Types of Coffee Beans: The Complete Guide to Arabica, Robusta, Liberica & Excelsa
Coffee is one of the world’s most nuanced beverages — and it all begins with the bean. Before the roast, before the brew, before the first sip, the type of coffee bean you choose determines nearly everything: the flavour, the body, the acidity, the caffeine, and the story in the cup.
Yet most people buy coffee without knowing which bean they are drinking, let alone why it tastes the way it does. This guide covers everything you need to know about the four main types of coffee beans — Arabica, Robusta, Liberica, and Excelsa — how they compare, and what makes Indian specialty coffee, and specifically Himalayan coffee from Darjeeling and Kalimpong, one of the most exciting emerging origins in the world.
What Are Coffee Beans? (And Why Does the Type Matter?)
Coffee beans are the seeds of the coffee cherry — the fruit of the Coffea plant, grown across tropical regions roughly between the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, a belt often called the Coffee Belt. Once harvested, processed, and roasted, these seeds become the aromatic beans you grind and brew.
There are over 120 species of coffee plants, but only four are commercially relevant:
1. Arabica Coffee Beans — The Gold Standard of Specialty Coffee
Arabica is the world’s most popular coffee bean, accounting for roughly 60–70% of global production. Originally native to Ethiopia and Yemen, Arabica plants are now grown across Central and South America, East Africa, and increasingly in South and Southeast Asia — including India’s own high-altitude regions.
Arabica thrives at elevations between 600 and 2,000 metres or higher, where cooler temperatures slow bean development and allow flavour complexity to build. The plants are more delicate than Robusta — but the cup quality they produce is unmatched.

2. Robusta Coffee Beans — Bold, Bitter & Built for Strength
Robusta is the world’s second most produced coffee, making up roughly 30–40% of global supply. True to its name, the Robusta plant is hardier — more disease-resistant, higher yielding, and able to grow at lower altitudes and higher temperatures than Arabica. In India, Robusta is primarily grown in Karnataka, Kerala, and Andhra Pradesh at lower elevations.
3. Liberica Coffee Beans — Rare, Unusual & Polarising
Liberica accounts for less than 2% of global coffee production. Native to central and west Africa, it is grown today primarily in the Philippines, Malaysia, and parts of Indonesia. It is rarely exported and difficult to source outside Southeast Asia — making it a true niche product.
4. Excelsa Coffee Beans — The Blender’s Secret Weapon
Excelsa is technically classified as a variety of Liberica, though it has a distinct enough flavour that many consider it its own category. Like Liberica, it is grown almost exclusively in Southeast Asia and represents well under 1% of global production.
Arabica vs Robusta vs Liberica — Quick Comparison
Here is a side-by-side overview of the three main commercial coffee bean types at a glance.
| Feature | Arabica ⭐ | Robusta | Liberica |
|---|---|---|---|
| Taste | Smooth, complex, sweet | Bold, bitter, earthy | Smoky, woody, floral |
| Caffeine | Lower (~1.2%) | Higher (~2.7%) | Medium |
| Price | Premium | Affordable | Rare & niche |
| Growing Altitude | High (600–2,000m+) | Low (0–800m) | Low to mid |
| Best For | Specialty, pour-over, espresso | Espresso blends, instant | Adventurous drinkers |
| Global Share | ~60–70% | ~30–40% | <2% |

Coffee Beans in India — A Rapidly Evolving Story
India has been growing coffee for over 350 years — primarily in the Western Ghats regions of Karnataka (Coorg, Chikmagalur), Kerala, and Tamil Nadu. These regions produce both Arabica and Robusta at various altitudes and are well-established on the global coffee map.
But India’s most exciting new coffee story is unfolding in the east — in the high-altitude hills of Darjeeling and Kalimpong in West Bengal, where a small movement of pioneering farmers is growing specialty-grade Arabica at elevations above 1,300 metres.
🏔 Himalayan Coffee — India’s Emerging Specialty Origin
The Darjeeling and Kalimpong region has long been famous for tea — but its conditions are equally suited to exceptional Arabica coffee. The combination of high altitude, cool temperatures, misty mountain air, and rich biodiversity creates a microclimate that produces slow-grown beans with remarkable complexity.
Himalayan coffee from Kalimpong has already earned specialty-grade recognition, with cupping scores above 84 from the Coffee Board of India. Tasting notes include mixed berries, plum, jasmine-like florals, stone fruit, and roasted nuts — a profile that stands comfortably alongside established Indian and international specialty origins.
- High altitude growing — above 1,300 metres — slows bean development, builds complexity
- Shade-grown — under diverse forest canopy — more sustainable, richer flavour
- Small-batch, hand-harvested — careful selection at every stage
- Naturally processed — allows fruit characteristics to develop fully in the bean
- Pioneer farmers — first-generation growers bringing extraordinary dedication to a new crop
Coffee Processing Methods — How They Affect Flavour
The way coffee is processed after harvesting dramatically affects the final cup — and is one of the most important factors beyond bean type itself. According to the Specialty Coffee Association, processing method is one of the key variables in a coffee’s final cupping score.

Whole Bean vs Ground Coffee — Which Should You Buy?
This is one of the most common questions from specialty coffee beginners — and the answer is almost always the same: whole beans.
Choosing Coffee Beans by Brewing Method
Different brewing methods extract different qualities from the same bean. Here is a simple guide to matching your bean and roast to your brewer:
The Saakya Approach — Coffee as a Conscious Experience
At Saakya, coffee is not a commodity. It is a carefully traced, mindfully sourced experience — from a specific farm, at a specific altitude, in a specific season.

Frequently Asked Questions About Coffee Beans
Your Best Cup Starts with the Right Bean
100% Arabica. Specialty grade. Shade-grown above 1,300 metres in Darjeeling & Kalimpong. Freshly roasted in small batches. Traceable to source.
Final Thoughts — The Bean Is Where Great Coffee Begins
Understanding the types of coffee beans transforms the way you experience coffee. It moves you from passive consumption to active appreciation — from drinking whatever is on the shelf to choosing a bean, an origin, a process, and a story.
The difference between a mass-market commercial blend and a freshly roasted, single-origin specialty Arabica from the Himalayas is not subtle. It is the difference between coffee as a caffeine delivery mechanism and coffee as a genuine sensory experience.
Whether you are just beginning to explore specialty coffee or deepening an existing interest — start with the bean. Choose Arabica. Choose high altitude. Choose single origin. And if you want to experience one of India’s most exciting emerging coffee origins, start with the Himalayas.

