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Sourcing economics

From plucker to purchaser — the true cost of tea

Every tea carries a hidden balance sheet. Between the farmer’s palm and your shelf lies a chain of broker fees, transport charges, warehousing costs, and certification premiums that can shift a tea’s price by hundreds of percent. Sourcing economics unpacks that chain — examining what farmers truly receive, where value accumulates, and how buyers can choose models that reward quality and fairness.

Why every dollar matters in the tea chain

The journey from tea garden to tasting cup is paved with transactions — each one layering cost, risk, and markup onto what was once a humble fresh leaf. Sourcing economics is the study of these transactions: who captures value, who bears cost, and how transparent — or opaque — the chain remains. For buyers, distributors, and farmers alike, understanding the true distribution of a tea’s retail price is foundational to ethical sourcing, quality control, and long-term business planning.

Historically, China’s tea trade was governed by state-run monopolies. After market liberalization in the late 1980s, a profusion of brokers, middlemen, and small traders filled the vacuum, connecting thousands of smallholder farmers to domestic and international buyers. This system brought dynamism but also information asymmetry. Farmers often sold fresh leaves at prices disconnected from final auction values, while buyers faced unpredictable markups. The 1990s saw the rise of village-level cooperatives in regions like Anxi and Wuyishan, which attempted to pool resources and negotiate better prices. Yet broker networks persisted, especially in pu-erh regions like Menghai and Lincang, where trees are widely scattered and harvests fragmented.

Today, sourcing economics encompasses a range of models — from direct-trade relationships pioneered by brands featured on thetea.app, to cooperative-pooled systems analyzed in our report ‘Single-buyer vs. cooperative-pooled yields — economic comparison’ and ‘Cooperative pricing in Fujian white-tea villages — 2026 survey’. In Fuding, white tea cooperatives have succeeded in lifting farmer incomes by as much as 18% over individual sales, according to data collected in 2025. Chen Hui Yi, Senior Tea Expert, observes that ‘in Fuding, the cooperative model has not only stabilized prices but also improved leaf quality, as farmers pool resources for organic certification.’ But these gains are not universal. The report ‘Broker markups in Yunnan — what farmers receive vs. wholesale price’ reveals that for certain ancient tree pu-erh, farmers receive less than 30% of the wholesale price despite the teas carrying high retail premiums.

Transportation and storage add further layers. Our analysis ‘Air vs. sea — transport-cost analysis for tea imports to EU and US’ found that air freight from Kunming to Frankfurt can account for 15–25% of the landed cost for premium green teas, compressing margins for importers who need speed to preserve freshness. For aged teas like pu-erh, economics shifts to warehousing; ‘Warehouse storage cost per kilogram per year — pu’er aging economics’ models the cost of maintaining ideal humidity and temperature in Kunming versus Guangzhou, with implications for ROI over a decade of aging.

Fair-trade certifications, though growing, remain a small fraction of China’s tea output. As explored in ‘Fair-trade premiums in Chinese tea — adoption and pricing impact’, only about 2% of tea farms are certified, with premiums often absorbed by compliance costs rather than reaching farmers. Yet consumer demand in Europe and North America is nudging more cooperatives toward certification.

At tea.report, we track these dynamics quarterly, providing the data that buyers need to negotiate fair prices and that farmers need to see their place in the chain. For deeper explorations, tea.travel offers on-the-ground sourcing guides that connect buyers directly with cooperatives and artisans. Meanwhile, tea.equipment catalogs the storage solutions critical for those who age pu’er themselves. The economics of tea are as nuanced as the leaves themselves — and every data point helps ensure that the people who grow our favorite teas are not forgotten in the price.

24 articles

In this topic

  1. — 01

    Broker markups in Yunnan — what farmers receive vs. wholesale price

    A field survey across Menghai, Lincang, and Jinggu reveals the gap between tea-farmer earnings and city-gate wholesale prices. While a kilo of single-origin old-tree maocha may sell for $400 in Kunming, many growers see less than 30% of that. This report traces the broker tiers, regional discrepancies, and the slow push toward cooperative transparency.

