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Coffee Species & Varieties

People often say “bean type” when they mean roast or origin, but the plant itself matters. Species and cultivars influence sweetness, acidity, body, disease resistance, and how much work it takes to grow the coffee.

Arabica dominates specialty coffee because it tends to offer more sweetness, more aromatic complexity, and a wider flavor range.

Typical profile:

  • more acidity and nuance
  • softer bitterness
  • floral, fruit, chocolate, citrus, and sugar-browning notes

It is also more delicate to grow, especially at higher altitudes where cooler temperatures slow maturation and improve flavor development.

Robusta is hardier, more disease resistant, and often higher yielding. It usually contains more caffeine and more bitterness.

Typical profile:

  • heavier body
  • earthier, woodier, darker flavors
  • lower aromatic complexity than top-tier Arabica

High-quality fine robusta exists, but commodity robusta has shaped its reputation. In espresso blends, small percentages can add crema and punch.

A cultivar is a distinct cultivated variety inside a species. Cultivars can change how sweet or floral a coffee is, how it responds to climate stress, and how farmers manage disease pressure.

These are foundational Arabica lineages. Many modern cultivars trace back to them.

  • Typica is known for clarity and elegance, but often lower yield.
  • Bourbon often brings sweetness and a rounded fruit profile.

These are productive Latin American workhorses that became common because they are more manageable for many farms.

  • approachable sweetness
  • balanced acidity
  • common in blends and reliable single origins

Famous Kenyan selections known for vivid acidity, blackcurrant-like fruit, and structured sweetness when grown well.

One of the most famous specialty cultivars. At its best, it can show jasmine, bergamot, and delicate tropical fruit with striking clarity.

It is prized because it can be extraordinary, not because the name alone guarantees quality.

A hybrid known for large seeds and dramatic cup profiles, often showing spice, tropical fruit, and heavy sweetness.

Species sets the broad ceiling and style. Cultivar refines the character. Origin and processing then shape how that potential expresses in the cup.

When a label lists only the country, you know something. When it also lists the cultivar, you know much more about what the producer and roaster are trying to highlight.

For the next layer, see how geography changes flavor in Origins & Flavor Map.