Australian coffee chain to invest Sh1.3b as it enters Kenya

Business
By Sofia Ali | Jul 17, 2025
Cabinet Secretary for Trade Lee Kinyanjui launched the Coffee Club Kenya in Lavington along Gitanga Road,the first of its kind in Africa on July 16, 2025. [Benard Orwongo, Standard]

Australian cafe chain, Coffee Club, has announced a $10 million (Sh1.3 billion) investment to expand into the Kenyan market and the region, its first foray into the continent.

As part of its growth strategy, the restaurant chain plans to open 30 branches across East Africa, banking on Kenya's rich coffee heritage.

Speaking at the launch event, Trade and Investment Cabinet Secretary Lee Kinyanjui, noted that although Kenya produces some of the world's finest coffee, most of it has historically been exported, with local consumption remaining relatively low.

However, new figures shared by the Agriculture and Food Authority reveal that local coffee consumption grew by 33.9 per cent, rising from 1,464 metric tonnes in 2023 to 1,961 metric tonnes in 2024.

This represents about 4.17 per cent of the nation's total production still modest, but up from just under five per cent only a few years ago.

The government now aims to grow domestic consumption to 20 per cent of national production within the next five years.

"The easiest way to stabilise prices for our farmers is to increase local demand," said Kinyanjui, emphasising the push to get more Kenyans especially youth to drink their own coffee.

The Coffee Club plans to open at least 10 outlets across Kenya in the next five years, with strategic partnerships to source beans locally through Dormans Coffee, further boosting local roasting and supply chains.

Industry players hope that a thriving local coffee culture will shield farmers from the volatility of global coffee prices and strengthen Kenya's coffee value chain through value addition and job creation.

Share this story
Legal battle brews over new tea levy, directorship
Tea sector players have moved to court challenging the new Tea Board of Kenya levies and regulations.
For Africa to move forward, Africans must be allowed to cross borders
An argument that Africa’s economic growth depends on freer cross-border labour mobility, noting that most migration is already regional but remains constrained by restrictive and outdated policies.
Global housing crisis deepens despite policy gains - UN warns
The UN-Habitat has warned that the global housing crisis is worsening despite policy progress, citing rapid urbanisation, inadequate implementation, and millions living in slums.
Families feel the pinch as war-hit diaspora remittances shrink
A decline in diaspora remittances, driven by Middle East conflict and rising living costs abroad, is deepening financial pressure on Kenyan households.
Mbadi names Adan Mohamed as new KRA chief
Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi has appointed former Industrialisation Cabinet Secretary Adan Abdulla Mohamed as Commissioner General of the Kenya Revenue Authority for a three-year term.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS