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Certification

Sustainability & Ethics

In Simple Terms

Coffee certification means an independent body has checked that a farm meets certain standards - whether that's environmental, social, or both. Organic, Fairtrade, and Rainforest Alliance are the most common ones you'll see.

What is certification in coffee?

Certification is a third-party verification process confirming that a coffee has been produced, traded, or processed according to a defined set of standards. The most widely recognised schemes are Organic, Fairtrade, and Rainforest Alliance (which absorbed UTZ in 2018). Each scheme focuses on different things - environmental farming practices, minimum price guarantees, worker welfare, biodiversity conservation - and involves annual auditing by an accredited body.

For producers, certification can unlock access to premium-paying markets and in some cases a guaranteed price floor. The cost and administrative burden is significant, particularly for smallholder cooperatives without dedicated compliance capacity.

For buyers, certifications are useful shorthand - but they're not a quality guarantee and shouldn't be treated as one. Many of the world's most interesting coffees come from uncertified farms, and a certification mark tells you nothing about how a coffee tastes. Quality and ethics are both worth caring about; they just need to be evaluated separately.