Young Consumers Return to Coffee…and Other Trends

 
 
 
 

Photo: Gordana Adamovic-Mladenovic 

According to trends documented by the National Coffee Association (NCA) in their just-released 2011 National Coffee Drinking Trends, coffee drinking remains strong – resistant to the economical downturn. In fact, 10% more young people than last year reported drinking coffee this year. This is one pattern among several others covered in the report. Other areas included gourmet coffee consumption, life-stage data and opinions of the single cup brewer.

The report correlated the increase in younger age coffee consumption with an increase in the perception of their personal financial situations over the past six months. This was interesting, because in the 40 plus age group, a higher percentage felt worse about the financial situation. There was no mention of whether or not coffee consumption went down among those over 40.

However, it was found that over three quarters of the adult population drinks coffee, though the figure for daily consumption goes down to 58%. Over a third of that is gourmet coffee, which accounts for 37% of all coffee drinks.

It was also found that more than three out of four coffee drinkers was drinking the beverage before the age of 24. Many started in their teens.

One of the hottest new items on the coffee scene in the past few years has been the single cup brewer. These have been heavily marketed, so it’s interesting to note that since 2005, purchases for home use have averaged one percent a year. Of those that have the single cup system, over a third bought the machine this year. The brewers are catching on, as consumers reported they are now more likely to replace their current coffee brewer with single cup. Indeed, another question showed that the perception of these brewers has improved over the last four years, with more consumers rating them as excellent or very good. It’s possible that with more and more hotels and offices using these machines, consumers are experiencing the ease of use coupled with good tasting brew.

So these are the stats that were released. We’re left with the task of figuring out what it all means.  The findings just seem to confirm what we know about coffee demand, which has continued to increase despite any economical concerns consumers might have. We’ve reported in the past that coffee is one of those items that won’t be eliminated during times of budget tightening. The gourmet coffee treat is here to stay in many consumers’ daily routine. We love coffee!

REVIEWS & COMMENTS

  • GOOD STATS

    Wakeknot | Thu, 10/27/2011 - 20:45

    more drink gourmet coffee than I would have dreamed of.

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  • ROCK YOU 80S SUN GLASSES

    intrepid510 | Tue, 10/18/2011 - 13:02

    Hmm well I will be on a vacation in a few weeks time and I will be interested to see if the kcup will be in my room. They are ideal for a hotel, much better than a mini pot of coffee in my opinion. I have a question about the report though, where is a daily cup coming from home or out? and I assume the qualify Starbucks as gourmet. Also coffee is hipster for sure!

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  • BETTER COFFEE

    EricBNC | Sun, 08/14/2011 - 21:03


    Younger people are looking for a quality coffee experience - not just a quick jolt - their caffeine fix comes from more potent sources than coffee now days with coffee becoming an enjoyable "break in the day" beverage.

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  • YOUNG COFFEE DRINKERS

    Gazy | Wed, 07/13/2011 - 18:39

    Back in January I wrote a blog about the trend observed by a Time Mag article about how young people are more inclined to energy drinks than coffee. Now you provide us with some stats that indicate a trend towards coffee.
    Stats and surveys are to be taken with an ounce of precaution and lead us not into conclusions. What must be done, on the part of coffee suppliers (growers and roasters), is to continue to improve quality. Us in marketing, must remove the caffeine/energy-boosting syndrome from coffee and convince consumers that coffee is the most pleasurable drink ever invented.

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  • ABSOLUTELY

    jbviau | Wed, 06/29/2011 - 12:54

    Life's too short to drink bad coffee (or cut down/drink none at all). The good stuff is a little indulgence I can always justify.

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