The Coffee Belt: The World's Coffee-Growing Regions Explained

Green coffee beans drying on a raised bed with mountains in the background
Green coffee beans at a drying station in a coffee-growing region. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

All commercial coffee production on Earth takes place within a band stretching roughly between the Tropic of Cancer (23.5° N) and the Tropic of Capricorn (23.5° S), a zone commonly called the Coffee Belt. Within this band, suitable growing conditions converge: tropical and subtropical temperatures, sufficient rainfall, defined wet and dry seasons, and, for the finest arabica, the altitude that slows cherry development and concentrates flavour. Understanding the Coffee Belt means understanding why a coffee from Yemen tastes nothing like one from Colombia, why Brazilian naturals differ so fundamentally from Kenyan washed coffees, and why climate change poses a specific and serious threat to the world's arabica supply.

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Why the Tropics: The Basic Requirements

Coffea arabica requires a mean annual temperature between approximately 15°C and 24°C. Below 10°C, the plant ceases photosynthesis and becomes susceptible to frost damage; a single frost event can kill an established arabica plantation. Above 30°C as a sustained mean, flowering is disrupted and bean development suffers. The Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn mark the boundaries beyond which the sun's angle means that sustained warmth of this calibre becomes difficult to maintain year-round without extreme altitude compensation.

Arabica grows best at altitude: the ideal range is 1,000–2,500 metres above sea level for the finest quality, though commercial production occurs as low as 600 metres in some regions. Robusta, which tolerates higher temperatures and greater humidity, grows from sea level to about 800 metres. Annual rainfall requirements for arabica are 1,500–2,500mm, ideally distributed with a dry season coinciding with the harvest period (excess rain during harvest disrupts cherry drying and processing).

Why Altitude Matters for Flavour

The flavour-altitude relationship is one of the most consistent in agronomy. At high altitude, lower ambient temperatures slow the metabolic rate of the developing cherry. A cherry that ripens in 6–7 months at 800 metres takes 9–10 months at 1,800 metres. This extended development period allows the seed to accumulate higher concentrations of sucrose (which converts to complex flavour compounds during roasting), organic acids (citric, malic, phosphoric), and volatile aromatic precursors.

Bean density is a direct result of this slower development: high-altitude beans are denser, harder, and more difficult to roast evenly (which is why specialty roasters often separate high-altitude lots and adjust roast profiles accordingly). Denser beans produce more Maillard reaction compounds during roasting, contributing to aromatic complexity. The classification "Strictly Hard Bean" (SHB) used in Central American grading systems certifies coffee grown above 1,350 metres, distinguishing it from lower-altitude "Hard Bean" (HB, 1,200–1,350m) and "Prime Washed" (below 1,200m) grades.

East Africa: Fruit and Florals

East Africa produces some of the world's most distinctive and celebrated coffees, characterised by bright acidity, floral aromatics, and fruit-forward flavour profiles. The region spans Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, and Uganda, each with distinct characteristics.

Ethiopia (1,500–2,200m)

As the birthplace of wild arabica, Ethiopia contains more genetic diversity in its coffee populations than any other country. Key origins include Yirgacheffe (jasmine, bergamot, lemon), Sidama/Sidamo (blueberry, raspberry, wine-like in natural-processed lots), Guji (stone fruit, dark chocolate), and Harrar (earthy, wine-like, dried fruit). Ethiopian coffees are processed by both washed and natural (dry) methods; natural-processed Ethiopian coffees, particularly from Sidama and Yirgacheffe, are among the most intensely fruit-forward coffees produced anywhere in the world.

Kenya (1,500–2,100m)

Kenya produces what many specialty buyers consider the world's most structurally complex washed coffees. The AA grade (screen size 18+) from the Central Province and Nyeri County is known for its intense blackcurrant, tomato, and phosphoric acidity, produced in part by the SL28 and SL34 varietals and by Kenya's unique double-wash processing (where fermented parchment coffee is soaked in fresh water after washing, a step called the "Kenya process"). Top-tier Kenyan lots sell at auction prices of $8–20 per pound green.

Rwanda and Burundi (1,500–2,000m)

Both countries produce high-quality washed Bourbon arabica with flavour profiles similar to Kenyan coffee (citrus acidity, stone fruit) but typically at lower price points. Rwanda's Cup of Excellence programme (COE), launched in 2008, has significantly raised the country's profile in the specialty market. A persistent processing defect called potato taste (caused by the bacteria Erwinia carotovora via antestia bug damage to cherries) affects some lots from both countries and remains a significant quality challenge for buyers.

Central America: Clean, Sweet, and Balanced

Central American arabicas are known for their cleanliness, sweetness, and approachability: medium acidity, medium body, and flavour profiles centring on caramel, milk chocolate, apple, and citrus. The region produces almost exclusively washed arabica, which contributes to the clean, transparent cup profile.

Guatemala (Antigua, Huehuetenango, Atitlán) grows SHB arabica on volcanic soil at 1,500–2,000 metres. Antigua coffees in particular have a full body and chocolate-toffee sweetness that has made them popular in espresso blends. Costa Rica pioneered the honey processing method (leaving controlled amounts of mucilage on the bean during drying), which adds sweetness and body while maintaining clarity. Panama's Gesha/Geisha varietal, grown in the Chiriquí highlands above 1,600 metres, is the region's most celebrated product and among the most expensive coffees in the world.

