Tea Monthly Price - Rupiah per Kilogram

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2011 - Jan 2019: 9,373.934 (40.58%)
Chart

Description: Tea (Mombasa/Nairobi auctions), African origin, all tea, arithmetic average of weekly quotes.

Unit: Rupiah per Kilogram



Source: International Tea Committee; African Tea Brokers Ltd.; Tea Broker's Association of London; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

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

Overview

Tea is an agricultural beverage commodity made from the leaves and buds of Camellia sinensis. In commodity markets, it is commonly priced by grade and origin, with auction and export quotations used to compare quality across producing regions. A widely cited benchmark is the Mombasa auction price, often reported as the average of the best three offers in US dollars per kilogram. Tea is traded in several processed forms, including black tea, green tea, oolong tea, and specialty teas, but black tea dominates bulk international trade. It is consumed primarily as an infusion and is used both in household consumption and in foodservice, instant tea, and flavored beverage products. Because tea quality depends on cultivar, elevation, leaf standard, and processing method, prices vary substantially across origins and grades. The market links agricultural production, labor-intensive harvesting, and international blending and packaging, making it sensitive to both farm-level conditions and downstream consumer demand.

Supply Drivers

Tea supply is shaped by perennial plantation agriculture, labor availability, climate, and processing capacity. Major producing regions include East Africa, South Asia, China, and parts of Southeast Asia, where warm temperatures, reliable rainfall, and suitable elevation support repeated leaf flushes. Unlike annual crops, tea bushes remain productive for many years, but yields depend on pruning cycles, plant age, and replanting decisions that take time to affect output. Harvesting is often selective and labor-intensive, especially for higher grades, so wage costs and labor supply influence the volume and quality of leaf picked.

Weather is a persistent supply driver. Rainfall timing, drought, excessive heat, frost in highland areas, and storm damage all affect leaf growth and quality. Tea is also vulnerable to pests and diseases, which can reduce yields or raise production costs. Processing infrastructure matters because fresh leaf must be withered, rolled, oxidized, dried, and sorted soon after harvest; bottlenecks in transport or factory capacity can lower grade and market value. Because tea is bulky and relatively low in unit value, freight, port access, and auction logistics also shape export competitiveness.

Demand Drivers

Tea demand is driven by household consumption, foodservice use, and industrial blending for packaged beverages. It is a staple drink in many importing and producing countries, with consumption patterns shaped by culture, income, and taste preferences. Black tea remains the main traded form in bulk markets, while green tea and specialty teas serve distinct consumer segments. Demand is relatively stable compared with many discretionary beverages because tea is often purchased as a daily household item, though premium segments are more sensitive to income and branding.

Substitution plays an important role. Tea competes with coffee, cocoa-based drinks, soft drinks, and bottled beverages, while within tea markets consumers may switch among origins, grades, and blends. In some regions, tea consumption rises in cooler seasons and falls in warmer periods, reflecting its role as a hot beverage, although iced tea and ready-to-drink products broaden usage. Long-run demand is also shaped by urbanization, retail packaging, and the expansion of instant and convenience formats. Health perceptions can influence preferences between tea types, but the core demand mechanism remains the beverage’s low cost per serving and broad cultural acceptance.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Tea prices are influenced by exchange rates because international trade is typically denominated in US dollars while production costs are incurred in local currencies. A weaker local currency can support producer margins, while a stronger dollar can affect import costs for buyers. Interest rates matter indirectly through inventory financing, since tea can be stored, blended, and released over time. When storage and financing costs are high, nearby supply tends to command a different price relationship than deferred supply.

Tea is less of a financial asset than some other commodities, so macro links are usually mediated through consumer spending, freight costs, and currency movements rather than speculative investment flows. Inflation in labor, packaging, energy, and transport costs can affect export prices. Because tea is a storable agricultural good, auction and forward pricing can reflect seasonal supply patterns and the cost of carrying inventories between harvest periods.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 201123,098.97-
May 201122,417.11-2.95%
Jun 201123,216.053.56%
Jul 201123,894.642.92%
Aug 201123,889.60-0.02%
Sep 201123,435.71-1.90%
Oct 201123,920.152.07%
Nov 201123,970.720.21%
Dec 201123,720.92-1.04%
Jan 201223,945.730.95%
Feb 201223,826.79-0.50%
Mar 201225,021.365.01%
Apr 201225,507.891.94%
May 201225,952.321.74%
Jun 201227,219.294.88%
Jul 201228,288.253.93%
Aug 201229,258.923.43%
Sep 201229,078.72-0.62%
Oct 201227,638.45-4.95%
Nov 201229,272.885.91%
Dec 201229,709.341.49%
Jan 201329,541.69-0.56%
Feb 201328,192.40-4.57%
Mar 201325,830.52-8.38%
Apr 201323,045.99-10.78%
May 201323,325.041.21%
Jun 201322,826.33-2.14%
Jul 201322,995.210.74%
Aug 201324,143.464.99%
Sep 201324,071.60-0.30%
Oct 201322,733.81-5.56%
Nov 201324,192.336.42%
Dec 201328,162.9716.41%
Jan 201431,198.0110.78%
Feb 201426,560.08-14.87%
Mar 201423,880.92-10.09%
Apr 201423,900.720.08%
May 201422,578.51-5.53%
Jun 201422,707.610.57%
Jul 201424,522.567.99%
Aug 201423,776.27-3.04%
Sep 201422,489.83-5.41%
Oct 201423,191.743.12%
Nov 201423,094.61-0.42%
Dec 201423,383.981.25%
Jan 201529,192.3224.84%
Feb 201530,854.715.69%
Mar 201535,541.7515.19%
Apr 201535,835.340.83%
May 201540,596.4213.29%
Jun 201543,534.297.24%
Jul 201545,331.084.13%
Aug 201543,688.15-3.62%
Sep 201544,611.772.11%
Oct 201544,752.020.31%
Nov 201541,816.35-6.56%
Dec 201541,979.440.39%
Jan 201637,772.21-10.02%
Feb 201633,524.12-11.25%
Mar 201630,334.70-9.51%
Apr 201627,809.50-8.32%
May 201629,631.686.55%
Jun 201632,205.758.69%
Jul 201631,870.66-1.04%
Aug 201630,396.30-4.63%
Sep 201630,570.580.57%
Oct 201631,113.021.77%
Nov 201635,606.6114.44%
Dec 201635,822.720.61%
Jan 201740,747.8213.75%
Feb 201740,819.860.18%
Mar 201738,970.32-4.53%
Apr 201738,189.34-2.00%
May 201739,172.412.57%
Jun 201741,752.166.59%
Jul 201739,891.58-4.46%
Aug 201738,690.00-3.01%
Sep 201739,371.451.76%
Oct 201741,385.895.12%
Nov 201740,318.36-2.58%
Dec 201737,823.10-6.19%
Jan 201839,608.504.72%
Feb 201840,642.412.61%
Mar 201838,660.68-4.88%
Apr 201837,129.94-3.96%
May 201836,835.68-0.79%
Jun 201835,324.10-4.10%
Jul 201835,900.581.63%
Aug 201834,943.66-2.67%
Sep 201835,847.282.59%
Oct 201836,731.312.47%
Nov 201834,715.60-5.49%
Dec 201833,360.55-3.90%
Jan 201932,472.90-2.66%

Top Companies

Unilever (Lipton)
Website: http://www.unilever.com/
Location: London, UK

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