Quick Answer: If you’re looking for a name, it’s Folgers. Based on sheer weight of ground coffee sold in US grocery stores, Folgers is the market leader by a significant margin over premium brands such as Starbucks or Dunkin’ at retail.

But if you are referring to most sold when measured in revenue dollars in the out-of-home segment (cafés) Starbucks is it.
If you’re asking about the type of drink, Latte is the most popular espresso beverage in America (although when it comes to coffee, we prefer ours cold – Cold Brew and iced espresso beverages are taking over for hot coffee with now more than 75 percent of Starbucks’ U.S. beverage sales).
Detailed Analysis & Responses by Participants
1. Everyday Consumers: The Paradox of “Comfort vs. Quality”
The Answer:
You are probably purchasing Folgers Classic Roast. For all of the third-wave coffee movement and specialty roasting contracts, Americans’ home-brewing rituals haven’t significantly veered from what Colombo’s mom did: boiling up traditional, mass-produced ground.
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
We often make the mistake of thinking “most sold” equals “best loved.” In coffee, however, “most sold” equals habit and price discipline. And so although you may Instagram a photo of your niche single-origin pour-over, the sales data indicates that most Americans at 8:37 on Tuesday morning are looking for a reliable caffeine delivery system that will not disrupt them in any way. Folgers is not tops in flavor complexity; it’s tops in supply chain dominance and nostalgia.
Your Action Plan (Buying Guide):
The ‘Second Best’ way is for all of those who want to step up their coffee game without spending a small fortune on over-the-top gear.

- Step 1: If you care at all about flavor notes, immediately discount the number one seller (Folgers/Maxwell House). Their success is based on using a mix of Robusta beans (with a tougher, more rubbery flavor) in order to keep prices down.
- Step 2: Check out the “Runner Ups” in your grocery aisle, such as Peet’s Coffee or Starbucks (Bagged).
- Step 3: Look at the “Roast Date.” The biggest secret of the “most sold” coffees? Best By Date doesn’t equal roast date. If there’s no roast date, simply assume that it is several months old.
- Step 4: Buy whole bean. The first time coffee is ground (which includes most of the top-selling Folgers tubs), it loses 60 percent of its aroma within 15 minutes.
2. And for One Coffee Shop Owner: The ‘Temperature Shift’ Reality
The Answer:
Not technically speaking, since your most selling item on the menu is a Latte and that is largely in part due to people getting tired of hot coffee.
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
There’s a tremendous decoupling between “Coffee” and “Heat,” data reveals. To younger generations (Gen Z and the Millennials) coffee is an all-weather cold sweet treat. If the quality of your hot foam is better than others, or if you could be excited about how nuanced that cup of hot espresso under your spatula is—well, then you’re not focused on what’s driving actual sales. Starbucks has announced that cold beverages account for 75% of its U.S. beverage sales, even in cold months.

Your Action Plan (Menu Engineering):
- Step 1: Pivot to Cold. Your “Most Sold” item next year will be a Cold Brew with Sweet Foam. If you don’t have a strong cold coffee program, you’re missing out on money on the table.
- Step 2: The “Modifier” Economy. The bottom liquid (coffee) is inexpensive. The money is in the add-ons. The most sold drink is almost never black coffee; it’s either an extremely dressed-up beverage (like with oat milk and syrup) or something ice cold. Design your Point of Sale (POS) to promote modifiers.
- Step 3: Speed vs. Craft. Icy drinks are quicker to prepare than a properly steamed milk for a latte. Selling cold beverage does increase your throughput (sales per hour) during the morning breakfast rush.
3. The Format Option for Marketers & Affiliates
The Answer:
Coffee’s best trade is K-Cup (Single Serve Pod) format which has the most buyers.
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
Coffee snobs hate them based on both taste and environmental reasons, but at the end of the day, convenience is king in the US. Keurig Dr Pepper systems are installed in about 40 million households in the United States.
In which getting a $10 can of Folgers as an affiliate earns you pennies. The ecosystem is a high-value funnel: The Keurig machine, the pod subscription.

