Southeast Asia’s supermarkets are quietly transforming, and so is the protein aisle.
Once dominated by wet markets where fresh poultry and seafood were sold with little to no packaging, today’s proteins are turning up in modern supermarkets, neatly sealed in vacuum packs, sleek trays or modified-atmosphere sleeves behind polished glass.
What looks like progress in presentation signals something deeper. Packaging is becoming a key differentiator for suppliers and brands in fresh meat, poultry, and seafood. It is reshaping not just how food is sold, but whether consumers trust it, choose it, and come back for it.
This shift has been years in the making. Urbanization and rising middle-class expectations have driven growth in modern grocery formats across the region. In Indonesia and Malaysia, grocery retail is undergoing significant transformation and not just in supermarkets and hypermarkets, but also in smaller convenience formats. UBS projects that convenience stores in ASEAN will see the fastest growth among all grocery formats, with a compound annual growth rate of 7% from 2022 to 2032, reflecting evolving urban consumer needs and increased demand for accessibility.
That said, Southeast Asia isn’t one-size-fits-all. While modern trade is expanding, traditional wet markets remain deeply rooted in many communities especially in rural and peri-urban areas across Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Cultural norms, access to infrastructure, and affordability still shape how people shop for fresh meat and seafood. For many households, trust is built through personal relationships and the familiar sensory cues of local markets.
However, in urban centres and among younger, working consumers, expectations are shifting. Hygiene, convenience, and clear labelling are becoming essential, particularly where modern retail formats are expanding. It is within this emerging segment that packaging is starting to shape purchase decisions in ways we haven’t seen before.
Freshness alone no longer seals the deal. Consumers want to see it sealed. They look for clear shelf-life information, transparency on sourcing, and packaging that minimizes environmental impact. The product itself hasn’t changed. What has changed is how consumers assess quality, and that’s largely through packaging.
For fresh protein suppliers and processors, this shift brings both opportunity and challenge. Formats like vacuum skin packs and high-barrier films now allow for extended shelf life and leak-proof convenience. But expectations are rising fast; The global vacuum skin packaging market was valued at USD 7.8 billion in 2023 and is projected to grow at a 4.2% CAGR through 2032.
Similarly, the global high-barrier films market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 6.1% from 2024 to 2030, with rapid uptake across meat, poultry, and seafood categories. These growth trends reflect a broader shift: as consumer expectations for safety and quality increase, what was once considered premium packaging is now a standard requirement for staying competitive in the protein aisle.
Packaging is also enabling market expansion. Take cheese: once a niche, import-only category in Southeast Asia, it has grown rapidly in recent years. According to IMARC Group, the Southeast Asia cheese market was valued at USD 3.49 million in 2024 and is projected to reach USD 6.26 million by 2033, growing at a CAGR of 6.71% during 2025–2033. This growth is facilitated by modern packaging solutions that makes it possible for a wider range including locally produced varieties to withstand hot climates, longer transport, and uneven cold chains. The same applies to marinated meats, mixed protein trays, and private-label innovations in fresh seafood. Packaging doesn’t just protect, it unlocks.
Yet as packaging unlocks new opportunities, it also raises important questions — a growing need to address its environmental footprint.
Fresh meat, poultry, and seafood are some of the most demanding categories when it comes to packaging. They’re wet, highly perishable, and often need multiple material layers to ensure food safety. That complexity makes it harder to adopt recyclable or low-impact formats but no less necessary.
Brands that overlook sustainability risk losing relevance, not just with consumers, but with regulators. Across markets like Singapore, Malaysia, and the Philippines, policies on waste reduction and circularity are becoming more stringent. At Amcor, we’re increasingly focused on helping our customers shift to recycle-ready packaging, reduce food waste through improved preservation, and explore alternative materials without compromising hygiene or performance. So where does this leave the industry?
Packaging has long been seen as a functional necessity, critical for protecting fresh protein during transport and display. But its role is changing. Increasingly, packaging shapes purchasing decisions, signals quality, and responds to rising expectations around convenience, hygiene, and sustainability.
For protein businesses, this shift presents a clear opportunity: to remain competitive, meet evolving consumer demands at the shelf, and strengthen trust where it matters most.