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Coffee Consumption Grows In the U.S.

A new report from the National Coffee Association found that two-thirds of consumers drink coffee daily
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The average coffee drinker consumers three cups per day on average, according to the National Coffee Association.

Coffee consumption in the United States continues to grow as two-thirds (66%) of American adults drink the beverage daily, according to a new report from the National Coffee Association (NCA).

In its Spring 2025 National Coffee Data Trends (NCDT) report by Dig Insights, the NCA found the average coffee drinker consumes three cups per day on average. Overall consumption rates have grown 7% when compared to 2020. 

"Coffee holds a unique place in Americans' daily lives — no other beverage is such a beloved and prominent touchstone,” said Bill Murray, president and CEO of NCA. “Coffee's popularity brews big benefits for American coffee drinkers and the entire U.S. economy, and we expect America's love affair with coffee to continue for many decades to come."

Driving coffee's five-year growth trend, consumption of specialty coffee has increased by nearly 18% (consumed by 46% of American adults during the past day in January 2025, compared to 39% in 2020). Consumption of traditional coffee held steady over the same time (consumed by 42% of adults during the past day in January 2025, compared to 43% in 2020).

Within the specialty category, past-day consumption of espresso-based beverages (which include cappuccinos, espressos, lattes, caffè mochas, macchiatos, flat whites and Americanos) increased by 17% (from 24% of adults in 2020 to 28% in 2025), and past-day consumption of non-espresso-based beverages (which include frozen blended coffees, cold brew coffees, and nitro coffees) jumped by nearly 42% (from 12% of adults in 2020 to 17% in 2025).

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While the number of Americans having specialty coffee in the past day has increased dramatically between 2020 and 2025, the proportion of traditional coffee consumed compared to specialty coffee has remained consistent, for every 100 cups of coffee consumed, 59 are specialty and 41 are traditional.

Other key findings include:

• At home remains the most popular place to prepare coffee. The study found that 71% of past-day coffee drinkers had coffee prepared at home only in 2025 (compared to 63% in 2020), 16% had coffee prepared out of home only (compared to 18% in 2020), and 13% had coffee prepared both at and out of home (compared to 19% in 2020).

• Grocery stores remain the most popular place to purchase coffee, but the number of past-day coffee drinkers who purchased coffee online doubled from 7% in 2020 to 14% in 2025. Also, 40% of past-day coffee drinkers purchased coffee at a grocery store in 2025 (compared to 41% in 2020), 29% at a mass merchant (compared to 25% in 2020), 10% in a club store (compared to 12% in 2020), and 5% in a coffee shop (no change since 2020).

• Drip coffee makers are most prevalent in American households, but single cup brewers, instant coffee, bean-to-cup machines, and other set ups are increasingly popular. The report found 62% of American adults have a drip coffee maker at home (compared to 58% in 2020), 42% have a single-cup brewer (compared to 40% in 2020), 35% have instant coffee (compared to 27% in 2020), 15% have a bean-to-cup machine (compared to 10% in 2020), 12% have a French press (compared to 14% in 2020), 12% have an espresso machine (compared to 8% in 2020), 11% have a slow-drip cold brew setup (compared to 7% in 2020), and 6% have a pour-over coffee maker (compared to 5% in 2020).

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