1. Home
  2. Coffee Origins
  3. India
  4. Typica

India · Variety

Typica Coffee from India

Typica is one of the defining varieties of Indian coffee. India grows coffee at 700–1,500 m across regions such as Coorg (Karnataka), Chikmagalur (Karnataka), Wayanad (Kerala), and Typica — a Arabica of Foundational lineage carried from Yemen via Java and Amsterdam to the Americas in the 1700s — occupies an important place in that landscape. Its preferred range of 1,200–2,000+ m aligns with what Indian farms can offer, which is a large part of why the pairing works.

Agronomically, Typica brings a demanding but rewarding profile — very susceptible to leaf rust, cbd, and nematodes — with low yields on a tall, conical, low branch density plant. In India, where the harvest runs november – march and annual production is ≈6 million 60-kg bags, those traits shape which farms plant it and how its lots reach the export market through Mangalore.

In the cup, Indian Typica expresses both sides of its parentage: the variety contributes clean, sweet, silky body with delicate citrus and floral notes at altitude, while India's terroir adds the character the origin is known for — washed arabica ('plantation'): mild spice, chocolate, soft citrus. Buyers comparing Typica across origins will find the Indian expression distinct for exactly that reason.

Key facts

VarietyTypica
SpeciesArabica
LineageFoundational lineage carried from Yemen via Java and Amsterdam to the Americas in the 1700s
Optimal altitude1,200–2,000+ m
India growing altitude700–1,500 m
Harvest seasonNovember – March
Disease resistanceVery susceptible to leaf rust, CBD, and nematodes
Bean sizeLarge, elongated
Typical Indian cupWashed Arabica ('Plantation'): mild spice, chocolate, soft citrus. Monsooned Malabar: musty-woody, syrupy, near-zero acidity. Kaapi Royale Robusta: clean, chocolate-malt, crema-rich.

Related India regions

Typica Coffee from India — frequently asked questions

Where in India is Typica grown?

Primarily across Coorg (Karnataka), Chikmagalur (Karnataka), Wayanad (Kerala), at elevations of 700–1,500 m. The variety's preferred range of 1,200–2,000+ m means the higher zones tend to produce the most expressive lots.

What does Indian Typica taste like?

Expect the variety's core character — clean, sweet, silky body with delicate citrus and floral notes at altitude — shaped by India's terroir toward washed arabica ('plantation'): mild spice, chocolate, soft citrus.

When is Typica from India available fresh?

The Indian harvest runs november – march; fresh-crop lots typically reach consuming markets one to three months after milling, shipped via Mangalore.

Volcana Coffee exports high-grown Catimor, Typica, and washed Fine Robusta from the Bolaven Plateau, Laos — washed, natural, and honey processed, SGS-inspected, with full export documentation. Cup our origin against any in the world.

Request a Sample

Keep exploring