  2. — 02

    Cooperative pricing in Fujian white-tea villages — 2026 survey

    A 2026 survey of 23 cooperative tea-processing units across Fuding and Zhenghe reveals the spread between farmgate costs and wholesale pricing for *Bái Háo Yín Zhēn*, *Bái Mǔ Dān*, and *Shòu Méi*. Cooperative members retained an average of 74% of the final wholesale price, but premium-grade lots in strong demand show the highest negotiation leverage.

  3. — 03

    Fair-trade premiums in Chinese tea — adoption and pricing impact

    Despite decades of growing demand for ethical tea, fair-trade certification covers only a fraction of China’s output. Sandry Law dissects farm-gate premiums, supply-chain erosion, and the reasons most smallholders remain outside the system.

  4. — 04

    Single-buyer vs. cooperative-pooled yields — economic comparison

    A data-driven comparison of two dominant Chinese tea sourcing models — direct single-buyer contracts versus cooperative-pooled yields — reveals stark differences in price stability, quality control, and farmer risk. Amgalan Chin examines producer data from Yunnan and Fujian.

  5. — 05

    Air vs. sea — transport-cost analysis for tea imports to EU and US

    When a container of aged pu'er can ride the waves for less than a dollar a kilo, while a consignment of spring *Lóngjǐng* demands a seat in an air cargo hold at ten times the price — the decision is never just arithmetic.

  6. — 06

    Warehouse storage cost per kilogram per year — pu'er aging economics

    The hidden carry cost of holding a cake for a decade — electricity, water, rent, and labor are the quiet artisans of age. An analytical deep-dive into the real cost of storing pu'er across China's three major aging climates.

  7. — 07

    Наценки посредников в Юньнани — что получает фермер против оптовой цены

    Полевое исследование в Мэнхай, Линьцане и Цзингу показывает разрыв между доходами чайных фермеров и оптовыми ценами на уровне городских ворот. Хотя килограмм маоча с одного старого дерева может продаваться за $400 в Куньмине, многие производители получают менее 30% от этой суммы. В этом отчёте прослеживаются уровни посредников, региональные различия и медленный процесс продвижения к прозрачности кооперативов.

  8. — 08

    Кооперативное ценообразование в фуцзяньских чайных деревнях, производящих белый чай, — обзор 2026 года

    Обследование 2026 года 23 кооперативных чаеперерабатывающих предприятий в Фудине и Чжэнхэ показывает разницу между затратами на уровне хозяйства и оптовыми ценами на *Bái Háo Yín Zhēn*, *Bái Mǔ Dān* и *Shòu Méi*. Члены кооперативов в среднем сохраняли 74 % конечной оптовой цены, однако партии премиального качества, пользующиеся высоким спросом, демонстрируют наибольший переговорный рычаг.

  9. — 09

    Надбавки Fairtrade в китайском чае — внедрение и влияние на ценообразование

    Несмотря на десятилетия растущего спроса на этичный чай, сертификация справедливой торговли охватывает лишь малую долю китайского производства. Сэндри Ло разбирает надбавки на уровне хозяйства, эрозию цепочки поставок и причины, по которым большинство мелких фермеров остаются за рамками системы.

  10. — 10

    Контракты с единым покупателем против кооперативно-пуловых урожаев — экономическое сравнение

    Основанное на данных сравнение двух доминирующих моделей закупки китайского чая — прямых контрактов с единым покупателем и кооперативно-пуловых урожаев — выявляет резкие различия в стабильности цен, контроле качества и рисках для производителей. Amgalan Chin изучает данные производителей из Юньнани и Фуцзяни.

  11. — 11

    Воздух против моря — анализ транспортных расходов при импорте чая в ЕС и США

    Когда контейнер выдержанного пуэра может плыть по волнам менее чем за доллар за килограмм, а партия весеннего *Lóngjǐng* требует места в грузовом отсеке самолёта в десять раз дороже — решение никогда не сводится к простой арифметике.

  12. — 12

    Стоимость хранения на складе за килограмм в год — экономика выдержки пуэра

    Скрытая стоимость содержания блина в течение десятилетия — электричество, вода, аренда и труд — тихие мастера возраста. Аналитический углублённый разбор реальной стоимости хранения пуэра в трёх основных климатических зонах выдержки Китая.

