Why regional output matters and how the numbers come together
Regional yields are the annual harvest volumes broken down by China’s major tea provinces — Yunnan, Fujian, Guangdong, Anhui, and others — often further segmented by flush (spring, summer, autumn) and tea category. For a buyer sourcing shēng pǔ’ěr cakes, knowing whether Yiwu’s 2026 spring yield came in 12% below the five-year average is as actionable as a futures contract. For a distributor in Moscow, a bumper Fujian white-tea harvest means negotiating leverage. These numbers sit at the intersection of agronomy, climate and commerce.
Yield data gathering used to travel slowly. Until the early 2000s, much of it was funnelled through state-run factories and provincial tea companies, reported on paper ledgers and aggregated months after the last leaf was plucked. Today, teamotea’s network of tea experts like Amgalan Chin, Senior Tea Expert covering cross-regional dark teas and sheng pu-erh, tracks micro-regional figures in real time. “Yields from a mountain like Yiwu don’t simply measure kilograms — they measure the health of the entire ecosystem,” Chin notes. “A single dry spring week can reduce output by 15% in the most prized micro-regions.” That granularity is now becoming the norm. In 2023, according to the Yunnan Provincial Department of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, the province produced 416,800 tonnes of tea, a 4.2% increase year-on-year, yet the real story was in the distribution: an 8% jump in raw materials for shou pu-erh offset by a marginal decline in high-altitude spring buds because of a cool March.
The reports published under this topic — such as “Yiwu 2026 spring yields — early estimates,” due to appear shortly after the qingming window — drill into specific origin. Others in the series, including “Fujian 2026 white tea first-pluck volumes” and “Guangdong Dancong harvest window tightens in 2025,” examine how climate trends and labour availability are redrawing the seasonal map. These articles rely on on-ground reporting from teamotea’s regional specialists, remote sensing data and interviews with village co-operatives. The methodology is deliberately transparent: sample sizes, confidence bands and known blind spots are noted up front, because yield forecasting without a margin of error is merely storytelling.
For context, China’s total tea output reached roughly 3.18 million tonnes in 2022, yet the share contributed by each province shifts subtly year to year. Anhui’s green tea belt, for instance, has seen modest yield growth fuelled by replanted cultivars, while Guangdong’s fenghuang dancong region remains volume-constrained by geography — steep slopes and ancient bushes resist intensification. These structural realities are what make regional yield tracking indispensable for long-term procurement planning.
Those looking to connect yield data to cup character can explore tea.school’s origin courses; the pu-erh region mapping module, for example, ties yield histories directly to terroir signatures. And anyone seeking to source teas from the very hills that produce these numbers will find the constellation of teamotea brands — including thetea.app and puerh.app — offering transparency down to the farm gate. Regional yields are not just spreadsheets: they are the story of land, weather and human skill expressed in tonnes of leaf.