South America: Balanced and Chocolatey

Brazil and Colombia dominate South American production. Brazil is the world's largest coffee producer by volume (roughly 37% of global production in 2022/23, according to the International Coffee Organization), growing both arabica and robusta at relatively lower altitudes (800–1,400 metres) on mechanised flatland estates. Brazilian naturals and pulped naturals (a processing hybrid) are characterised by low acidity, full body, and flavours of dark chocolate, caramel, and hazelnut, making them the backbone of most espresso blends globally.

Colombia (third globally by volume, largest washed arabica producer) produces coffees at 1,200–2,300 metres with clean profiles of red fruit, caramel, mild citrus, and medium body. The bimodal harvest (two per year in most departments) provides consistent supply. Peru, Bolivia, and Ecuador are smaller producers but increasingly represented in the specialty market with clean, high-altitude washed arabicas.

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Asia and the Pacific: Earthy, Low-Acid, Full Body

Asia-Pacific coffees are distinguished by lower acidity and heavier body compared with African and Latin American equivalents, often with earthy, spicy, or herbal notes that reflect both varietal character and processing methods specific to the region.

Indonesia (700–1,700m)

Sumatra (Mandheling, Gayo, Lintong) is famous for a unique processing method called wet-hulling (Giling Basah), in which parchment is removed at a high moisture content of 30–40% rather than the standard 10–12%. This produces a distinctive green bean with a blue-green colour, and in cup a heavy body, low acidity, earthy, cedar, and tobacco character that is polarising in the specialty world but enormously popular in dark-roast blends. Java and Sulawesi (Toraja, Flores) produce coffees with slightly higher acidity and cleaner profiles than Sumatran lots.

Kopi Luwak, produced from coffee cherries that have passed through the digestive system of Asian palm civets, is the most famous (and most controversial) Indonesian specialty. It retails for £300–500 per kilogram; animal welfare concerns about civet farming have led the Specialty Coffee Association and most specialty buyers to recommend against purchasing civet coffee.

Vietnam (200–1,500m)

Vietnam is the world's second-largest coffee producer and the largest robusta producer. The Central Highlands (Đắk Lắk, Lâm Đồng) grow almost exclusively robusta at low to medium altitude for the instant coffee and espresso blend markets. Da Lat, at higher altitude in Lâm Đồng province, produces some arabica of increasing specialty quality. Vietnamese coffee culture is characterised by the traditional phin drip filter and the cà phê sữa đá (iced coffee with sweetened condensed milk), one of the most refreshing coffee preparations in the world.

India (900–1,500m)

India's coffee is grown primarily in the southern states of Karnataka (70% of production), Kerala, and Tamil Nadu. Monsooned Malabar is India's most distinctive origin: green beans are exposed to monsoon winds for 12–16 weeks, absorbing moisture and swelling to roughly double their normal size, losing acidity and developing a unique mustiness and heavy body. Karnataka's washed arabicas from Coorg and Chikmagalur have improved significantly in specialty quality in recent years and represent good value for buyers.

Emerging Origins

Two emerging origins deserve attention for specialty buyers and curious drinkers.

China (Yunnan Province, 900–1,900m): Yunnan has grown coffee commercially since the 1980s and produces primarily washed arabica (Typica and Catimor) that has historically supplied large commodity buyers. Quality has risen rapidly in the 2010s and 2020s, with microlot producers from Baoshan, Pu'er, and Dehong winning regional Cup of Excellence placements and attracting international specialty buyers. Yunnan arabica typically shows milk chocolate, caramel, and gentle stone fruit characteristics.

Myanmar (900–1,700m): Myanmar's Shan State has developed a small but growing specialty coffee industry. The country's political instability since the 2021 military coup has disrupted supply chains, but producers such as Mann Coffee and the Myanmar Coffee Association continue to develop export capacity. Shan State arabicas show clean, medium-bodied profiles with apple and brown sugar notes.

Climate Change and the Arabica Map

Climate change poses an acute threat to arabica production. A landmark 2021 study published in PLOS ONE by Ovalle-Rivera et al. projected that arabica's climatically suitable land area could decline by 38–89% by 2080 under high warming scenarios. Higher temperatures and more erratic rainfall patterns are already affecting yields in traditional growing regions: Ethiopia's Yirgacheffe has experienced altered rainfall patterns, while Colombia's coffee regions have seen increased incidence of leaf rust driven by warmer, wetter conditions.

The response from the industry includes several strands: breeding programs to develop heat-tolerant arabica hybrids (World Coffee Research's F1 hybrid program is the most advanced, with 36 varieties under evaluation across multiple origins); the expansion of production to higher altitudes (pushing cultivation to 2,300–2,500 metres in East Africa and Latin America); and the development of arabica varieties from wild Ethiopian Coffea species with greater climatic resilience. The longer-term viability of arabica production in some of its most iconic regions is genuinely uncertain, a fact that gives added meaning to every cup sourced from those places today.


Related: The Biology of the Coffee Plant: Arabica, Robusta, and What Makes a Good Bean | The Best Countries to Visit for Coffee: Ethiopia, Colombia, Jamaica, and Beyond

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