What does a green coffee buyer do?
The green coffee buyer is the professional responsible for sourcing, evaluating and purchasing green coffee for a roaster or buying organisation. They are the invisible link between the producer at origin and the roaster — and their expertise in cupping, coffee agronomy and international negotiation directly determines the quality and ethics of the supply chain.
The role of green coffee buyer is little known to the general public, yet fundamental in the specialty coffee value chain. Without them, no roaster — however talented — can guarantee a consistent supply of quality coffees.
A green coffee buyer's skills fall across three domains. First, mastery of cupping: they must be capable of objectively evaluating dozens of lots per day under standardised cupping conditions, identifying defects, potentials and aromatic profiles, and comparing lots from different countries, varieties and processing methods. The Q-grader certification is the reference qualification, but experience accumulated through origin trips often fills the gaps of the standardised protocol.
Second, understanding agronomy and origin countries. A good buyer knows that defects in a Kenyan lot are not treated the same way as defects in an Ethiopian lot, that seasonality varies by hemisphere, that the climatic conditions of a crop year affect the expected profile of a given variety at a given altitude. This knowledge allows them to adjust their expectations and selection criteria according to context.
Third, skills in international negotiation and logistics. The green coffee buyer negotiates prices with cooperatives, export agents or importers. They manage export documents, phytosanitary certificates, forward contracts, quality arbitration on receipt, and long-term relationships with producers within a direct trade framework.
In the specialty coffee world, the most renowned buyers publish 'crop reports' after each origin trip, communicate directly with producers, and sometimes develop the agronomic practices of partner farms in return for a long-term price commitment. This 'relationship coffee' model is the most advanced form of ethical sourcing.
Green coffee buyer skills and responsibilities
| Domain | Skills | Concrete examples |
|---|---|---|
| Sensory evaluation | Cupping, Q-grader, defect detection | Evaluate 40 lots/day on origin trips |
| Agronomic knowledge | Varieties, altitudes, processes, countries | Adjust expectations to crop year conditions |
| Commercial negotiation | Pricing, forward contracts, relationships | Negotiate a direct trade premium with a cooperative |
| International logistics | Export, transit, arbitration | Manage customs and phytosanitary documents |
| Reporting & communication | Crop reports, lot sheets, transparency | Publish lot details for end customers |
| Sustainable development | Long-term relationships, producer support | Co-finance a processing infrastructure |
The sourcing infrastructure behind your morning cup
Green coffee buyers — sometimes called coffee sourcing directors, coffee selectors, or origin liaisons depending on the company — are responsible for the most consequential quality decision in the specialty coffee supply chain: what raw material the roastery receives. Their work begins months before the coffee appears in a retail bag. In pre-harvest season (typically 3–6 months before each origin's harvest begins), buyers review previous year lots, communicate with export partners and cooperative managers about expected yields and quality levels, and sometimes pre-commit to purchase volumes that allow producers to plan their post-harvest processing. This forward purchasing, called 'forward contracting,' is one of the mechanisms through which quality-focused roasters provide financial stability to origin partners.
The travel component of green coffee buying is substantial for roasters who take direct sourcing seriously. A buyer visiting Ethiopia during harvest season (November–January) may cup 50–100 different lots across multiple cooperatives and washing stations in a two-week trip, evaluating each one for flavour quality, physical green coffee characteristics, and fit with the roastery's customer profile. The cupping sessions are intensive — tasting dozens of cups per day requires a disciplined palate-reset protocol (water, neutral crackers, rest periods) and reliable cupping form documentation. Notes taken at origin must be precise enough to allow comparison with samples received months later when the physical lot is shipped — a quality verification that confirms whether the farm-level quality survives export processing and shipping without degradation.
Going deeper
The green buyer's relationship skills are as important as their sensory skills. A buyer who can communicate respectfully and productively with a cooperative manager in Ethiopia, an exporter in Colombia, and a futures trader in New York is more effective than one with superior cupping abilities but poor cross-cultural communication. The specialty coffee supply chain spans enormous cultural, economic and logistical distances; the green buyer is the person who makes these relationships function at the quality level that specialty roasters and their customers depend on. Many specialty roasters' reputations are built primarily on the quality of their sourcing relationships — which are themselves built on the interpersonal trust that skilled, committed green buyers develop over years of repeated origin visits.