As a lifestyle and diet, veganism has been around for millennia, but plant-based eating has only recently become big business. Companies such as Beyond Meat (BYND 5.71%) and Oatly (OTLY 2.75%) command multibillion-dollar valuations. Packaged food titans such as Tyson Foods (TSN -0.23%) have launched their own vegan brands, and startups such as Impossible Foods are racing to go public.
- According to data from Allied Market Research, the global vegan food market is expected to grow by a compound annual rate of 6.4% through 2030.
- UBS expects plant-based protein to grow by 27% annually.
- A number of factors are boosting the performance of plant-based stocks, including healthy eating trends, environmental concerns, economies of scale, and technological innovations.

Name and ticker | Market cap | Dividend yield | Industry |
---|---|---|---|
Beyond Meat (NASDAQ:BYND) | $188 million | 0.00% | Food Products |
Oatly Group Ab (NASDAQ:OTLY) | $539 million | 0.00% | Food Products |
Calavo Growers (NASDAQ:CVGW) | $496 million | 2.88% | Food Products |
Laird Superfood (NYSEMKT:LSF) | $63 million | 0.00% | Food Products |
Local Bounti (NYSE:LOCL) | $56 million | 0.00% | Food Products |
Mission Produce (NASDAQ:AVO) | $905 million | 0.00% | Food Products |
Let's take a closer look at each of these plant-based companies.
Companies 1 - 3
1. Beyond Meat
Beyond Meat is a leader in the plant-based meat substitute industry. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, its revenue was growing at triple-digit rates, although growth has slowed dramatically since then and has declined in recent quarters. The company's products have become ubiquitous at supermarkets and common on restaurant menus. As of December 2024, Beyond Meat reported its products were available at approximately 129,000 retail and food service locations in more than 90 countries, though the number has declined in recent quarters. The company stopped reporting that information in 2025.
Revenue
The company continues to innovate and introduce new products in the vegan meat substitute category, including its fourth generation of the Beyond Burger, Beyond Beef, and Beyond Sun Sausage. Beyond Meat has historically spent heavily -- around 10% of its revenue -- on research and development (R&D), which should enable the company to hold its leadership position over time. It excels at developing new products, advancing its technology, and making quality improvements.
However, trends in plant-based meat consumption have been challenging lately, and the company has reported several quarters of revenue declines. It continues to be unprofitable as well.
2. Oatly
Oatly made a splash with its initial public offering (IPO) in May 2021. The Swedish oat milk brand has shaken up the plant-based milk category, and oat milk has passed soy milk to become the second-best-selling alternative after almond milk.
While Oatly has captured attention with a bold marketing campaign and a new product category in the U.S., the company has been around since the 1990s and has been consistently developing oat-based alternative dairy products, including milk, ice cream, yogurt, cooking creams, spreads, and to-go drinks.
Oatly's products are now available in more than 65,000 stores and more than 60,000 coffee shops. Its revenue rose 5.1% to $823.7 million in 2024 compared to the previous year, although Oatly is currently unprofitable because it is spending aggressively on marketing. Its growth has also slowed significantly since its IPO, and as of the end of 2024, the company was pursuing an "asset-light" strategy, shuttering facilities to improve its cost structure, utilization, and efficiency.
3. Calavo Growers
Avocados are a staple of the vegan diet in much of the world, and they are popular with the millennial and Gen Z generations. About half of Calavo Growers’ revenue comes from avocados, and growth in the category helped the company's stock price triple between 2011 and 2020. Shares have pulled back since then amid volatility in avocado prices and falling profits as the company pursued growth in lower-margin products. Investors are hopeful that the return of former CEO Lee Cole will restore the company's earlier success.
As a commodities producer, Calavo faces stiff competition. Prices for commodities such as avocados are constantly changing. But since it takes as long as 13 years to grow an avocado tree, and demand for the fruit is rising, the company should be well-positioned for long-term growth. By the first quarter of 2025, prices were rising again, driving revenue growth and profits.
Commodities
Companies 4 - 6
4. Laird Superfood
Laird Superfood, a vegan food company founded by athletes Laird Hamilton and Gabby Reece, has risen from the dead. At one point, the company looked like it was headed for bankruptcy, but the stock soared through 2024 as its decision to shut down its manufacturing plant and move to a co-packing model has paid off, improving its cost structure.
The company has since returned to growth and is posting strong results in e-commerce, which makes up a majority of its sales. Better in-stock rates led to sales on Amazon (AMZN -0.29%) more than doubling in the third quarter of 2024, and other business improvements, like direct procurement of raw materials, have helped the business approach a break-even point. Revenue was up almost 20% through the first half of the year.