Your Action Plan (Content Strategy):
- Layer 1: Hit “Convenience Pain Points.” Stop writing about “Best Tasting Coffee.” Tell us about “Best Coffee for Busy mornings.” The search intent for K-Cups is fast, not flavor profile.
- Step 2: The ‘Variety Pack’ Angle. “Variety Sampler Packs” are the biggest sellers on Amazon. People suffer from decision fatigue. They’re the people who want to buy one box that has 40 variations. Keyword Research Find and list these products.
- *Equipment Attachment Rate. Helpful Tip: Write articles about the “Best Single Serve Coffee Maker”. That conversion on a $100 machine is worth so much more than the coffee, and once they own the machine they are locked into the pod form factor you can recommend as well.
4. For Investors: The “Recession Resilience” Matrix
The Answer:
Starbucks takes the cake in terms of revenue, while J.M. Smucker (Folgers and Dunkin’ retail) exits with volume stability.
The Counter-Intuitive Truth:
Coffee is an odd barometer of the economy. It creates what economists call a “Lipstick Effect”—consumers will still purchase costly Starbucks lattes in a recession, because it’s pocket change compared to money spent on vacation or that new car. On the other hand, high inflation also encourages a shift from “Away-from-Home” (or Starbucks) to “At-Home” (or Folgers/Keurig).
The Trap: Don’t treat coffee like a monolith — In his hands, Cappuccino diario Primero’s menu is as variegated and fascinating as its name. You need to straddle both ‘Commodity Coffee’ (Grocery) and ‘Experience Coffee’ (Café).
Your Action Plan (Portfolio Logic):
- Maintain Finger on “At-Home” Gap. Eye fourth-quarter earnings from J.M. Smucker. They are a sign of consumer tightening when they spike.
- Step 2: The Take and Go (RTD) Segment. It is the fastest growing investment option. Check out partnerships like PepsiCo (which distributes Starbuck iced coffee) or Coca-Cola (Costa Coffee). The coffee of the future “most sold” is probably more a can from a gas station than a home brew.
- Stage 3: Green Coffee Futures (also Known as The C-Price). Knowing commodity (Arabica/Robusta futures) cost is essential. Folgers is less hurt by expensive Robusta than specialty brands are by expensive Arabica because Folgers’ target consumers aren’t as demanding about differences in quality at different price points.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Which is the top selling brand of coffee in America?
A: If you go by the number and weight of bags of ground coffee that get sold in grocery stores, Folgers has the widest cup. But in dollar revenue from out-of-home (café) sales, Starbucks is the biggest.
Q: Are the hottest drinks at coffee shops still hot?
A: No. Although the Latte is the overall most sought-after espresso drink, the markets have swung in favor of cold drinks. Cold Brew and iced espresso beverages now represent more than 75% of Starbucks’ U.S. beverage sales, data show.
Q: What makes single-serve K-Cups so popular even though they’re bashed for tasting horrible?
A: Convenience, rather than flavor profile, is the main sales driver for K-Cups. With Keurig systems in about 40 million American homes, and today’s consumers valuing convenience above all, the time they save using single-serve pods is key on busy mornings.
Q: Is there a way in the grocery store for shoppers to be assured they’re getting top quality fresh coffee?
A: Shoppers need to scan the label for a distinct “Roast Date” and not simply go by a “Best By” date, which can mask stale beans. I also suggest purchasing whole beans over pre-ground, as coffee degrades through its staling process and 60% of aroma is lost fifteen minutes post grind.
Q: How do such economic factors as the recession or inflation affect coffee sales?
A: Coffee frequently shows the “Lipstick Effect,” when people still keep buying a $4 café latte as an “affordable luxury” even in economic slumps. But high inflation can tip the scales toward a migration from experience-based coffee (Starbucks) to at-home commodity brands (Folgers).
References
| Source / Entity | Topic / Subject | Time | Outcome / Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source: Statista / U.S. Census Data and Simmons National Consumer Survey (NHCS). | Topic: Brands of ground coffee consumed in the U.S. | Time: 2020-2024. | Outcome: Folgers was the market leader in regular ground coffee to a much greater extent than any of its competitors, with a robust lead enjoyed over them in household penetration. |
| Entity: Starbucks Corporation. | To: Fiscal Q3 2023 Earnings Call / Investor Release. | Time: August 2023. | Result: Cold beverages made up 75 percent of the U.S. beverage mix, signaling a lasting departure from hot coffee dominance in the café channel. |
| Entity: National Coffee Association (NCA). | Title: National Coffee Data Trends (NCDT) Report. | Time: Spring 2023/2024. | Result: Single-cup brewing systems (hello, Keurig) remain the second most popular preparation method after drip coffee, reinforcing the K-Cup as a dominant sales format. |
| Entity: J.M. Smucker Co. | Subject: Annual Report / 10-K Filing. | Time: 2023. | Result: Validates the continued power of both the Folgers and Dunkin’ brands in the U.S. retail consumer foods category. |







