Author: Qahwa World |
Date: June 6, 2026
US Coffee Consumption 2026 by the Numbers: The Rise of Specialty Coffee and What It Means for Global Markets
Key Numbers:
- 66% of American adults drank coffee yesterday – more than any other beverage including water.
- 47% drank specialty coffee daily, surpassing traditional coffee (42%).
- 58% had specialty coffee in the past week, a 10-point increase since 2021.
- 45% of Americans consumed espresso-based beverages weekly (lattes, cappuccinos, espressos).
- Age group 25-39 leads consumption: 69% weekly for specialty coffee.
- Hispanic Americans are the highest specialty coffee consumers (67% weekly).
- Northeast and West regions have the highest consumption (64% and 61% weekly).
- Medium roast is the most popular (58%), followed by dark (39%) and light (13%).
The 2026 National Coffee Data Trends report, released by the National Coffee Association (NCA), confirms that coffee remains America’s favorite beverage. 66% of adults drank coffee yesterday, ahead of tap or bottled water. However, the real story lies in a deep shift within the US market.
For the first time, specialty coffee is achieving sustainable growth over traditional coffee. This shift reflects changing consumer tastes and carries major implications for global production, arabica and robusta futures, roasting strategies, and distribution worldwide. In this report, we present the most revealing numbers and analyze what they mean for the global coffee market.
1. Daily and Weekly Consumption Basics
January 2026 data shows specialty coffee outpacing traditional coffee in daily consumption for the first time on a broad scale. Daily specialty coffee penetration reached 47%, versus 42% for traditional coffee. On a weekly basis, 58% of Americans drank specialty coffee, compared to 62% for traditional coffee – a very close gap.
| Coffee Type | Daily Penetration | Weekly Penetration |
|---|---|---|
| Specialty Coffee | 47% | 58% |
| Traditional Coffee | 42% | 62% |
| Espresso Based Beverages (EBBs) | 29% | 45% |
| Cold Specialty Beverages (N-EBBs)* | 17% | 27% |
* Includes cold brew, frozen blended coffee, and nitro coffee.
Since 2021, weekly specialty coffee consumption has increased by 10 percentage points (from 48% to 58%). Meanwhile, weekly traditional coffee consumption has remained stable at around 62%. This means nearly all growth in the US coffee market comes from the specialty segment.
2. Who Drinks Specialty Coffee? Demographic Profile
By age: The 25-39 age group is the strongest driver. 69% of them drank specialty coffee in the past week, versus only 46% of those aged 60+. Moreover, 60% of the 25-39 group consumed espresso beverages, and 40% drank cold specialty drinks. Young adults (18-24) prefer specialty (50%) over traditional (40%), signaling a lasting generational shift.
| Age Group | Specialty (Weekly) | Espresso Beverages | Cold Specialty |
|---|---|---|---|
| 18-24 | 50% | 38% | 33% |
| 25-39 | 69% | 60% | 40% |
| 40-59 | 60% | 47% | 27% |
| 60+ | 46% | 30% | 13% |
By ethnicity: Hispanic Americans are the highest specialty coffee consumers (67% weekly), followed by Asian Americans (64%). African Americans (57%) and Caucasian Americans (56%) follow. Hispanic Americans also lead in espresso beverages (57%) and cold specialty drinks (39%).
By region: The Northeast leads with 64% weekly specialty consumption, followed by the West (61%), then the South (57%), and finally the Midwest (49%).
3. How Do Americans Drink Their Specialty Coffee?
Temperature: 43% prefer hot specialty coffee, while 32% consume it cold. In contrast, traditional coffee is 54% hot and only 13% cold. Specialty coffee thus dominates the cold beverage market year-round, even in January.
Roast level: Medium roast is the most popular (58%), followed by dark roast (39%), then light roast (13%). This confirms a preference for balanced, classic flavors.
Additives (sweeteners and whiteners): 59% of specialty coffee drinkers use sweeteners or flavored syrup. 58% use whiteners (milk, cream, or milk alternatives). The 25-39 age group records the highest sweetener usage (70%). Hispanic Americans are more likely to add white sugar and honey.
