How to Reduce on Caffeine and Still Enjoy Coffee?

  • By Carmen luo
  • August 15, 2024

Love coffee but can't tolerate caffeine, what should I do?
We will provide the method from the selected coffee beans, coffee powder, brewing method.

1. Coffee Beans & Blend

1.1. Use Less Ground Coffee

Basically, the more ground coffee you use, the higher the caffeine content in your resulting brew. If you normally use a heaped tablespoon of coffee per six liquid ounces of water, try using a bit less and see if you can live with the resulting concoction.


Reduce the amount of ground coffee while keeping the amount of water consistent.

1.2. Stay True to Arabica Beans

The two species most widely cultivated commercially are Coffea arabica (aka Arabica) and Coffea canephora (aka Robusta).As a general rule of thumb estimate the caffeine content to average about 1% for Arabica beans and 2% for Robusta beans by weight.

Hence, always go with 100% Arabica coffee and “Just Say No” to any kind of Robusta beans. Not only will this reduce your caffeine intake dramatically, you’ll also be drinking a far superior cup of coffee.

Practical Takeaway

Make sure to only buy 100% Arabica beans. If you’re lucky it will say so on the side or back of the coffee bag. If not, jot down the brand, name of the coffee, or web address and do some research.


If the beans are from Columbia, Guatemala, El Salvador, Tanzania, or Kenya they’ll be Arabica beans, since those regions don’t grow Robusta beans.


Stay away from lower-cost, lower-quality blends often found in supermarkets and wholesale markets. Robusta beans are often used as filler in order to keep the costs down.


Be careful when buying any fine European blends, they often include Robusta beans.


Some espresso blends use high quality Robusta beans for its ability to hold the crema head. So make sure that your espresso consists of 100% Arabica beans.

1.3.Create Your Own Low Caffeine Blend

Blend your fully-loaded 100% Arabica beans with decaffeinated beans to create your own unique low-caffeine blend. If the taste and aroma is more important to you than the caffeine content, use a 1-to-1 ratio. If you want low caffeine content with an acceptable taste, use a 1-to-2 ratio of caffeinated to decaffeinated beans.

Here’s a tip: Blend coffees that complement each other for the best possible flavor. So, for example, blend a distinctive, full-bodied regular Arabica coffee, such as Kenya, Yemen Mocha, Sumatra, or Guatemala, with a mild decaffeinated coffee, such as Costa Rican or Columbian.

Practical Takeaway:Make your own low caffeine blend with complementary beans.

1.4.Adjust the Ground Level

Assuming that the brewing method stays the same, the finer you grind coffee, the more caffeine it will release. We can use this fact to our advantage by grinding the coffee a bit coarser to reduce the caffeine in our brew. Just make sure that you don’t make the coffee grind too coarse, for you’ll end up with an underextracted brew that might taste like dish water.

Practical Takeaway:Use a coarser ground to prepare your coffee.

1.5. Try a Darker Roast

Dark roasts have slightly less caffeine than lighter roasts if you measure them by volume (i.e., if you measure using a scoop). The approximate figures work out to be as follows:

Light roast = 1.37%

Medium roast = 1.31%

Dark roast = 1.31%

This, however, does not hold true if you measure the same coffee by weight. Let me explain.

When coffee beans are roasted two things of interest happen: they lose water content (about 20% give or take) AND they swell in size. Thus we end up with coffee beans that weigh less and yet are larger in size. Now let’s take what we’ve just learned a step further. A dark roast is roasted longer than a light roast, so we can expect a dark roast to weigh less and be a wee bit larger than a light roast.

But how is this going to explain the above mystery? Well, if you measure your coffee with a scoop and it’s a dark roast you’ll end up with fewer beans in the scoop, since they’ve expanded during the roasting process. And because there are fever beans, there will be less caffeine per scoop. Voilà!

If you measure your coffee by weight and it’s a dark roast you’ll have more beans since they weigh less after the roasting process. More beans…more caffeine. Simple!

So measurement with a scoop results in a slightly less caffeinated beverage and measurement by weight results in a slightly more caffeinated beverage.

Practical Takeaway:Use a dark roast and measure it with a coffee scoop.

1.6. Experiment with Instant Coffee

Instant coffee is made by brewing coffee beans and then removing the water content via freeze-drying. The end result is a concentrated instant powder. To make a coffee you simply add this powder to a glass of hot water and you have something that some say resembles “coffee”.

The caffeine of instant coffee is generally less than in regular brewed coffee. In fact on a cup for cup basis of equally strong coffee, instant coffee has about half the caffeine of filtered brewed coffee. According to the USDA, 1.8 grams of instant coffee (equivalent to about one rounded teaspoon) contains 57 mg of caffeine.

Remember, make sure to check the label – you want 100% Arabica. Don’t settle for less!

Practical Takeaway:Switch to instant coffee made from 100% Arabica beans.

1.7.The Magic of Naturally Low Caffeine Coffee

The phrase “low caffeine coffee” refers to coffee with naturally low caffeine content as compared to average coffee. This does not include coffee that has been subjected to one of the methods of decaffeination, such as, for example, the Swiss Water Process.

One such producer is Trung Nguyen, which owns and operates the largest chain of coffee houses and cafés in Vietnam. Their Passiona low caffeine coffee only has about 35% of the caffeine found in regular coffee. This is comparable to some decaf coffees.

Their low caffeine coffees are created by cultivating the Chari bean that naturally grows with very little caffeine in it. ‘Chari’ is the French name for the variety Coffea Iberica or ‘Excelsa’ coffee. This rarely grown coffee is difficult to harvest and process, and hence accounts for only 1% of world coffee production.

Now, by itself these beans don’t really make a nicely balanced cup of coffee. However, if it’s blended with a lower-caffeine variety of Arabica you can add smoothness and richness to the flavor. The Passiona is described as having a rich and nutty, even chocolaty taste with light elements of fruit. Not bad for a low caffeine option.

Practical Takeaway:Research “low caffeine coffees” and see if you can’t find one you like.

2.Tweak the Method

In the previous section we looked at how you can use various coffee bean related tips and tricks to cut down on your caffeine intake. Now it’s time to look at the second variable — the method you use to make your coffee.

2.1. Beware of the Brewing Time

The longer you brew coffee, the higher the level of caffeine in your beverage of choice.

If you want to reduce your caffeine intake, it is recommended that you drink espresso or French press coffee before considering drip coffee

Suggest:Order a single shot of espresso (which clocks in at about 50-64 mg caffeine per fluid ounce) and then add 4-5 oz of hot water to make it an Americano. Add some cream and sugar, serve it in a mug and you’ve got something that could pass for a cup of coffee.

2.2. Give Cold Brewed Coffee a Chance

Cold brew is made by soaking coffee grinds in water at room temperature overnight. The next day you filter out the coffee concentrate and store it in the fridge for up to 2 weeks.

Cold brewed coffee makes an extremely mild brew. It has about 30% less caffeine than the traditional drip brewed coffee. Furthermore, it’s also very low in acid; in fact it’s 67% less than in hot coffee. There are quite a few people who swear by this method. Give it a try and see what you think.

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