Day 12 was when I almost quit the whole experiment. I was sitting in the 7 Brew drive-through at 7:48 AM in Rogers, Arkansas — the line had 11 cars ahead of me — and I was going to be late to a 9 AM meeting that required a 40-minute drive. I almost put it in park and left. But I had already done Dutch Bros the previous 11 mornings in a row, and breaking the pattern felt like it would contaminate the data, which is a weird thing to care about over coffee, but here we are.
I want to be upfront about the setup before anything else. I live close enough to both chains that neither one is a “special trip.” The 7 Brew is 6 minutes from my apartment; the nearest Dutch Bros is 9 minutes in the other direction. I’m not comparing them based on three visits or a vacation stop. I ordered from each one on alternating days for 30 days — 15 mornings at each — and kept notes in a running iPhone note that is currently 1,847 words long and deeply embarrassing to scroll through.

The drink I ordered at both places, and why
To compare apples to apples, I needed a shared category. Both chains are famous for their energy drink situation — Dutch Bros has their Rebel series, 7 Brew has their “Spark” line — but honestly I was trying to compare coffee first and everything else second.
My control order: a medium iced vanilla latte with oat milk, no extra flavor shots, standard sweetness. Simple enough that it should be hard to screw up and universal enough that both places can execute it competently.
At Dutch Bros, a medium (24 oz) iced vanilla latte with oat milk runs $6.50 in my area as of the time I was doing this. At 7 Brew, the equivalent — a “Double Brew” with oat milk and vanilla — came out to $6.25. The price difference is almost irrelevant. What matters is that I drank 30 of these things over 30 days and I have opinions.

The coffee itself: Dutch Bros wins, but not for the reason I expected
I went into this thinking 7 Brew would be the underdog I’d end up rooting for. They’re newer, they’re expanding aggressively (they’ve opened something like 150+ locations in two years, which is a pace that usually means corners get cut), and every piece of internet content about them is written by someone who seems to have discovered coffee last month.
But the espresso pull at Dutch Bros is genuinely better. Not by a massive margin, but consistently better. I noticed starting around Day 4 that my Dutch Bros lattes had a slight bitterness on the finish that I’d associate with a medium-dark roast being extracted properly, whereas the 7 Brew espresso tasted — I kept writing “thin” in my notes. Less body. More neutral.
I ran a small side test on Day 19. I ordered both a straight double shot (iced, no milk, no flavor) at both places on the same morning — Dutch Bros first, then 7 Brew about 45 minutes later. The Dutch Bros shot was noticeably darker and more complex. The 7 Brew shot tasted like it was pulling a lighter roast, which isn’t objectively bad, but it means if you’re adding vanilla and oat milk, you’re mostly tasting vanilla and oat milk.
The thing is, I think this is partially by design. 7 Brew’s whole business model depends on the flavor systems doing most of the heavy lifting. They have something like 50+ flavor combinations on their menu and the espresso is more of a caffeine delivery vehicle. That’s fine. Just know what you’re getting.

The drive-through experience: this is where it actually gets interesting
Dutch Bros is famous for their staff culture. The enthusiasm. The “they ask how your day is going and actually seem like they mean it” thing. I’ve seen it described as either charming or cult-like depending on who you talk to, and both descriptions have some accuracy.
Here’s what 15 mornings of data actually showed me:
Average wait time at Dutch Bros: 7 minutes, 22 seconds. (Yes I timed most of them.)
Average wait time at 7 Brew: 4 minutes, 8 seconds.
That’s not a small difference. Over 15 visits, I spent roughly 47 more minutes in the Dutch Bros line than the 7 Brew line. The reason isn’t that Dutch Bros is slow at making drinks — it’s that their staff comes to your car window to take your order while you’re still in line, which sounds efficient but actually creates a weird bottleneck when there are multiple order-takers working the line simultaneously and they’re also trying to have a conversation with you.
7 Brew uses a more traditional speaker-box system, and their operation feels slightly more mechanized. The staff is friendly but they’re not trying to be your friend. I actually prefer this at 7:45 AM. The Dutch Bros chattiness that might be delightful at 2 PM on a Saturday is a mild irritant when I’m trying to get out of the line before a meeting.
The one exception: Dutch Bros handles complex custom orders faster. On Day 23 I tried ordering something more elaborate at 7 Brew (asked for half sweet, extra espresso shot, light ice) and the person on the speaker seemed briefly confused before recovering. Dutch Bros staff handled similar requests without missing a beat every time.