Out-of-home preparation: 36% of specialty coffee drinkers buy their coffee away from home (cafés, restaurants, workplaces), compared to only 23% of traditional drinkers. This highlights the importance of the hospitality and café sector for specialty coffee growth.
4. What Do These Numbers Mean for the Global Coffee Market?
The US shift to specialty coffee is not just a local taste change; it is a strong signal for global markets.
1. Demand for high-quality arabica will increase: Specialty coffee’s heavy reliance on arabica puts pressure on producing countries to increase output while maintaining quality. However, a record Brazil 2026/27 crop (71.9 million bags) may create a temporary surplus, but strong US demand will absorb much of it.
2. Arabica prices may find support despite surplus: Prices usually fall when supply rises. Yet 58% of Americans drinking specialty coffee weekly means that any production increase may be met by rising consumption, limiting price collapse. Additionally, tight spot supplies (falling exchange inventories) support prices in the short term.
3. Robusta market faces pressure: As traditional coffee’s share declines, Vietnam increases its robusta exports. This could lead to a robusta surplus and downward pressure on prices. Roasters will need to find new uses for robusta.
4. Flavor innovation and new formats are essential: 35% of specialty coffee drinkers consider flavor part of the definition of “specialty coffee.” The strong preference for sweet flavors forces producers to develop blends that meet these tastes. Meanwhile, the popularity of cold drinks requires investment in chilled distribution channels.
5. Demographic shifts reshape global marketing: Specialty coffee’s concentration among 25-39 year olds and Hispanic Americans means brands must redirect their campaigns and sales channels. Higher out-of-home consumption (36%) benefits global café chains.
6. Supply chain and climate challenges remain: With El Niño and Strait of Hormuz disruptions persisting, specialty coffee supply chains become more fragile. Prices may experience sharp volatility despite a theoretical surplus.
5. What Does This Mean for the Arab World, Especially the Gulf?
The Gulf market is experiencing massive growth in specialty coffee. US data confirms this is a global trend. For coffee-importing Arab countries, this means:
- Higher prices: If strong US demand continues, arabica prices may rise globally, increasing import costs for local roasters and cafés.
- Opportunity for differentiation: Arab cafés can play on distinctive flavors (spice, floral, fruit) that US specialty drinkers are open to. This opens doors for collaboration with US roasters or exporting innovative Arab blends.
- Need for investment in education and training: To meet global quality standards, the Gulf coffee sector must strengthen Q Grader and sensory analysis programs, just as labs like Kanamori Coffee Lab do in Japan.
Frequently Asked Questions About US Coffee Consumption 2026
Q: What percentage of Americans drink coffee daily compared to other beverages?
A: 66% drink coffee daily, making it the most consumed beverage ahead of tap or bottled water.
Q: Has specialty coffee truly overtaken traditional coffee?
A: In daily consumption, yes: 47% specialty vs. 42% traditional. Weekly, traditional still leads slightly (62% vs. 58%).
Q: Which age group consumes the most specialty coffee?
A: The 25-39 age group, at 69% weekly.
Q: What is the most popular roast in America?
A: Medium roast (58%), followed by dark (39%), then light (13%).
Q: How do these numbers affect global coffee prices?
A: Strong US demand for arabica supports prices, while Brazil’s record crop may create temporary surplus. Robusta prices trend downward due to Vietnam exports.
Q: Which flavors do US specialty coffee drinkers prefer most?
A: Sweet flavors: chocolate (85%), caramel and brown sugar (78%), vanilla (79%).
The 2026 data shows that specialty coffee is no longer a luxury but the backbone of the US coffee market. This sends clear messages to producers, roasters, and investors worldwide: quality, innovation, and understanding demographic shifts are the keys to success in the coming decade.
Prepared and edited by: Qahwa World – Based on the National Coffee Association’s 2026 National Coffee Data Trends Specialty Coffee Report.
All rights reserved. Republication with attribution permitted.
Publication date: June 6, 2026