The World's Biggest Coffee Brands — and the Curious Cases of How Different Countries Drink Coffee

Nescafé — the brand that democratised coffee access globally after its 1938 launch — is now consumed in over 180 countries, with dramatically different preparations in each. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

Coffee is the second most traded commodity in the world after crude oil, with a global market valued at approximately $460 billion annually. This market is served by an industry of remarkable contrasts: multinational corporations producing billions of doses of instant coffee daily, artisan roasters sourcing single lots by helicopter from Ethiopian highlands, vending machine empires in Tokyo subway stations, family-owned espresso brands in Trieste that have operated since 1933. The world's biggest coffee brands are not simply companies — they are cultural phenomena that have shaped how their home countries and the countries they've penetrated understand the daily ritual of coffee. And the curious cases — the countries whose coffee cultures defy all expectation — are often the most interesting coffee stories of all.

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The Global Giants

Nescafé (Nestlé) — The Brand That Invented Instant Coffee

Nescafé is the world's most widely consumed coffee brand — present in over 180 countries, with approximately 5,500 cups drunk every second globally. But the brand's origin is a story of crisis resolution: in the 1930s, Brazil was producing such massive coffee surpluses (the consequence of decades of over-investment in plantation capacity) that the Brazilian government approached Nestlé and asked them to develop a soluble coffee product that could be produced from the surplus crop without waste. The result, after eight years of development by chemist Max Morgenthaler, was launched in Switzerland on April 1, 1938 — Nescafé, from "Nestlé" + "café."

The timing was decisive: the United States military adopted Nescafé as a standard ration during World War II, distributing billions of doses to troops across every theatre of the war. When those soldiers returned home — and when US occupation brought Nescafé to Japan, the Philippines, and Europe — they brought coffee habits with them. Nescafé's market penetration in the immediate post-war period was the most rapid food product adoption in history. Today, the brand's highest-volume markets include the Philippines, Mexico, Russia, and Pakistan — countries where Nescafé often means coffee in its entirety.

Folgers — America's Cup

In the United States, Folgers has been the best-selling ground coffee since the 1990s — a fact that surprises European coffee drinkers, since Folgers is ground coffee roasted light to medium, sold in large format tins and cans, and brewed through drip coffee machines in volumes that produce a large, mild, low-intensity cup nothing like what Italians or Australians consider normal coffee. Folgers was founded in 1850 in San Francisco during the Gold Rush, targeting the enormous market of prospectors who needed affordable, mass-produced coffee. Its advertising slogan — "The best part of waking up is Folgers in your cup" — has been in continuous use since 1984, making it one of the longest-running television advertising campaigns in American history.

The Folgers phenomenon reflects a genuine cultural difference: American coffee culture, shaped by drip brewing, the diner coffee culture of the 20th century, and the sheer volume-per-cup habit (a standard American "large" coffee is 450–600ml, versus an Italian espresso at 25–30ml), values consistency and abundance over intensity.

Lavazza — Italy's National Brand

Founded by Luigi Lavazza in Turin in 1895, Lavazza is Italy's largest coffee company and the leading premium coffee brand in European retail. What distinguishes Lavazza from most competitors is its consistent use of blending as an art: Lavazza has always positioned itself as a blend specialist rather than a single-origin purveyor, with signature blends that have remained fundamentally consistent across decades — the Qualità Rossa blend (arabica + robusta) has been the Italian household standard since its launch in 1956. Lavazza processes approximately 30,000 tonnes of coffee per year, sources from over 30 countries, and has been central to the global dissemination of Italian espresso culture through its capsule systems, café partnerships, and retail presence in 140+ countries.

Illy — Trieste's Perfect Cup

Founded in Trieste in 1933 by Francesco Illy (a Hungarian-Italian entrepreneur who invented the first automatic espresso machine prototype in 1935), illycaffè represents the luxury end of Italian mass-market coffee — a single blend of nine arabica origins, constant across all formats, with exceptional quality control and a consistent flavour profile that has made it the choice of fine restaurants and specialty retailers globally. Illy's approach is unusual: it uses only arabica (no robusta), only one blend, and maintains direct relationships with its supplying farms through the Università del Caffè — its own research and training institution. Illy pioneered pressurised packaging (nitrogen-flushed cans) to preserve freshness — a technology now standard across the industry.

Nespresso (Nestlé) — The Capsule Revolution

Nespresso was patented by Nestlé engineer Eric Favre in 1976 but languished in development until 1986, when the system was commercialised — initially with almost no success. The repositioning in the early 1990s — away from office use toward premium household luxury, with the distinctive aluminium capsules and the eventual George Clooney advertising campaigns — transformed Nespresso into one of the most profitable product launches in food history. The business model is essentially the razor-and-blade model: the machines are sold near cost; the margin is in the capsules, which are proprietary and can only be purchased from Nespresso. The system generated approximately CHF 6.5 billion in revenue in 2022. Its environmental impact (billions of aluminium capsules produced annually, recycling rates well below 50%) remains the brand's most persistent controversy.

Starbucks — Globalising Coffee Ritual

Founded in Seattle in 1971, Starbucks has 35,000+ locations in 80+ countries and has been the primary vector through which the concept of specialty coffee culture — single origins, espresso-based drinks, barista craft — has been disseminated to markets where traditional coffee culture was either absent or unsophisticated. Its influence on coffee culture in China, India, South Korea, and much of Southeast Asia has been profound: Starbucks introduced espresso-based drinks, coffee as a "third place" experience, and coffee as a status symbol to hundreds of millions of consumers for whom local coffee culture offered nothing equivalent. Its critics (and they are vocal) argue that Starbucks homogenises coffee culture, serves over-roasted coffee, and drives out local café traditions; its defenders point to the democratisation of espresso access in markets where the alternative was Nescafé.

