Ube has become a driving force in the global coffee market, with generational preferences fueling its growth and development.
Global coffee chains, including Starbucks and Costa Coffee, have rolled out ube ranges, tapping into trending flavours and social media buzz. Ube, a Southeast Asian root vegetable also known as a purple yam, has recently drawn global attention for its vivid purple colour and distinctive taste. The ingredient has gone viral online on social media, accelerating its rise as the “next matcha”. This is substantiated by a Q1 2026 survey, in which over 60 percent of Gen Z and millennials stated that they use social media to discover products in new flavours, and over half say that when they find a new flavour they like, they enjoy sharing it on social media, said GlobalData, a leading intelligence and productivity platform.
Brands are responding by building shareability into product launches. Starbucks, for example, introduced its Ube Vanilla Velvet Latte, Ube Vanilla Velvet Matcha, and Ube Vanilla Macchiato, promoted with multiple TikTok posts (via Starbucks and Starbucks UK) featuring pour shots and seasonal lines such as “spring is purple this year” and “ube vanilla, a new way to sip this spring.” This social-first playbook helps Starbucks reach younger consumers where they discover, evaluate, and recommend new drinks.
“Ube’s bold hue is instantly recognisable in feeds, and its highly “Instagrammable” look lends itself to sharing, especially in trendy café settings. It is an “Instagrammable” ingredient in every sense, high-impact visuals, easy to recognise, and made to be shared,” said Jessica Butler, Consumer Analyst at GlobalData.
“That matters because social platforms are now a primary route to discovery for younger consumers. Brands should treat a launch as a content strategy as much as a product release, building in scroll-stopping visuals, creator partnerships, and easy-to-share moments that turn trial into amplification.”
Ube also taps into younger consumers’ appetite for novelty. Many Western consumers haven’t tried it before, which makes it feel new, and worth a test. In Q1 2026 survey, 64 percent of Gen Z and 65 percent of millennials said curiosity motivates them to try new flavours. With trends moving fast, iced coffee, then matcha, now ube, brands can win by innovating at pace. Costa Coffee is doing this by adding ube to familiar formats on its UK spring menu, including a Sweet Ube Hot Chocolate and Sweet Ube Frappe, making the trend feel approachable.
Ube’s “better-for-you” halo is another tailwind. It contains vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants, and has been linked to benefits such as supporting blood pressure and blood sugar. As health-led decision-making rises, this matters: 68 percent of Gen Z and 70 percent of millennials say health and wellbeing always or often influence their choices. That gives brands permission to position ube as natural and plant-based, while keeping claims credible and compliant.
Ube is beginning to transfer into retail. UK superfood-infused beverage brand Revibed recently launched ube powders in Holland & Barrett, positioned for smoothies, lattes, and baking, and marketed as a “simple, versatile single ingredient format.” That points to a wider opportunity for powders, syrups, concentrates, and RTDs.
“The next step is turning ube from a viral café moment into an everyday staple,” added Butler.
“Brands should build social-first launches, introduce ube in ‘safe’, familiar formats, and expand into at-home and functional options, while getting sourcing and authenticity right.”
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