Ostrich Eggs are late-game barn products and are not part of normal first-year animal planning.
Animal Products Database
Ostrich Egg Stardew Valley Animal Product Guide
- Source
- Barn
- Produced by
- Ostrich
- Sell price
- 600g
- Processing
- Mayonnaise Machine
- Bundle usage
- None listed
Last checked: 2026-05-22 · Source: Stardew Valley Wiki
How to use this data
Choose whether to sell, save, or process Ostrich Egg
Animal product decisions depend on the source animal, bundle pressure, processing machine, and whether the raw item has a better short-term use.
- Trace the source first: Ostrich Egg comes from Ostrich, so production depends on that animal routine staying stable.
- If no bundle use is listed, compare raw sale value with any processing output.
- Check the processing path: Mayonnaise Machine can change whether the item is better kept or sold.
- If machine time is limited, process the item only when it supports your current money or collection goal.
Animals that produce this item
Use these links to check unlock path, building tier, and care notes before planning the product.
Artisan processing
Compare the raw product value with its artisan output before deciding whether to process or sell directly.
- Raw
- 600g
- Output
- 1900g total (10x)
- Artisan
- 2660g
Ostrich Eggs produce 10 Mayonnaise; the Mayonnaise quality matches the egg quality, so this row uses normal-quality value as the baseline.
Related Guides
Guides for animal products, bundles, and farm planning
Stardew Valley Animals Guide: Should You Build a Coop or Barn First?
A practical first-animal guide for deciding between a Coop and Barn, planning feed, avoiding early cash traps, and connecting animal products to bundles and income.
Community Center Priority Guide: What to Save First in Year 1
A beginner-friendly Community Center priority guide for deciding which bundles to track early, what to save, and which rewards change your farm routine.
First Winter Preparation: What to Set Up Before Crops Slow Down
A Year 1 Stardew Valley guide for preparing for Winter as a planning season instead of treating it as dead time.