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Collage of assorted coffee bags from different coffee subscription services against a blue background.

The best coffee subscriptions ensure that your favorite brew is always around and are a great way to try new flavors, origins, and roasters. Trade

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One of the worst nightmares for coffee drinkers is to wake up, shuffle to the kitchen, and realize that you see your best coffee maker but no coffee. The peace of mind in knowing that you have a steady stream of coffee coming makes one of the best coffee subscriptions worthwhile.

Maybe you like switching up what you’re drinking each time, or maybe you want someone to curate your brew for you. Whatever you’re looking for, you’ll find it in the outstanding offerings below. Our top pick is Trade Coffee, thanks to the customizability and extensive roster of roasters and blends. If you’re looking for a gift subscription, Driftaway Coffee starts every subscription off with a coffee explorer box. It’s exciting to try out and alleviate the stress of choosing the perfect blend for someone else’s palate.  

Top picks for the best coffee subscriptions

Best overall: Trade Coffee

Best to gift: Driftaway Coffee

Best for beginners: Blue Bottle Coffee

Best for discovery: Atlas Coffee Club

Best small-batch: Crema.co

Best for freshness: Devoción

Best overall

As you set up your subscription, you tell Trade how you prefer to brew your coffee, how you take it, and your ideal roast and flavor profile. The company matches you with your ideal beans. You know exactly what’s coming, the roaster’s schedule for roasting, when your bag was roasted (probably within the past few days), and why you were matched with it. 

It’s easy to adjust your delivery schedule, choose the exact beans you’re getting, and discover new favorites. Trade makes exploring coffee a fun, zero-headache adventure.

Read our full Trade Coffee review.

Best for gifting

The tricky thing with choosing a subscription gift is that it’s often hard to pinpoint the recipient’s preferences. For that reason, Driftaway makes an excellent gift. Every new subscriber gets a Coffee Explorer Kit, consisting of four 1-oz bags. Your recipient ranks each coffee, giving Driftaway insight into their preferences for future deliveries. 

The gifter chooses between a one-year, six-month, or three-month subscription, delivering either every month or every two weeks (there are more options if you’re subscribing for yourself). The size of each delivery can be 8 ounces, 12 ounces, or 1 pound, and they can set up either a whole bean subscription, a ground subscription, a cold brew bag subscription, or a “Mystery Kit” where the names are hidden (don’t worry, they can find out what they’re drinking at the weekly virtual tastings). 

The recipient also gets an account from which they can pause their shipment, change their address, or do anything else, and the bags even come with their name on them. 

Read our full Driftaway Coffee review.

Best for beginners

If you’re a little wary of the idea of subscriptions, try Blue Bottle’s. For one thing, it offers a way to try it at little cost — the first bag is free and you only pay the $5 shipping. You can try any of its three subscription offerings this way: the single-origin, blend, or espresso assortments. 

Your subscription can be as little as a six-ounce bag, freshly roasted of course, and the brand offers lots of information on how each coffee should be prepared. It’s easy to pause or cancel your subscription if you choose not to move forward.

Read our full Blue Bottle Coffee review.

Best for discovery

Atlas Coffee Club Single Bag Monthly Subscription

Each month, Atlas highlights single-origin, sustainably farmed coffee beans from a specific country. A half bag subscription costs $9 per month, a full bag costs $14 per month, and two bags costs $28 per month, plus shipping.

With Atlas’s subscription, you’ll learn a lot about different regions, their typical coffee flavor profiles, and what makes each one special. Each month, you receive 6 to 24 ounces of freshly-roasted coffee, flavor notes, a postcard, and brewing tips. 

As you’re setting up your subscription, you choose how much coffee you want per shipment, whether you want it every two or four weeks, your roast preferences, and whether you want it ground or not. It’s a great way for new, enthusiastic coffee drinkers to dip their toes into the specialty coffee world in an accessible, fun way. The website offers clear, illustrated guides on topics from “how to make coffee with a French press” to “how to make coffee without a coffee maker.”

Read our full Atlas Coffee Club review.

Best small-batch

Crema.co offers a lot of great features that overlap with some of our other picks: their first shipment to you is a Discovery Kit — where you figure out your preferences by tasting through a selection — and the subscription is easy to customize. 

The initial quiz is a little more interactive, asking for specific tasting notes you like and letting you know your percentage match with each brew it’s recommending. But, two unique things about Crema.co are a) its focus on tiny independent roasters b) you can take the quiz to be matched with your perfect coffee and order it by the bag, rather than setting up a subscription. 

It also has a personality-driven, informative newsletter and is proudly not on social media. If you like to feel like you’re supporting cool humans, rather than a corporation, Crema.co is a great choice.

Best for freshness

If you’re committed to (or even a little obsessive about) your produce and meat being as fresh as possible, why should your coffee be any different? Brooklyn-based roaster Devoción works with Colombian growers, who harvest coffee year-round. The service claims “faster transport from origin to cup than any other purveyor,” which can be in as little as 10 days. 

Devoción’s coffees are flavorful, balanced, and unlike anything else on the market, thanks to its unique supplier relationships. The subscriptions are to individual blends (you can take a quiz on your preferences to be matched to your ideal blend), unlike other roasters offering subscriptions with more variety, but the coffee is next-level enough that it’s worth considering.

What to look for in a coffee subscription

I’ve been working in the specialty food world since 2015, eating, drinking, learning, teaching. For these rankings, I tasted through the available coffee subscriptions, both from roasters and otherwise. This is what I was looking for:

Flavor and quality of the beans: Tastes vary, but there are some objective flaws in coffee beans, such as beans tasting burnt. This was less about how much I liked each selection personally and more about how balanced the coffees were and whether they matched their flavor notes. 

Ease of setup: Coffee and subscription services should make our lives easier. If a subscription was confusing to set up or to understand when and what coffee was coming, that knocked off a few points. The best subscriptions also offered notes on preparing the coffees they sent. 

Ease of customization: If you’re traveling, slowing down on caffeine, or simply don’t want to continue your subscription, that should not require three emails and a phone call. Subscriptions that made it easy to pause or cancel were prioritized. Extra points were also given to subscription services that allowed the subscriber to customize the beans they received based on flavor profile and preferred method of brewing.

Christine Clark

Freelance Reporter

Christine Clark is a freelance writer who covers specialty food and beverage, especially cheese and wine. She has been in the food and beverage world for a little under a decade. Christine got her start in cheese at Murray’s Cheese in New York City, where she ran the education department, teaching and programming classes on cheese and cheesemaking (everything from wine to mezcal to chocolate to smoked fish was fair cheese-pairing game). Christine is a Certified Cheese Professional with the American Cheese Society and has taught cheese and pairing classes around the world. Some of her bylines can be found in VinePair, Wine Enthusiast, Epicurious, AllRecipes, The Spruce Eats, Food52, and more and she has been featured as a cheese expert in The New York Times, Bon Appetit, FirstWeFeast, and HuffPost. Learn more about how our team of experts tests and reviews products at Insider here.

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Disclosure: Written and researched by the Insider Reviews team. We highlight products and services you might find interesting. If you buy them, we may get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our partners. We may receive products free of charge from manufacturers to test. This does not drive our decision as to whether or not a product is featured or recommended. We operate independently from our advertising team. We welcome your feedback. Email us at reviews@businessinsider.com.

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