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Coffee grading plays a crucial role in determining quality, pricing, and buyer expectations. However, grading systems vary across East Africa, making it essential for buyers to understand what each classification means.
What is Coffee Grading?
Coffee grading refers to the classification of beans based on:
- Size
- Density
- Defects
- Cup quality
It helps standardize quality across markets.
Key Grading Systems in East Africa
Uganda
- Screen size grading (AA, A, B, C)
- Robusta and Arabica graded separately
- Increasing focus on specialty microlots
Kenya
- Highly structured system (AA, AB, PB)
- Known for strict quality control and auction system
- AA beans are among the most sought-after globally
Rwanda & Burundi
- Focus more on cup quality than size
- Specialty-focused grading
- Strong presence in Cup of Excellence competitions
Why Grades Matter to Buyers
Grades influence:
- Pricing structures
- Roasting profiles
- Flavor expectations
Higher grades generally indicate better uniformity and fewer defects, but cup quality remains the ultimate benchmark.
The Role of Quality Control
At Wakanda Coffee Brokers, quality assurance includes:
- Sample cupping
- Defect analysis
- Pre-shipment inspections
This ensures consistency and reliability across shipments .
Common Misconceptions
- Bigger beans ≠ better flavor
- Grade alone doesn’t define specialty quality
- Origin and processing are equally important
Conclusion
Understanding grading systems allows buyers to make smarter sourcing decisions and align purchases with their quality expectations.