Coffee, Other Mild Arabicas Monthly Price - Baht per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 121.421 (104.15%)
Chart

Description: Coffee (ICO), International Coffee Organization indicator price, other mild Arabicas, average New York and Bremen/Hamburg markets, ex-dock

Unit: Baht per Kilogram



Source: International Coffee Organization; Thomson Reuters Datastream; Complete Coffee Coverage; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Coffee, Other Mild Arabicas refers to a group of washed arabica coffees traded on international markets and typically priced in US dollars per kilogram. In commodity reporting, the standard reference is the International Coffee Organization (ICO) New York cash price, ex-dock, which reflects a physical market benchmark for deliverable coffee rather than a futures contract settlement. “Other Milds” generally includes arabica coffees from origins such as Colombia and several Central American and East African producers, distinguished from Brazilian Naturals and from robusta coffee. The category is used in green coffee trade, before roasting, blending, or retail packaging.

These coffees are valued for their relatively mild acidity, clean cup profile, and suitability for higher-quality blends and single-origin products. They are consumed primarily as roasted and ground coffee, instant coffee inputs, and espresso blends. Because coffee is a perennial crop and a globally traded agricultural beverage, its pricing reflects both farm-level production conditions and downstream demand from roasters, traders, and food-service buyers.

Supply Drivers

Supply of Other Mild Arabicas is shaped by perennial tree biology, altitude, rainfall patterns, and the long production cycle of coffee plants. The crop is concentrated in tropical highland regions where cooler temperatures, well-distributed rainfall, and volcanic or fertile soils support arabica cultivation. Long-standing producing areas include Colombia, Central America, parts of East Africa, and selected highland zones in Asia and the Americas. These regions are favored because arabica quality declines in excessive heat and low elevations.

Production is sensitive to weather during flowering, cherry development, and harvest. Drought, excessive rain, frost in rare high-altitude locations, and storm damage can all reduce yields or quality. Coffee trees also exhibit biennial bearing tendencies in some conditions, with output varying between heavier and lighter crop cycles. Pest and disease pressure, especially coffee leaf rust and berry borers, can constrain supply and raise production costs. Because coffee is harvested annually, supply responds with a lag to price signals: new plantings take several years to bear commercially, and farm renovation is capital intensive.

Infrastructure matters as well. Roads, milling capacity, port access, and inland transport affect the ability to move parchment and green coffee to export channels. Smallholder production is common in many origins, which makes supply dependent on farmgate prices, labor availability, and access to credit and inputs.

Demand Drivers

Demand for Other Mild Arabicas is driven by global beverage consumption, especially in markets that favor washed arabica profiles for brewed coffee, espresso, and premium blends. Roasters use these coffees for cup quality, aroma, and blending balance, often combining them with other arabicas or robusta to adjust flavor, body, and caffeine content. Substitution occurs across coffee types: when relative prices change, buyers may shift between Other Milds, Brazilian Naturals, and robusta depending on desired taste and cost.

Consumption is influenced by population growth, urbanization, income levels, and café culture, but coffee also has a broad habitual demand base because it is consumed daily by many households. Demand is less seasonal than supply, though weather, holidays, and retail purchasing cycles can affect short-term buying patterns. Instant coffee and food-service channels create additional industrial demand for green beans, while specialty coffee markets place a premium on traceability, origin characteristics, and processing consistency.

Long-run demand is also shaped by product substitution with tea, cocoa-based beverages, energy drinks, and ready-to-drink alternatives. However, coffee retains a strong position because of established consumption habits, global distribution networks, and the compatibility of arabica with premium roasting and blending applications.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Coffee prices are influenced by the US dollar because international trade is commonly invoiced in dollars; a stronger dollar tends to make coffee more expensive in local-currency terms for importing countries and can affect purchasing behavior. Interest rates matter through inventory financing and carry costs, since traders, roasters, and exporters often hold physical stocks between harvest and consumption. When storage and financing costs are high, nearby supply can command a premium over deferred supply, while ample inventories can encourage contango structures.

As a storable agricultural commodity, coffee also responds to broader risk sentiment and to shifts in commodity index flows, though its linkage to financial assets is weaker than that of metals or energy. Inflation can affect input costs such as labor, fertilizer, transport, and packaging, which feed back into farm economics and trade margins. Exchange-rate movements in producing countries also matter because they alter producer incentives and export competitiveness.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2021116.59-
May 2021128.6510.35%
Jun 2021133.303.61%
Jul 2021146.9710.25%
Aug 2021157.837.39%
Sep 2021164.764.39%
Oct 2021177.797.91%
Nov 2021188.786.19%
Dec 2021198.645.22%
Jan 2022198.780.07%
Feb 2022201.781.51%
Mar 2022189.53-6.07%
Apr 2022197.854.39%
May 2022197.66-0.10%
Jun 2022210.796.64%
Jul 2022205.10-2.70%
Aug 2022212.403.56%
Sep 2022218.642.94%
Oct 2022200.61-8.25%
Nov 2022172.21-14.15%
Dec 2022161.33-6.32%
Jan 2023151.59-6.03%
Feb 2023172.0313.48%
Mar 2023169.16-1.67%
Apr 2023173.482.55%
May 2023166.00-4.31%
Jun 2023159.53-3.89%
Jul 2023147.64-7.46%
Aug 2023144.39-2.20%
Sep 2023145.320.65%
Oct 2023147.791.70%
Nov 2023154.384.46%
Dec 2023163.325.79%
Jan 2024157.35-3.65%
Feb 2024164.964.84%
Mar 2024165.750.48%
Apr 2024193.8816.97%
May 2024186.12-4.00%
Jun 2024201.148.07%
Jul 2024205.612.22%
Aug 2024200.19-2.64%
Sep 2024204.232.02%
Oct 2024203.45-0.38%
Nov 2024231.7713.92%
Dec 2024258.8811.69%
Jan 2025267.393.29%
Feb 2025305.7314.34%
Mar 2025301.69-1.32%
Apr 2025291.57-3.36%
May 2025289.04-0.87%
Jun 2025261.22-9.63%
Jul 2025232.93-10.83%
Aug 2025262.2212.58%
Sep 2025282.487.72%
Oct 2025289.712.56%
Nov 2025293.401.27%
Dec 2025265.17-9.62%
Jan 2026251.22-5.26%
Feb 2026221.43-11.86%
Mar 2026238.017.48%

Top Companies

Tata Coffee
Website: http://www.tatacoffee.com/
Location: Bangalore, India
Estimated Production: 10000 metric tonnes per year

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