US coffee prices spike due to tariffs and poor weather
[October 25, 2025] By
DEE-ANN DURBIN and CHRIS RUGABER
It’s getting more expensive for Americans to get their caffeine fix.
The average U.S. price of a pound of ground coffee hit $9.14 in
September, a 3% increase from the August average of $8.87 and 41% higher
than in September 2024, according to U.S. government figures. Coffee
prices have been increasing sharply since the start of this year.
Consumer prices for food purchased for home use and away from home were
3% in September compared to the same month a year earlier, the U.S.
Labor Department reported Friday. The consumer price index, which
measures a broader sample of all coffee products, including instant
coffee, showed U.S. coffee prices up 19% from September 2024 and flat
compared to August.
Nikki Bravo, the co-owner of Momentum Coffee in Chicago, raised prices
by about 15% last week for lattes, cappuccinos and other drinks at her
four locations.
Bravo said she is paying 15% more for coffee beans compared to a year
ago and has started roasting more beans in-house to save money. She gets
most of her beans from Africa.
Other items also have gotten more expensive, such as cups and sleeves,
she said. In addition, the minimum wage in Chicago rose July 1 to $16.60
an hour.
“At some point we just had to pass it along, we couldn’t continue to eat
it,” Bravo said.
Stubbornly high inflation has also left consumers uncertain and less
willing to splash out on a takeout coffee, she added. According to
Toast, a restaurant management system, the average price of a regular
coffee at U.S. restaurants in September was $3.54 compared to $3.45 a
year earlier.

Here's why java is feeling such a jolt and how some are trying to
alleviate it:
Tariffs
Outside of Hawaii and Puerto Rico, there are few places in the U.S. that
can grow coffee. So 99% of America’s coffee is imported, according to
the National Coffee Association, a trade group.
Brazil is the top source for U.S. coffee, supplying 30% of the market.
The Trump administration imposed a 40% tariff on Brazilian products in
July on top of a 10% tariff imposed earlier. Brazilian producers have
begun withholding shipments to the U.S. as they negotiate with American
roasters over who will absorb the added cost, reducing supply in the
U.S., according to investment bank UBS.
Colombia, which supplies 20% of the U.S. coffee market, is subject to a
10% tariff, but President Donald Trump recently threatened higher
tariffs and an end to U.S. aid to Colombia. Vietnam, which supplies 8%
of the U.S. coffee market, has been subject to a 20% tariff since the
summer.
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Coffee beans are poured into a grinder at a cafe in College Park,
Md., on Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2021. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File)
s In September, Trump announced that
“unavailable natural resources” could be exempt from tariffs for
countries that have reached trade agreements with the U.S. But so
far, coffee hasn't won any exemptions.
Weather risks
Heat, drought and other poor weather conditions have hurt coffee
production globally in recent years, causing prices to surge. World
coffee prices rose nearly 40% in 2024, according to the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
Earlier this month, coffee prices rose after the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration declared that La Nina conditions had
formed. That raised concerns about the possibility of drought in
Brazil.
The risk to coffee production from climate change has some
researchers trying to develop more climate-resistant varieties of
coffee.
Congress might step in
In September, a bipartisan group of U.S. House members introduced a
bill that would repeal all tariffs on coffee.
“We only produce 1% of the coffee that Americans consume. It’s one
of the best examples of Trump’s blanket tariffs making no economic
sense," U.S. Rep. Ro Khanna, a California Democrat, said. Khanna
co-sponsored the bill with U.S. Rep. Don Bacon, a Nebraska
Republican.
Bacon said Friday that he became interested in the issue when he saw
how much coffee cost at the grocery store. He said he's also not a
fan of tariffs and thinks Congress — not the president — has the
power to levy them.
Bacon said he thinks the Trump administration now realizes that
putting tariffs on products that the U.S. can't grow is bad for
consumers, and he's hopeful the bill will pass.
“I hope the president and Congress see the positive benefit of
removing this tariff on everyday Americans,” he said.
___
Durbin reported from Detroit. Rugaber reported from Washington
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