Laird Superfood is best known for its plant-based coffee creamers, based on coconut milk powder, healthy fats, and organic coconut sugar, but the company also sells beverages, snacks, and supplements like Performance Mushrooms. Still, almost 60% of its sales still come from coffee creamers.
If Laird can maintain its recent momentum and achieve profitability, the stock should continue to climb.
5. Local Bounti
Local Bounti is one of several “ag tech” companies that have gone public in recent years, using new technologies in the age-old agriculture industry.
Founded in 2018, Local Bounti grows lettuce and herbs and uses a patented technology it calls “Stack and Flow,” which it describes as a combination of vertical farming and hydroponic greenhouse farming. Its techniques are more environmentally sustainable than traditional agriculture, using 90% less water and 90% less land while increasing harvest efficiency, and it focuses largely on lettuce and other leafy greens.
Local Bounti has made relatively little revenue so far, and management will be well short of its earlier target of $462 million in revenue by 2025, but the company is growing. In the first quarter of 2025, revenue rose 38% to $11.6 million as it increased production at several facilities. It expects to achieve positive adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) in the third quarter of 2025. The company has partnered with retailers, including Walmart (WMT -0.67%)-owned Sam's Club and Brookshire Grocery.
Local Bounti is a high-risk stock, but after the bankruptcy of AppHarvest, it looks like the best bet in indoor agriculture, an emerging industry with advantages over traditional agriculture.
6. Mission Produce
Another avocado seller to make the list, Mission Produce, went public in 2020 and calls itself the world’s most advanced avocado network. It buys avocados from around the world, including California, Mexico, Peru, South Africa, and New Zealand, and owns more than 10,000 acres globally. The company also sells mangoes.
Like other industries, the avocado industry has been challenged at times by supply chain issues and labor shortages, though avocado prices soared through 2024.
That drove revenue up 28% to $714.5 million through the first half of 2025, though gross profit was flat, a challenge of its sourcing and distribution model. While demand for avocados should remain strong, investors should be aware that prices are volatile, so Mission's results will be sensitive to underlying commodity prices.
Related investing topics
Investing in vegan ETFs
Investing in vegan ETFs
There are no truly vegan ETFs on the market currently. One called VegTech Invest liquidated in May 2025. There is the U.S. Vegan Climate ETF (VEGN -0.36%), but its holdings are weighted toward tech and generally resemble the S&P 500. The ETF’s biggest holdings are Nvidia (NVDA 1.1%), Broadcom (AVGO 0.06%), and Alphabet (GOOG 1.29%)(GOOGL 1.27%).
How to invest in vegan stocks
How to invest in vegan stocks
- Open your brokerage app: Log in to your brokerage account where you handle your investments.
- Search for the stock: Enter the ticker or company name into the search bar to bring up the stock's trading page.
- Decide how many shares to buy: Consider your investment goals and how much of your portfolio you want to allocate to this stock.
- Select order type: Choose between a market order to buy at the current price or a limit order to specify the maximum price you're willing to pay.
- Submit your order: Confirm the details and submit your buy order.
- Review your purchase: Check your portfolio to ensure your order was filled as expected and adjust your investment strategy accordingly.
Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF)
FAQ
Vegan stock FAQ
How do you find new vegan stocks?
There’s no easy way to track vegan stocks coming to the market, but an occasional search for terms such as "vegan IPO" and "vegan companies going public" should help you discover new vegan stocks.
Is Impossible Burger publicly traded?
Impossible Foods, the maker of the Impossible Burger, is not currently publicly traded. Reuters reported in April 2024 that the company was targeting a "liquidity event" in the next two to three years that could include an IPO, a sale to another company, or another round to raise capital.
The company last raised $500 million at a $7 billion valuation in 2021, but its valuation is believed to have fallen significantly amid broader weakness in the plant-based meat industry. The disappointing results at Beyond Meat would likely dampen interest in an Impossible Foods IPO.
Does Beyond Meat pay dividends?
Beyond Meat doesn’t currently pay a dividend. The company is unprofitable, and management has said that it does not intend to pay a dividend for the foreseeable future.
What is the biggest vegan company?
It's not clear what the biggest vegan company is because privately held companies don't disclose their results. Based on its most recent funding round of $7 billion, Impossible Foods may be the most valuable company with a committed vegan mission. However, the value of the company is believed to be lower now due to challenges in the plant-based meat industry.
Are vegan stocks a growing market?
Vegan stocks have struggled lately as trends like plant-based meat and dairy have lost momentum. As a result, many vegan stocks have underperformed as results have not lived up to earlier expectations.