Agricultural Marketplace

Real prices.
Direct trading.
No middlemen.

SouqConnect brings Algeria's agricultural markets online — connecting farmers and buyers with transparent, live pricing across vegetables, meat, olive oil, and livestock.

13M+ Rural Algerians in agriculture
42% Of household spending on food
0 Algerian price-tracking apps
Live Market Prices
Tomatoes 85 DZD/kg +4%
Potatoes 60 DZD/kg 0%
Onions 45 DZD/kg -2%
Chicken 459 DZD/kg +6%
Beef 1,613 DZD/kg 0%
Olive Oil 1,200 DZD/L +8%

Every market. Every product.

Vegetables

Tomatoes, potatoes, onions, peppers, cucumbers, zucchini — tracked daily from wilaya markets.

From 45 DZD/kg

Meat & Poultry

Beef, lamb, chicken, goat. Live and frozen. Regional price benchmarks for every wilaya.

From 460 DZD/kg

Olive Oil

Extra virgin, first press. Local cooperatives and individual producers. Seasonal pricing alerts.

From 1,000 DZD/L

Livestock

Cows, sheep, goats, camels. Listing with breed, age, weight, and price. Direct contact with sellers.

List your stock free

Price opacity costs farmers and buyers.

Old way
  • Farmer doesn't know what buyers pay
  • Buyer doesn't know what's available
  • 3–4 middlemen each take a cut
  • Tomatoes range from 40–120 DZD with no logic
  • Biggest winner: the middleman
Vegetable oil prices: +65.8% since 2020
Meat prices: +12.7% since 2020
SouqConnect
  • Live price feeds from wilaya markets
  • Direct farmer-to-buyer listings
  • No middlemen, no hidden margins
  • Regional price history you can actually use
  • Biggest winner: the farmer and the family
Real data. Fair prices.
Transparent markets.
This week in Algiers
Tomato price trend (30 days)
Low: 62 DZD High: 115 DZD
Current (Algiers) 85 DZD/kg
Oran 92 DZD/kg
Constantine 78 DZD/kg
Blida 70 DZD/kg
Every morning, an Algerian farmer wakes up unsure what the day's prices will bring. Every evening, a family stretches their budget to cope with market volatility nobody could have predicted.

SouqConnect exists to change that. We are building the price transparency infrastructure Algeria's agricultural markets have never had — not a luxury, but a necessity for 13 million people whose livelihoods depend on it.

This is not about technology. It's about fair markets. It's about farmers knowing what their produce is worth, and families knowing what they'll pay. It's about closing the gap that middlemen have been exploiting for generations.