I've spent time consulting with tea shops, coffee shops, and restaurants on how to improve the way they sell tea. What I've found again and again is that many businesses offer a half-assed effort to serve tea, meanwhile the market for tea has been increasing significantly over the years. I want to help you get on the train.
When it comes to tea sales in coffee shops, restaurants, and businesses, the numbers are often underwhelming — not because customers don't want good tea, but because we're not giving them anything worth wanting.
I've walked into places with phenomenal food, thoughtfully curated coffee menus, and a genuine passion for their craft... only to find the tea selection is a box of off-brand bags from Costco or Sam's Club, sitting in a drawer somewhere, barely worth listing on the menu. At that point, you're not really selling tea. You're just checking a box. And you're not making enough money off it to justify even having it there. It's the cheapest thing on the menu. But what if tea could actually bring value to your customers?
Here's the thing: tea sales in a restaurant, coffee shop, or any food-and-beverage business have enormous untapped potential. People pay for an experience. And tea, done well, is one of the most experiential beverages you can offer. Upgrading your tea can open up a whole new customer profile, give your team something fresh to innovate with, and genuinely improve your margins because premium, well-presented tea can deserve a premium price.
This is a win for everyone. Your customers get something unique and beautiful. Your staff get something interesting to talk about and sell. And you get to charge more for it because it's genuinely worth more.
Before getting into the specifics, let's talk about why improving tea sales is worth your time and investment.
The specialty coffee world has done something remarkable over the past two decades — it trained people to pay $6, $7, $8 for a cup of coffee because the experience, quality, and craft justified it. I was just in Southern California and went to a bumping coffee shop with $10 espressos and $17 pourovers. And people had no problem paying for the quality.
Tea has that same potential, and in many ways even more, because most people haven't yet had the experience of truly great tea served thoughtfully. That novelty is an opportunity.
A curated loose-leaf tea program with interesting origins, beautiful presentation, and a touch of ceremony — can become a genuine differentiator for your business. It's one of the easiest ways to offer something meaningful that your competitors almost certainly aren't doing well. And because the raw cost of quality loose-leaf tea is still relatively modest, the margin when you charge appropriately for the experience can be excellent.
Here's my top tips.
This is my single highest recommendation to anyone looking to increase their tea sales in a coffee shop, restaurant, or business: get the tea out where people can smell it and see it.
Tea does not sell by words alone. No matter how beautiful your menu design is or how carefully you've written the description, tea sells best when it's in someone's hands and in their nostrils. The moment a guest picks up a jar, pops the lid, and takes a smell — you've already made the sale most of the time. See that smile on their face?
My recommendation is simple: use small, clean glass jars with an airtight seal that can be easily opened. Display them on the counter, on the table, or wherever guests naturally interact with your team. Make it easy and inviting for someone to pick one up and take a sniff. You'll be amazed at how often that one moment, that sensory spark, is all it takes. They'll pass it to their friend. They'll order some!
This also creates natural conversation. Your team doesn't have to memorize a long sales pitch. They just hand someone a jar and let the tea do the talking.
If you're still using tea bags, it's time to make the switch to loose-leaf tea. Not just for quality reasons (though the flavor difference is real and noticeable), but because loose-leaf tea is simply more beautiful. It looks interesting. It smells incredible. It invites curiosity.
Guests can see what they're actually drinking — the leaves, the botanicals, the color. It turns a commodity into something worth paying attention to.
Once you've made that switch, the creative possibilities open up significantly — and this matters especially if you work primarily in the coffee world.
Here's the reality: there are only so many things you can do with an espresso machine before you've exhausted the menu. Cappuccinos, lattes, flat whites, iced coffees... all wonderful, but the template is familiar. I've watched coffee shops come alive with renewed energy when the tea lineup becomes genuinely competitive with the coffee options. When guests look at the menu and see five or six tea drinks that are as interesting and thoughtfully crafted as anything on the espresso side, it changes the appeal. Make it premium, make it an experience.
The more people can participate in the process, the more ownership they feel over it, and the more they enjoy it. It sounds simple, but it's powerful.
My biggest recommendation here is to offer a French press service for loose-leaf tea. Steep the tea in a glass French press and let the guest take it to their table with them. It's visually stunning, it keeps the tea warm, and it gives the guest something to interact with and control. Give them ceramic cups, several. Make it shareable. Put it on wood.
BONUS: Want to give an extra kick to the experience? Get really small glass french presses. Offer a flight, like they do with whiskey and beer.
You can take it even further by pairing the French press with a small hourglass timer set with one or two minutes, so guests can time their own steep. Or offer a teapot/press that they pour themselves. These are small investments that dramatically elevate the experience and give people something to talk about.
When someone walks out having had that kind of tea service, they remember it. They come back for it. They tell people about it. That's how you build a tea sales program in a coffee shop or restaurant that actually means something.
The upsell? Start selling those teas to take home. Either bags or loose leaf. Make that a clear option.
If you put these things in place — the loose-leaf switch, the glass jar displays, the creative menu, the hands-on service — you won't just improve your tea sales. You'll develop a whole new customer profile. Some of your guests will start coming in specifically because of the tea. Others who didn't think they were tea people will discover they are, because someone finally gave them a reason to care.
The bar is honestly low right now. Most businesses are doing very little with tea, which means that even modest upgrades make you stand out in a meaningful way. A thoughtful loose-leaf tea program, well presented and genuinely enjoyed by your team, is one of the best investments you can make in your menu.
Have questions about where to source good loose-leaf tea? Send me an email at josh.caliguire@gmail.com. I'm happy to give recommendations based on where you're located and what your customer profile looks like.