization and origin/ethical claims (where supported by traceability and certification)
Temperature
Quality is sensitive to heat and temperature swings (melting, fat bloom) and to moisture (sugar bloom), so cool, dry, stable conditions across warehousing and last-mile distribution are important.
Atmosphere Control
Odor control is important (chocolate readily absorbs odors); packaging barrier properties and segregated storage from odorous goods reduce taint risk.
Shelf Life
Milk chocolate is generally shelf-stable at ambient conditions, but quality defects (fat bloom, sugar bloom, flavor oxidation, and odor taint) can shorten effective marketability if storage and handling are poor.
Risks
Cocoa Supply Shock HighMilk chocolate depends on cocoa ingredients sourced from a supply base that is heavily concentrated in West Africa; weather variability, pests and diseases, and aging trees can rapidly reduce available cocoa volumes and raise input costs, disrupting manufacturing plans and trade flows.Diversify cocoa sourcing across origins where feasible, use longer-term supply contracts, strengthen farm-level productivity and disease-management support programs, and build scenario-based hedging and inventory strategies for cocoa inputs.
Deforestation Compliance HighCocoa and derived products such as chocolate are in scope of the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR), requiring operators to demonstrate deforestation-free supply chains; incomplete traceability, geolocation gaps, or non-compliant land-use histories can block market access into the EU or force costly re-routing and segregation.Implement plot-level traceability and supplier due diligence aligned to EUDR requirements, maintain documented chain-of-custody, and establish compliant sourcing programs (including remediation and exclusion protocols).
Labor And Human Rights HighUpstream cocoa is associated with elevated child labor and forced labor risk in certain origins, increasing the likelihood of buyer delisting, import scrutiny, or reputational damage if due diligence systems are weak.Adopt credible human-rights due diligence (risk mapping, remediation pathways, independent monitoring), require supplier compliance with labor standards, and support community-based child-labor monitoring and remediation systems where operating.
Food Safety And Allergens MediumMilk chocolate is an allergen-bearing product (milk; often nuts/soy lecithin in formulations) and is vulnerable to cross-contact and labelling failures, which can trigger recalls and trade disruptions.Maintain validated allergen controls (segregation, cleaning verification), robust label controls, and GFSI-aligned food safety management systems.
Quality Degradation In Distribution MediumChocolate quality deteriorates with heat, humidity, and temperature cycling (bloom, melting, texture and appearance defects), increasing claims, returns, and loss rates—especially in hot climates or during uncontrolled last-mile logistics.Use heat-risk routing and seasonal shipping plans, improve temperature/humidity control in warehousing and transport where needed, and strengthen packaging barrier and secondary packaging protection for warm-climate distribution.
Sustainability
Deforestation and forest degradation risk in upstream cocoa production regions, creating regulatory and reputational exposure for chocolate supply chains
Traceability and land-use due diligence requirements for cocoa/chocolate placed on the EU market under the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR)
Greenhouse gas footprint and land-use impacts linked to both cocoa farming and dairy ingredients used in milk chocolate
Packaging waste and recycling compliance expectations in major consumer markets
Labor & Social
Child labor and forced labor risk in upstream cocoa supply chains has been repeatedly documented as a concern, increasing buyer due diligence expectations and audit requirements
Smallholder livelihoods and living income challenges in cocoa-producing regions, which can amplify social risk and contribute to farm abandonment or low reinvestment in aging trees
FAQ
How is “milk chocolate” defined in international standards?Codex Alimentarius (CXS 87-1981) defines milk chocolate with minimum cocoa solids and milk solids requirements on a dry matter basis. It specifies at least 25% cocoa solids (including at least 2.5% fat-free cocoa solids) and a minimum milk solids range (12% to 14%, including milk fat in a 2.5% to 3.5% range), with the exact milk solids and milk fat minimums applied by the authority having jurisdiction.
Which countries are major import markets for chocolate preparations in global trade?UN Comtrade data published via the World Bank’s WITS tool indicates that in 2024 the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom, France, and the Netherlands were among the top importers by value for HS 1806 (chocolate and other food preparations containing cocoa).
Why is cocoa supply considered the key disruption risk for milk chocolate?Milk chocolate relies on cocoa ingredients, and the International Cocoa Organization notes that cocoa production is highly concentrated in West Africa, with about 70% of global production coming from the region. This concentration means weather shocks, pests/diseases, and farm-level constraints can quickly translate into supply shortages and price volatility that affect chocolate manufacturers worldwide.
How can EU deforestation rules affect global cocoa and chocolate trade?The EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR) covers cocoa and derived products such as chocolate and requires companies placing these goods on the EU market to demonstrate they are deforestation-free and compliant with due diligence requirements. The European Commission states the regulation’s application dates are 30 December 2026 for large and medium operators and 30 June 2027 for micro and small operators.