The thing 7 Brew does that Dutch Bros doesn’t and I can’t explain why
7 Brew has a $2 Tuesday promotion. Every Tuesday, any size drink is $2. This is absurd. A large specialty latte for $2 is not a sustainable business practice and I have no idea how they’re doing it, but I showed up four Tuesdays in a row and paid $2 for a large oat milk latte each time and I feel like I’m getting away with something.
Dutch Bros has occasional deals but nothing this consistent or this dramatic.
The non-consensus take I’ll defend
Most comparisons you’ll find online end up recommending Dutch Bros for “coffee people” and 7 Brew for “people who want a fun sweet drink.” I think this framing undersells 7 Brew and slightly flatters Dutch Bros.
Here’s my actual take: if you’re someone who drinks coffee black or close to it, Dutch Bros wins clearly. Their espresso has enough character to stand on its own and the quality control is better.
But if you’re the kind of person who’s building a drink — customizing sweetness, adding flavors, going for something specific — the espresso base matters less than you think. In that scenario, 7 Brew’s faster service, slightly lower prices, and $2 Tuesdays make them the better choice on pure value math. The espresso disappears into the drink anyway.
The mistake people make is assuming “better coffee” means “better experience” regardless of what you’re actually ordering. That’s only true about 40% of the time for how most people actually use these drive-throughs.
The drinks I’d actually recommend at each place
At Dutch Bros, stop overthinking it and get the Golden Eagle — caramel sauce, vanilla syrup, half-and-half, espresso, with a caramel drizzle on top. It’s not subtle. It’s excellent. On Day 8 I ordered it iced as a departure from my control drink and sat in the parking lot for an extra ten minutes because I didn’t want to drink it in the car and risk spilling it.
At 7 Brew, get off the latte train and try a Spark energy drink instead of the coffee. The Mango Sunrise Spark — mango purée, citrus, their energy base — is genuinely good in a way that has nothing to do with coffee. It’s a completely different product category and pretending it competes with a latte is the wrong frame. It’s more like a high-end convenience store energy drink done correctly.
What 30 days actually tells you that 3 visits don’t
The quality consistency between visits matters more than peak quality. Dutch Bros has higher peaks — the best latte I had over 30 days was from Dutch Bros on a Thursday morning when the shot pulled perfectly and the oat milk was textured properly. But Dutch Bros also had my two worst drinks: one that was over-extracted and bitter (Day 7), and one where I’m pretty sure they used regular milk instead of oat milk (Day 21) and I didn’t realize until I was halfway through it.
7 Brew was never transcendent. It was also never bad. Every single drink was within a narrow band of “this is fine, competent, what I expected.” If you’re someone who needs reliable rather than excellent, 7 Brew is actually the more dependable choice on a long enough time horizon.
I did not expect to come out of 30 days saying this.

The stuff that has nothing to do with the drink
7 Brew’s app is slightly better for mobile ordering. Dutch Bros’ app crashes on my specific phone (iPhone 14 Pro, iOS 17.2) about one in every five times I try to load my rewards. I’ve had to reload the app mid-transaction twice. Small thing, real annoyance.
Dutch Bros has better merch. I say this knowing it’s irrelevant. But they do.
7 Brew’s locations are almost always newer construction, which means the drive-through lanes are wider and better designed. On rainy days this matters more than you’d think.
If I had to pick one
I go to 7 Brew more often. I like Dutch Bros more.
Those aren’t contradictory. I go to 7 Brew on weekday mornings because it’s faster and cheaper and the consistency is there. I go to Dutch Bros on weekend mornings when I have time to sit in the line and I want a drink that actually tastes like something.
If you’re choosing between them and you only live near one, the right answer is whichever one you live near. The difference in quality is real but it’s not “make a special trip” real. If you have equal access to both, the answer depends entirely on what you’re ordering and what time of day you’re going.
The one thing I’d push back on in most of the comparisons I read before starting this: stop treating Dutch Bros’ staff enthusiasm as a differentiator. It’s real, and some people love it, but it’s also a trained behavior and by Day 15 of visiting Dutch Bros I was experiencing it as a script rather than genuine warmth. That’s not a criticism — it’s a training program that works at scale. But it’s not a reason to choose one chain over another unless you’re actively seeking that interaction, which most pre-9-AM humans are not.