  13. — 13

    云南中间商加价  — 茶农所得 vs. 批发价格

    一份横跨勐海、临沧与景谷的田野调查,揭露了茶农收入与城门批发价之间的落差。虽然一公斤单一产区古树毛茶在昆明能卖到$400,许多种植者却只拿到不到三成。本报告追溯中间商层级、区域差异,以及缓慢推进的合作社透明度。

  14. — 14

    福建白茶村合作社定价——2026年调查

    一项针对福鼎和政和23个茶叶加工合作社的2026年调查,揭示了*Bái Háo Yín Zhēn*、*Bái Mǔ Dān*和*Shòu Méi*在产地成本与批发定价之间的价差。合作社社员平均保留了最终批发价的74%,但在强劲需求下,高等级批量展现出最大的议价杠杆。

  15. — 15

    中国茶叶的公平贸易溢价——采用与订价影响

    尽管数十年来对道德茶叶的需求日益增长,公平贸易认证仅覆盖中国产出的一小部分。Sandry Law 剖析产地端溢价、供应链蚕食,以及大多数小农仍置身体系之外的原因。

  16. — 16

    单一买家与合作社集体产量 — 经济比较

    以数据为导向的比较,在两大主导的中国茶叶采购模式之间 — 直接单一买家合约与合作社集体产量 — 揭示了价格稳定性、品质控管与农民风险上的鲜明差异。Amgalan Chin 审视来自云南与福建的生产者数据。

  17. — 17

    空运与海运——中国茶叶进口欧美的运输成本分析

    当一整柜陈年普洱茶能以每公斤不到一美元的价格乘风破浪,而一批春季 *Lóngjǐng* 却需要花费十倍价格抢占空运货舱座位——这项决策从来就不只是算术题。

  18. — 18

    仓库保存成本每公斤每年——普洱茶陈化经济学

    一块茶饼存放十年的隐性持有成本 — 电力、水、租金与人工,正是岁月静默的工匠。深度剖析中国三大陈化气候下存储普洱茶的实际成本。

  19. — 19

    雲南中間商加價  — 茶農所得 vs. 批發價格

    一份橫跨勐海、臨滄與景谷的田野調查,揭露了茶農收入與城門批發價之間的落差。雖然一公斤單一產區古樹毛茶在昆明能賣到$400,許多種植者卻只拿到不到三成。本報告追溯中間商層級、區域差異,以及緩慢推進的合作社透明度。

  20. — 20

    福建白茶村合作社定價——2026年調查

    一項針對福鼎和政和23個茶葉加工合作社的2026年調查,揭示了*Bái Háo Yín Zhēn*、*Bái Mǔ Dān*和*Shòu Méi*在產地成本與批發定價之間的價差。合作社社員平均保留了最終批發價的74%,但在強勁需求下,高等級批次展現出最大的議價槓桿。

  21. — 21

    中國茶葉的公平貿易溢價——採用與訂價影響

    儘管數十年來對道德茶葉的需求日益增長,公平貿易認證僅覆蓋中國產出的一小部分。Sandry Law 剖析產地端溢價、供應鏈蠶食,以及大多數小農仍置身體系之外的原因。

  22. — 22

    單一買家與合作社集體產量 — 經濟比較

    以數據為導向的比較,在兩大主導的中國茶葉採購模式之間 — 直接單一買家合約與合作社集體產量 — 揭示了價格穩定性、品質控管與農民風險上的鮮明差異。Amgalan Chin 審視來自雲南與福建的生產者數據。

  23. — 23

    空運與海運——中國茶葉進口歐美的運輸成本分析

    當一整櫃陳年普洱茶能以每公斤不到一美元的價格乘風破浪,而一批春季 *Lóngjǐng* 卻需要花費十倍價格搶佔空運貨艙座位——這項決策從來就不只是算術題。

  24. — 24

    倉庫儲存成本每公斤每年——普洱茶陳化經濟學

    一塊茶餅存放十年的隱性持有成本 — 電力、水、租金與人工,正是歲月靜默的工匠。深度剖析中國三大陳化氣候下存儲普洱茶的實際成本。