Scorching and Tipping in Coffee Roasting: How to Spot It and Avoid It
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If you've ever pulled a batch from the roaster and noticed small dark spots on the surface of your beans, or blackened marks on the tips, you've likely encountered scorching or tipping. They're two of the most common coffee roasting defects - and two of the easiest to identify visually, even if the flavour impact can range from barely noticeable to completely overpowering.
Both defects are the result of too much heat, too fast, in the wrong place. But they happen for different reasons, affect different parts of the bean, and require different fixes. Whether you're roasting at home or on a commercial machine, understanding the difference between scorching and tipping - and knowing what to adjust - will save you batches and help you produce cleaner, more consistent roasts. (If you are newer to roasting, our guide on 'Roasting Coffee Beans at Home: Everything You Need to Get Started and Keep Improving' covers the basics.)
What is scorching in coffee roasting?
Scorching (sometimes called "facing") happens when the flat surface of a coffee bean comes into direct contact with metal that's too hot - typically the drum wall - and burns. It's a conduction problem. The heat transfer from the drum to the bean surface is so intense that it chars the outside before the inside has a chance to absorb and distribute the energy evenly. Rather than the heat taking the time it needs to break down the cell structure gradually, it's a flash impact on a small surface area.
You can spot scorching by looking at the flat faces of your roasted beans. You'll see discoloured patches, dark burn marks, or tiny round holes that almost look like blisters. They often become visible as the coffee reaches first crack, though they can appear even earlier - before the beans have turned from green to tan. At darker roast levels, the burn marks can be harder to see against the overall colour of the bean, but the flavour defect will still be there. One roaster described scorched beans as looking a bit like ladybirds, with their dotted wings - it's a surprisingly apt comparison.
In the cup, scorched coffee tastes smoky, ashy, and harsh, with an unpleasant bitter edge and a noticeable lack of sweetness. Depending on how many beans in the batch are affected, it can range from a subtle background harshness to something that completely overpowers the coffee's natural character.
What causes scorching?
Scorching is almost always an early-roast problem. The most common causes are:
Charge temperature too high. If the drum is excessively hot when you drop the beans in, the initial contact between bean and metal can be fierce enough to burn the surface immediately. This is especially true on drum roasters where beans rest against the hot metal before they start tumbling.
Drum speed too slow. If the drum isn't rotating fast enough, there isn't enough kinetic energy to lift the beans off the drum surface. They sit against the hot metal for too long, sticking to the bottom and burning on contact. They need to keep moving to avoid prolonged contact with the hottest part of the roaster.
Batch size too large. Overfilling the drum restricts how freely the beans can move. When there's not enough space for the beans to tumble properly, those at the bottom stay in contact with the drum surface for too long. Too many beans also means too much conduction - the sheer volume of coffee pressing against hot metal creates blistering. On top of that, overfilling reduces airflow within the drum, which compounds the problem by removing the convective cooling that normally helps moderate surface temperatures.
Flame too high at the start. Even if your charge temperature is reasonable, having the gas or heating element set too aggressively at the beginning of the roast can create the same problem - the drum surface heats faster than the beans can absorb it.
Think of it like burning the outside of a marshmallow over a direct flame: the surface chars while the inside is still cold. That's essentially what scorching is - a flash of heat on a small area, faster than the bean can handle.
What is tipping in coffee roasting?
Tipping is a related but distinct defect. Instead of burn marks on the flat surface, tipping shows up as dark, charred spots on the tips or edges of the bean - the pointed ends where the bean is thinnest and most exposed.
Tipping is more of a convection problem than a conduction one. Where scorching is about direct contact with hot metal, tipping happens when the overall air temperature in the roasting environment is too hot, or when heat is being applied faster than the bean can absorb it. The tips and edges, being thinner and more exposed, dry out and heat up faster than the denser core of the bean. When the difference is too extreme, the tips burn.
In the cup, tipped coffee tastes very similar to scorched coffee - astringent, smoky, and bitter. Depending on how widespread it is in the batch, it might be a faint harshness in the background or it might dominate the cup entirely.
What causes tipping?
Overall heat too high. If the air inside the drum is excessively hot - whether from a high charge temperature, aggressive gas application, or insufficient airflow to moderate the environment - the tips of the beans can burn before the core has caught up. Poor airflow is a particularly common factor: without enough air movement to distribute heat evenly, it concentrates and transfers to the beans too quickly.
Heat applied too fast. Tipping often happens when the roast is pushed too quickly. The bean can't conduct heat from its surface to its core fast enough, so the exposed extremities char while the interior is still undergoing earlier stages of development.
Drum speed too fast. Interestingly, where a slow drum can cause scorching (beans resting on hot metal), a drum spinning too fast can contribute to tipping. The beans are being flung around aggressively, and the exposed tips take the brunt of the hot air.
Bean shape and density. Not all beans are equally susceptible. Beans with more pronounced pointed tips are physically more vulnerable. And lower-density beans - typically from lower altitudes - have softer cell structures that are more easily damaged by heat.
Coffee consultant Rob Hoos, in his publication Tipping and Its Avoidance, explains that heat diffuses much faster at the endpoints of the bean than through the core - the heat damages the softest part of the seed first. Importantly, Hoos notes that tipping can happen at any point during the roast, not just at the start. Any time the air environment is too aggressive for the bean to handle, the tips are the first casualty.

