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Green Tea
Best for: Afternoon service, wellness menus and cold-brew tea
Use when: You want a light, fresh, low-caffeine tea for guests moving away from coffee or looking for afternoon refreshment.
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White Tea
Best for: Spa menus, wellness cafes and gentle afternoon service
Use when: You need a delicate, very low-caffeine tea with a refined, naturally sweet profile suited to wellness positioning and afternoon service.
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Yellow Tea
Best for: Specialty cafes and premium tea menus
Use when: You want a rare Chinese tea with a smooth, mellow character that gives guests a genuine talking point and signals expertise.
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Roasted Matcha
Best for: Low-caffeine lattes and warm baked goods
Use when: Customers find regular matcha too grassy or intense, or you need softer, lower-caffeine afternoon and evening menu options.
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Jasmine Green Tea
Bestseller
Jasmine Green Tea
Jasmine Scented · Floral · Low-Caffeine
From AED 1000
Roasted Matcha
Low-Caffeine
Roasted Matcha
Toasted Notes · Low-Caffeine · Smooth
From AED 500
White Tea
Low-Caffeine
White Tea
Fujian Province · Minimally Processed · Very Low-Caffeine
From AED 1000
Yellow Tea
Premium
Yellow Tea
Hunan Province · Men Huang Process · Low-Caffeine
From AED 1000
Green Tea
Green Tea
Zhejiang Province · Unoxidised · Low-Caffeine
From AED 1000

Frequently Asked Questions

Who orders low-caffeine tea?

Low-caffeine tea appeals to guests who still want real tea flavour but prefer a gentler drink. It works well for afternoon service, wellness menus and customers reducing coffee intake. Products like white tea, green tea and roasted matcha sit in this range — giving cafes a middle option between high-caffeine drinks and caffeine-free alternatives.

Which low-caffeine products work best for cafes?

White tea, green tea, roasted matcha and some floral teas are strong choices. They give cafes lighter options without removing tea flavour entirely. Each product delivers a genuine tea experience — aroma, character and presentation — while keeping caffeine levels moderate enough for afternoon and early evening service.

Can low-caffeine tea be served in the evening?

It can be suitable for some guests, but it is not the same as caffeine-free. Low-caffeine products typically contain 5–15mg caffeine per serving, which some sensitive guests will still feel. For strict evening or sleep-sensitive service, genuinely caffeine-free options are always safer and should be the clear recommendation.