Temperature changes and dry weather caused by climate change are pushing costs higher
This article was written by Ritika Dubey and was published in the Toronto Star on October 7, 2025.
Your daily cup of java is getting a little more expensive as roasters and cafés grapple with rising coffee bean prices.
Climate change has been the biggest contributor to the ongoing surge in bean prices, as coffee crops are very sensitive to temperature changes, said Michael von Massow, food economist at the University of Guelph.
“We’ve seen some increases in disease and some decreases in yield that have lowered supply, and basic economics 101 — when supply goes down, prices go up,” he said on Monday.
Coffee prices have remained high amid concerns of dry weather in Brazil, a major coffeeproducing country.
That’s making your daily cup of coffee more expensive, whether you’re brewing it at home or buying a coffee at a café. Statistics Canada data shows Canadians paid 27.9 per cent more for their coffee at a grocery store in August compared with a year earlier.
Robert Carter, president of the Coffee Association of Canada, said the surge in coffee prices is a continuation of what roasters and cafés saw last year.
“The commodity side is still fluctuating, and the production side, we’re still seeing limited production challenges out of various countries such as Colombia and Brazil,” he said.
Carter said cafés and coffee bean roasters were already struggling with rising operational costs, such as with packaging and labour, and now coffee bean prices are adding to their challenges.
“The cost of goods, which coffee would fall into, has definitely seen an increase … within the double digits,” he said.
Coffee prices are also seeing added price pressures from tariffs, even as Canada dropped its countertariffs in September.
Von Massow suspects price fluctuations are likely hurting smaller roasters in Canada more than larger players who buy directly from producers. Smallscale coffee roasters typically buy coffee beans from brokers who aggregate supply from farmers and coffeeproducing countries.
“The smaller roasters are going to get squeezed, everyone gets squeezed, as costs go up because we as consumers are resistant to price increases and they don’t want to see volume go down,” he said.
Von Massow said it will be more difficult for smaller roasters to pass down costs to their customers.
“They’ve always differentiated not on price, but on product,” he said of smaller roasters. “But the greater the price disparity is, the less their demand will be.”
However, some costs will be mitigated for these roasters as the impact of countertariffs start to wear off, von Massow said. Meanwhile, other costs are likely to be passed on to customers.
“We’re seeing big companies start to announce some price increases as the shortages become more sustained,” he said.
Coffee chain Tim Hortons said it will increase the price of its coffee by an average of three cents per cup.
Speculation on coffee futures — a way of measuring commodity prices based on contracts for future delivery in a publiclytraded market — have also amplified price pressures.
“The coffee market has been on a rollercoaster for the past year,” said Adam Pesce, president of Oakville, Ont.headquartered Reunion Coffee Roasters, which sells wholesale and also runs a retail café in Toronto.
Reunion has had to increase prices over the past several months to match its rising costs, said Pesce.
Coffee prices are also seeing added price pressures from tariffs, even as Canada dropped its countertariffs in September