How to tell the difference
Both defects leave visible marks and produce similar off-flavours, but the location of the damage is the key distinction.
Scorching appears as dark spots, blisters, or tiny burn holes on the flat surfaces of the bean. It's caused by direct contact with overheated metal (conduction).
Tipping appears as dark, charred marks on the tips and edges of the bean. It's caused by excessive ambient heat in the roasting environment (convection), applied faster than the bean can absorb.
In practice, the two can appear together - if the overall thermal environment is too aggressive, you might see both surface burns and charred tips in the same batch. But understanding which one you're dealing with helps you know where to focus your adjustments.

Which beans are most at risk?
Some green coffees are more prone to scorching and tipping than others. It's worth being aware of this before you roast, so you can adjust your profile accordingly.
Lower-density beans (typically from lower altitudes) have softer cell structures and are more sensitive to heat. They're more likely to scorch or tip under conditions that a denser, higher-altitude bean might handle without issue.
Natural processed coffees tend to carry more risk than washed coffees. They often require a longer, slower drying phase at the start of the roast, and applying too much heat too early can cause surface damage more easily. Natural coffees from lower-grown sites are particularly susceptible - they combine lower density with the processing characteristics that make them more heat-sensitive.
Beans with pronounced tips. The physical shape of the bean matters. Pointier tips have less mass and more surface area relative to their volume, making them more vulnerable to tipping.
Beans with uneven moisture content. If green coffee hasn't been dried properly at origin, it may have inconsistent moisture levels within the bean. Drier areas inside the bean are more susceptible to internal scorching - a variant where the damage happens inside the cell structure rather than on the surface. The best defence against this is a gentler start to the roast, allowing heat to penetrate more evenly before ramping up.
How to prevent scorching
The fixes for scorching are mostly about moderating that initial contact between bean and drum:
Lower your charge temperature. This is the single most effective change. If your beans are showing surface burns, your drum is likely too hot when you drop them in. Bring the charge temperature down in small increments (5–10°C at a time) and see if the marks disappear.
Check your drum speed. Make sure the beans are moving freely from the moment they enter the roaster. If your drum speed is adjustable, experiment with increasing it slightly. The goal is to prevent beans from sitting against the hot drum surface for too long.
Reduce your batch size. If you're roasting close to your machine's maximum capacity, the beans may not have enough room to tumble properly. Dropping the batch size by 10–15% can make a noticeable difference to evenness.
Ease off the heat at the start. Rather than hitting the beans with full gas or power from the moment of charge, consider a gentler start. You can build momentum as the beans warm up, rather than relying on a blast of heat right at the beginning.
How to prevent tipping
Tipping requires a slightly different set of adjustments, since it's more about the overall thermal environment than direct contact:
Lower the initial heat application. If the air inside your drum is too hot, the tips of the beans will bear the brunt. Reduce your charge temperature and/or your gas setting at the start of the roast.
Slow the roast down. If you're pushing for a fast roast, the beans may not be able to absorb heat evenly. A slightly longer, more gradual profile gives the core of the bean time to catch up with the surface and tips. Consider using a heat soak approach at the start rather than applying high heat immediately.
Adjust drum speed. If your drum is spinning too fast, try slowing it down slightly. This reduces the convective force on the exposed tips.
Extend the drying phase. Giving the beans more time in the early drying phase (roughly 150°C-170°C) allows moisture to escape more evenly, reducing the risk of the tips drying out and burning ahead of the rest of the bean.
Improve airflow. Good ventilation helps distribute heat more evenly throughout the drum, reducing hot spots. Make sure your exhaust system isn't blocked or restricted.
How to spot these defects during quality control
You can catch scorching and tipping at two stages: visually after roasting, and by taste during cupping.
Visual inspection. After every roast, take a small sample and spread the beans out on a light surface. Look at both the flat faces and the tips. Scorching shows as dark spots or blisters on the flat surface; tipping shows as blackened or charred tips. It's worth doing this routinely - even if you're not actively troubleshooting - so you catch subtle signs before they become serious problems.
Cupping. Both defects produce astringent, smoky, and bitter flavours. At their mildest, they add a slightly harsh edge to an otherwise clean cup - something a trained palate will notice but a casual drinker might not. At their worst, they completely overpower the coffee's natural character. If you're cupping and getting an unexplained ashy or charred note, check your roasted beans for visual signs.
The severity depends on how many beans in the batch are affected. A handful of scorched beans in an otherwise clean batch will have a mild impact. A widespread problem across the majority of the batch will be unmistakable.
A note on internal scorching
It's worth mentioning internal scorching separately, because it's harder to spot visually and sometimes overlooked entirely. Internal scorching happens when the moisture inside the bean isn't evenly distributed - usually because of poor drying at the farm level - and the drier internal areas char when high heat is applied.
You might not see obvious surface marks, but the cup will taste off - ashy and hollow. The best prevention is a cautious start to the roast: lower charge temperature, a slower initial rate of rise, and a gradual ramp-up that allows heat to penetrate the bean more evenly before you push the roast forward.
There's not much you can do about the green coffee's internal moisture distribution after it arrives at your roastery. But if you consistently notice inconsistent roast results from a particular lot - even with good technique - uneven moisture may be the culprit.