Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Blue Bottle Coffee
American coffee roasting and retailing company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Blue Bottle Coffee, Inc., is a coffee roaster and retailer once headquartered in Oakland, California, United States. In 2017, a majority stake in the company was acquired by Nestlé (68%). It is a major player in third wave coffee.[1] The company focuses on single-origin beans.[2]
Remove ads
Locations
Originating in Oakland, California, the company soon expanded to other areas around the country. Blue Bottle first expanded to several cafés in locations around San Francisco, including the Ferry Building and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art's rooftop garden.[3] The company operates 99 stores as of June 2021, with locations in California, New York, Washington, D.C., Boston, Chicago, Seoul, Jeju City,[4] Kyoto, Kobe, Tokyo, Osaka, Yokohama, Hong Kong, Shanghai and Singapore.[5]
Remove ads
History
Summarize
Perspective

W. James Freeman founded Blue Bottle Coffee in the early 2000s in Oakland's Temescal District.[6] Freeman borrowed the name from one of Europe's first cafés, The Blue Bottle Coffee House. Initially, he intended to roast coffee in small batches (6 lbs. per roast) to sell within 24 hours of roasting, as a home-delivery service. Blue Bottle soon ceased deliveries and opened as a traditional café.[7]
Blue Bottle opened additional locations in San Francisco and elsewhere in the San Francisco Bay Area and opened its first New York location in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, in 2010.[8] The company-owned stores carry off-menu items such as the "Gibraltar", a form of cortado.[3]
- In 2012, Blue Bottle received $20 million in venture capital investment.[9]
- In January 2014, Blue Bottle raised $25.75 million in a new round of funding.[10]
- In 2015, Blue Bottle completed a venture capital round in which it raised $70 million from investors led by Fidelity.[11]

- Since its inception, the company has raised $120 million from investors as of 2017.[12]
- In February 2015, Blue Bottle Coffee opened its first location in Tokyo, Japan, in the Kiyosumi neighborhood.[13]
- In September 2017, Nestle S.A., the world's largest food and drinks company, acquired a majority stake of Blue Bottle.[14] While the deal's financial details were not disclosed, the Financial Times reported "Nestle is understood to be paying up to $500m for the 68 per cent stake in Blue Bottle".[15] Blue Bottle expected to increase sales by 70% in 2017.[16]
- In May 2019, Blue Bottle Coffee opened its first location in Seoul, South Korea.[17]
- In December 2019, Blue Bottle Coffee announced they would test eliminating disposable cups at some of their shops to increase sustainability efforts, with the goal being zero waste within one year.[18] Nothing has been reported to date about this test and whether it was successful.
- In April 2020, Blue Bottle Coffee opened its first location in Central, Hong Kong. Amid COVID-19, the café opened daily from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for takeaway only.[19]
- In February 2022, Blue Bottle Coffee opened its first location in mainland China, Yutong Cafe. Yutong Cafe is located at a historic building by Suzhou Creek in downtown Shanghai.[20]
- In April 2024, Blue Bottle Coffee’s Boston area locations filed to unionize. Baristas cited multiple grievances with the company as reason for unionizing, including not being paid a living wage, mishandling of sexual harassment,[21] and not being given input into café operations. The union requested voluntary recognition from the company, and subsequently engaged in a state-wide walkout when Blue Bottle Coffee refused to recognize the union.[22]
- In August 2024, Blue Bottle Coffee opened a gift-centric store in Raffles City Shopping Centre, Singapore.[23] In April 2025, this was converted to a proper café and became its first location in South East Asia.[24]
- In September 2024, Blue Bottle Coffee illegally[citation needed] fired union organizer Remy Roskin.[25]
- In May 2025, Blue Bottle Independent Union (BBIU) conducted another state-wide walkout across Blue Bottle Coffee’s greater Boston area locations in protest of multiple alleged unfair labor practices, including the company attempting to install surveillance cameras.[26][27]
Remove ads
See also
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads