Global coffee consumption over last decade totaled $370B

15:2719/08/2025, Salı
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File photo
File photo

US is largest coffee importer, spending $69.2B on java, while Brazil exported the most coffee, reaching $62B in 2015–2024, according to International Trade Center data

The world’s coffee consumption – both hot and iced – over the past 10 years reached $370.3 billion, according to data from the International Trade Center (ITC).

The coffee sector continues its upward trend with the rise of coffee chains worldwide. Coffee imports in 2015–2024 reached a total of $370.3, while the US accounting for $69.2 billion of this total, followed by Germany with $41.9 billion and France with $28.9 billion.

Other large coffee importers were Italy, Canada, Belgium, Spain, Japan, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, with their total coffee imports amounting to $238.5 billion. The top 10 coffee importers made up 64.4% of the market in the last decade.

Meanwhile, Brazil was the world’s largest coffee exporter, with exports over the past decade reaching $360.3 billion, followed by Switzerland with $28.7 billion and Colombia with $28.6 billion. Other large coffee exporters were Germany, Vietnam, Italy, Honduras, France, Belgium, and Indonesia.

At the same, Türkiye’s coffee imports in 2015-2024 reached $2.7 billion, while prices for imported coffee rose from $153.4 million in 2015 to $497.1 million in 2024, up 224%, according to data from the country’s statistical bureau TurkStat.

Türkiye’s coffee exports over the last decade totaled $354.5 million, and for this year totaled $55.6 million as of June.

Türkiye imported most of its coffee from Brazil, making up $1.7 billion, followed by the Netherlands with $201.1 million, Italy with $100.5 million, Germany with $80.9 million, and Colombia with $79.9 million.

The country’s coffee imports totaled $472.5 million as of June, with Brazil as the top source for its imported coffee.


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