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The Curious Cases: Countries Where Coffee Culture Defies Expectation

Finland: The World's Greatest Coffee Drinkers

By per-capita consumption, Finland is the world's most coffee-intensive nation — Finns drink an average of 12kg of coffee per person per year, compared to approximately 4.2kg in the US and 5.8kg in Italy. This is not a new development: Finnish coffee culture has been extreme since the 18th century, when coffee arrived in Scandinavia and was enthusiastically adopted despite (or because of) the dark winters and the cultural valorisation of warmth and communal gathering.

The paradox is the style: Finnish coffee is neither espresso nor specialty filter. It is pale, weak, lightly roasted filter coffee drunk in enormous quantities — multiple cups throughout the day, accompanying every social occasion, available at every petrol station and convenience store in the country. The Finnish word kahvitauko (coffee break) is legally mandated: Finnish employment law historically guaranteed workers two coffee breaks per working day. Coffee is not luxury in Finland — it is infrastructure.

Japan: The World Capital of Canned Coffee

Japan's relationship with coffee is one of the most interesting cultural transplantations in beverage history. Coffee arrived in Japan in the late 17th century through the Dutch trading post at Dejima in Nagasaki, but the mass market only developed after World War II — and the form it took was determined by Japanese culture rather than European tradition. The result is the canned coffee — the UCC and Georgia brands of ready-to-drink coffee sold in vending machines (of which Japan has approximately 2.7 million, or one for every 46 people) for roughly ¥120–150 per can, available hot in winter and cold in summer from the same machine, 24 hours a day.

UCC (Ueshima Coffee Company, founded 1933 in Kobe) invented the canned coffee with milk in 1969 — the world's first commercially successful ready-to-drink canned coffee. Georgia Coffee, launched by Coca-Cola Japan in 1975 (named for the American state, considered evocative of Southern comfort), became the best-selling canned coffee brand in the world, available in over 30 varieties. The Japanese canned coffee market is approximately $8 billion annually — larger than the entire Italian coffee market.

Simultaneously, Japan has one of the world's most sophisticated specialty coffee scenes: Tokyo's third-wave café culture — in Shimokitazawa, Shibuya, and Nakameguro — is among the world's most technically advanced, with Japanese baristas consistently placing at World Barista Championship competition. Japan imports some of the world's most expensive green coffee and drinks some of the world's cheapest instant coffee from the same vending machine. Both things are true.

Italy: Where the Rules Are Unwritten But Absolute

Italy produces no coffee commercially (it has no suitable growing climate) yet has defined the world's dominant coffee preparation method. The Italian espresso system — short extraction (25–30ml), 9 bar pressure, 90–96°C, 25–30 seconds — is the technical basis of Starbucks, every specialty café on Earth, and the global barista profession. But Italy's domestic coffee culture comes with rules that are social rather than legal and enforced with a rigidity that astonishes outsiders:

  • Ordering a cappuccino after 11am is acceptable to bar staff but marks you unmistakably as a tourist. Italians drink cappuccino only at breakfast; a milky coffee after lunch or dinner is physiologically inexplicable to most Italians.
  • Coffee is drunk standing at the bar (at the counter), not sitting at a table — the bar counter price for an espresso (roughly €1–1.20 in most of Italy) is a subsidised civic institution; sitting at a table can cost 3–5× more.
  • The Caffè sospeso (suspended coffee) — a Neapolitan tradition of paying for an extra coffee in advance, available for whoever needs one and can't afford it — is one of the most elegant expressions of coffee as social contract anywhere in the world.

Australia: The Country That Invented the Flat White

Australia and New Zealand — through waves of Italian immigration in the post-war period — developed a coffee culture independently of the American filter coffee tradition, producing a espresso-based café scene that arguably preceded the American "third wave" by a decade. The flat white (a double ristretto shot with microfoam steamed milk, smaller than a latte, denser than a cappuccino) is an Antipodean invention — claimed with competitive intensity by both Australia and New Zealand, with the New Zealand claim generally considered the stronger one (Wellington's DKD café in the 1980s). Starbucks added the flat white to its international menu in 2015, acknowledging what specialty baristas already knew: the Antipodean approach to espresso and milk texture had become the global professional standard.

Ethiopia: Where Coffee Is Not an Industry but a Ceremony

Ethiopia — the birthplace of Coffea arabica — has the world's most formal domestic coffee ritual: the bunna ceremony (bunna means coffee in Amharic). Green coffee beans are roasted in a pan over a brazier in front of guests; the smoke of the roasting is wafted through the room; the coffee is ground by mortar and pestle; brewed in a ceramic pot (jebena) and poured three times — Abol (first pour, strongest), Tona (second), Bereka (third, weakest, meaning "to be blessed"). The ceremony takes 45 minutes to an hour and cannot be rushed. In rural Ethiopia, refusing the third cup is considered rude. It is among the world's few surviving coffee rituals that is entirely unchanged from its historical form — unchanged because Ethiopia never abandoned coffee for tea, never industrialised the ceremony, never lost the thread between the tree and the cup.


Related: Cafezinho: Brazil's National Coffee Ritual | Ethiopia: The Origin of Coffee

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