Home

 › 

Food

 › 

10 of the Most Popular Coffee Brands in the US

10 of the Most Popular Coffee Brands in the US

Ivica Drusany / Shutterstock.com

10. Maxwell House

Philip Rozenski / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

8. Café Bustelo

Photo by Bob Levey/Getty Images for Café Bustelo

7. Folger Coffee Company

littleny / Getty Images

4. Dunkin' Brands

tupungato / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

3. Lavazza

Ivica Drusany / Shutterstock.com

2. Keurig Dr Pepper (Green Mountain Coffee Roasters)

Sergi Alexander / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

1. Starbucks

aboutsung / Shutterstock.com

10. Maxwell House
9. Eight O'Clock Coffee
8. Café Bustelo
7. Folger Coffee Company
6. Caribou Coffee
5. Peet's Coffee
4. Dunkin' Brands
3. Lavazza
2. Keurig Dr Pepper (Green Mountain Coffee Roasters)
1. Starbucks

There’s no doubt that we’re crazy for coffee in this country. Acc0rding to Drive Research, 74% of us drink it daily, and our collective consumption amounts to what Food Beverage Insider estimates is about 517 million cups a day. There are said to be more than 38,000 branded coffee shops in the U.S., and possibly as many as 12,000 more independent purveyors of our favorite hot caffeinated drink.

The American coffee scene has changed dramatically since the mid-20th century. It used to be that a cup of joe was a cup of joe. People drank it with their breakfast or after lunch or dinner (or with those meals). It came in two flavors, regular and decaf, and the only things you added to it were milk or cream and sugar or artificial sweetener (unless you were the type who preferred your java with a shot of rum or brandy).

If you made your own, you bought pre-ground beans in a can or bag at the market and brewed it in a percolator or by the drip method (which became automated with the introduction of the Mr. Coffee machines in 1972). Wherever you drank it, the coffee was almost certainly made from a blend of high-quality Arabica and lesser Robusta beans.

Coffee aficionados talk of coffee in terms of waves. What has just been described was first-wave coffee. The second wave arrived when small shops like the pioneering Peet’s in Berkeley, CA, began selling single-origin beans, developing custom blends (often entirely Arabica), and popularizing espresso and its offshoots, like cappuccino and latte. Starbucks took this concept and ran with it. (Here’s a look at the best independent coffee shop in every state.)

Third-wave coffee shops typically offer brewing options beyond what comes out of the espresso machine — like cold brew and pour-over. They also pay attention to fair trade practices and sustainability, and source beans not just from specific regions but from individual estates, often working directly with farmers. (These are the top coffee-producing countries in the world.)

There are representatives of each of these waves among the biggest coffee brands in America based on annual sales. 24/7 Tempo compiled a list of the top ten of these, using sources including the data site Statista, the German-based coffee information site Coffeeness, and the online recruitment site Zippia, as well as the websites of the companies listed.

Note that most of these companies sell food products as well as non-coffee beverages. Annual revenue figures reflect the entire business of these corporations, not just their coffee sales.

To top