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Tidal wave of Chinese tea brands place bets on winning over American tastebuds

Published on: December 19, 2025 12:57 AM

Amanda Wang, co-founder of the Chinese fast-growing beverage chain Ningji Lemon Tea, made four research trips to the US before launching Bobobaba, designed to cater specifically to American tastes.

With colourful, Instagram-friendly drinks filled with fruit pieces, boba pearls and cute logos, Wang, whose Chinese brand is backed by Tencent and ByteDance, is among an influx of Chinese tea brand entrepreneurs betting they have what it takes to convert young American coffee and matcha drinkers.

“The US is a developing country in terms of bubble tea,” Wang told Reuters, adding that the US-centric brand is sweeter than what Ningji offers in China. Another concession needed to be made to the pace of doing business in America, where it’s impossible to open a store within 20 days of signing a contract, as she does in China.

“Doing business here is quite different from what we imagined in our heads. It took seven months to open the store, which was quite painful,” Wang said, adding that she has a 10-year plan for cautious expansion in the US.

Despite the challenges, companies from Chagee Tea House, Chahalo, Molly Tea and Auntea Jenny – buoyed by their success in China’s modern tea-drink market and propelled by flavour innovations, fresh brands and rapid store rollouts – have within the last year opened US stores or announced expansions.

Mixue, which has leveraged its $1 fruit teas to become the world’s largest food and beverage chain by stores, with over 53,000 locations globally, announced a ten-year storefront lease in New York City in September.

“Everyone is looking at the US as a potential market,” said Felix Lin, the CEO of a Nevada-based distributor for Asian food products, HF Foods, who said he has received a growing number of calls from Chinese food and beverage chains.

Chagee, which listed on the NASDAQ in April, has over 80 personnel working full-time on the company’s “significant pipeline” for US expansion, Emily Chang, the company’s top US executive, told Reuters in November. It plans to open a large flagship store in the heart of Silicon Valley next year.

Chang, previously an executive at Starbucks China, said part of Chagee’s plans includes a public campaign to promote tea among US consumers and to establish it as a new product category. This mirrors how Starbucks popularised coffee in tea-drinking China nearly 30 years ago. In November, Chagee launched the “evening tea service,” a bespoke experience that offers a flight of three teas and a tea sommelier, in part to show US consumers that tea can be enjoyed in the evening. Demand for coffee tends to drop off in the early afternoon, Chang said.

Most of these brands have found success beyond China’s highly-competitive market, where annual revenues for tea-drinks will exceed 30 billion yuan this year, per estimates from Hongcan Research Institute. They have also already expanded to Southeast Asia and other nearby Asian markets – such as Australia. Some also have begun building a presence in the Middle East and Europe.

Wang is in no doubt that the opportunity for tea brands in America’s large, stable consumer market is vast, though she knows it won’t be easy.

“Culture and brand awareness are the biggest challenges,” she said. “Building trust takes time.”

Filed Under: Lifestyle Tagged With: American, Chinese, tastebuds, tea brands, Tidal

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