Domestic coffee prices continue to remain stable
On the morning of December 8, coffee purchasing prices in the Central Highlands provinces continued to stabilize at a high level.
Dak Lak (Cu M'gar, Ea H'leo, Buon Ho) and Dak Nong (Gia Nghia, Dak R'lap) both purchased at 103,000 VND/kg (the highest price).
Lam Dong (Di Linh, Lam Ha, Bao Loc) has coffee price of 102,300 VND/kg.
Gia Lai (Chu Prong) reached 102,500 VND/kg.
Kon Tum, Pleiku, and La Grai (Gia Lai) all have coffee prices of VND102,400/kg.
Vietnam’s total coffee area in 2024 is expected to reach 732,000 hectares, with the Central Highlands being the main production region. However, the Coffee Replanting Program, which aims to replant 200,000 hectares in the 2014–2025 period, is still slow, with only 74,500 hectares having been replanted as planned to date.
Although overall damage due to pests (such as mealybugs, stem canker, and rust) decreased compared to the previous year, Typhoon Kalmaegi and heavy rains during the harvest period damaged coffee yields in some production areas, especially in the Central Highlands.

World coffee prices fell slightly last week.
On the London floor, the price of robusta coffee contracts for delivery in January 2026 decreased by 5.9% (equivalent to 270 USD/ton), closing at 4,295 USD/ton.
On the New York floor, the price of Arabica coffee for delivery in December 2025 decreased by 1.6% (equivalent to 6.8 US cents/pound), reaching 406.25 US cents/pound.
According to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), Vietnam's coffee production estimate for the 2025-2026 crop year (October-September) was revised down slightly to 30.8 million bags (from the official estimate of 31 million bags in June), but still up 6.2% compared to the 2024-2025 crop year.
Robusta output is expected to reach 29.6 million bags, up 5.7% year-on-year.
Arabica output was revised up slightly to 1.2 million bags.
Higher coffee prices have encouraged farmers to increase investments in cultivation, including fertilizer use, the USDA said. Favorable weather conditions, with abundant rainfall, have supported production, with some experts predicting coffee production could increase by as much as 10%.
Vietnam’s coffee exports in the 2025-2026 crop year are forecast to reach 27.3 million bags, up from 25.2 million bags in the previous crop year. Of which, the amount of green coffee, instant coffee and roasted coffee are all forecast to increase.
Source: https://baodanang.vn/gia-ca-phe-hom-nay-8-12-2025-xuat-khau-du-kien-tang-manh-3314144.html










Comment (0)