A coffee tree yields about one pound of coffee in a year.
Your Morning Coffee Comes From One Pound Per Tree
Your morning cup of coffee represents a surprisingly small fraction of a tree's entire annual production. A healthy coffee tree yields approximately one pound of roasted coffee per year—barely enough to keep a moderate coffee drinker caffeinated for a couple of weeks.
But here's where it gets interesting: that single pound is the result of harvesting roughly 2,000 coffee cherries. Each cherry typically contains two coffee beans, meaning one tree produces about 4,000 individual beans annually. The dramatic difference between cherry weight and final product comes down to processing.
From Cherry to Cup: The 5-to-1 Rule
Coffee doesn't grow as beans—it grows as bright red cherries that look more like cranberries than anything you'd associate with your espresso. The tree produces 5 to 10 pounds of these cherries each year, but here's the catch: it takes approximately 5 pounds of cherries to produce just 1 pound of roasted coffee beans.
The cherries must be harvested, depulped (fruit removed), fermented, washed, dried, and hulled before you get the green coffee beans that roasters work with. Then there's the roasting process itself, which causes additional moisture loss. What started as a plump, juicy cherry becomes a dry, dense bean.
The Economics of Your Coffee Habit
Consider this: the average American drinks about 3 cups of coffee per day, consuming roughly 75 pounds of coffee annually. That's the combined annual production of 75 coffee trees working full-time just to fuel one person's caffeine habit.
- One tree = ~2,000 cherries per year
- One pound of roasted coffee = ~5 pounds of cherries
- One tree's annual yield = about 40-50 cups of brewed coffee
- Average coffee drinker's annual consumption = 75 trees worth of coffee
Coffee trees don't reach full production until they're 3-4 years old, and they'll continue producing for 15-20 years before yields decline significantly. During their productive years, they require careful attention: the right altitude (typically 3,000-6,000 feet), consistent rainfall, rich volcanic soil, and temperatures between 60-70°F.
Why Coffee Costs What It Does
Understanding the 1-pound-per-tree reality helps explain coffee pricing. A small coffee farm with 1,000 trees might produce only 1,000 pounds of roasted coffee annually—and that's if conditions are ideal, pests are controlled, and harvest timing is perfect.
Many specialty coffee cherries are still hand-picked to ensure only ripe cherries are harvested, requiring multiple passes through the same trees as cherries ripen at different rates. A skilled picker can harvest about 100-200 pounds of cherries per day, which will eventually become 20-40 pounds of roasted coffee.
Next time you're grinding beans for your morning brew, remember: those 10 grams of grounds in your cup represent an entire day's worth of one coffee tree's annual production. Suddenly, $15 for a bag of quality coffee seems pretty reasonable.