GCPDex Starbucks Index
How much does a Tall Latte cost around the world? A purchasing power comparison across 22 countries.
Last updated: · 22 countries · 5 drinks
Key Insights
Full Price Comparison
All prices are Tall (12 oz / 355 ml) size, converted to USD at April 2026 exchange rates. Click column headers to sort.
| # | Country | Local Price | USD | vs. Global Median | Index (US=100) |
|---|
All 5 Drinks — USD Comparison
Side-by-side view of all 5 standard drinks across all countries.
| Country | Latte | Cappuccino | Caramel M. | Drip | Frappuccino | 5-Drink Avg |
|---|
Country Deep Dives
Why is a latte $2.17 in Italy but $6.70 in Switzerland — neighboring countries with the same currency? Six standout markets explained.
The 5 Drinks
Why these five? They’re the most internationally available standardized SKUs at every Starbucks worldwide.
Purchasing Power
USD prices alone are misleading. A $5 latte in Switzerland (median wage CHF 36/h) is wildly different from $5 in Brazil (minimum wage R$7/h). How many lattes per hour of work?
| Country | Latte (USD) | Minimum wage (USD/hour) | Lattes per hour of work |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇦🇺Australia | $4.36 | $15.85 | 3.6 |
| 🇨🇭Switzerland | $6.70 | $23.20 | 3.5 |
| 🇬🇧United Kingdom | $5.34 | $14.05 | 2.6 |
| 🇩🇪Germany | $5.33 | $13.50 | 2.5 |
| 🇫🇷France | $5.16 | $12.85 | 2.5 |
| 🇨🇦Canada | $3.37 | $12.05 | 3.6 |
| 🇯🇵Japan | $3.33 | $7.42 | 2.2 |
| 🇺🇸United States | $5.45 | $7.25 | 1.3 |
| 🇰🇷South Korea | $3.85 | $7.30 | 1.9 |
| 🇮🇹Italy | $2.17 | $0 (no national minimum) | — |
| 🇧🇷Brazil | $2.12 | $1.43 | 0.7 |
| 🇮🇳India | $3.04 | $0.45 | 0.1 |
| 🇮🇩Indonesia | $2.84 | $1.25 | 0.4 |
| 🇵🇭Philippines | $2.95 | $1.10 | 0.4 |
A US worker on federal minimum wage works ~46 minutes to afford one Tall Latte. In India, the same drink takes ~6.7 hours. Wages from official 2026 sources, converted at April 2026 rates.
Frequently Asked Questions
2026 Q2 Market Report
A deeper analysis of what these prices reveal — written by GCPDex’s research team, April 2026.
Executive summary
A Tall Latte at Starbucks now costs anywhere from $2.12 in Brazil to $6.70 in Switzerland — a 3.2× spread. That spread isn’t random. It tracks a story about local coffee culture, currency policy, store ownership structure, and how aggressively Starbucks adapts its global playbook to each market. This Q2 update covers five findings that surprised us, three macro trends shaping the next twelve months, and what to watch for in our Q3 refresh.
Five surprises from the Q2 dataset
1. The Europe paradox. Italy at $2.17 sits next to Switzerland at $6.70 — same continent, same currency in Italy and shared border, yet a 3× gap. The cause isn’t transportation or taxes. It’s competitive context. In Italy, espresso at a corner bar is €1; Starbucks must price aggressively or be irrelevant. In Switzerland, where the median wage exceeds CHF 36/hour and there is no entrenched chain-coffee competitor, Starbucks can extract premium pricing without losing volume. The same brand, two completely different positioning strategies.
2. Brazil cracks the price floor. At $2.12, Brazil is now the cheapest Starbucks market globally — even cheaper than Italy. Two compounding forces: a weak BRL (R$5.25/USD in April 2026) and the fact that Brazilian Starbucks is operated by SouthRock, an independent licensee that prices without direct Seattle oversight. Watch this number: SouthRock has been under financial restructuring since 2024, and pricing decisions could swing materially if ownership changes.
3. Japan’s ¥500 wall is holding — for now. Japan held Tall Latte at ¥500 ($3.33) through the February 2026 price wave that hit competing chains. ¥500 is a psychological anchor: a single coin, frictionless at the register. But raw material costs are pushing margin compression visibly — our internal models suggest a ¥530 update is plausible by Q4 2026 if JPY weakness continues. If that happens, Japan moves from “mid-tier” to top-quartile pricing in USD terms.
4. India’s hidden premium. India’s $3.04 reading is misleading. India’s minimum wage works out to roughly $0.45/hour — meaning a Tall Latte costs about 6.7 hours of minimum-wage work. By that purchasing-power measure, India is by far the most expensive Starbucks market on the planet. The headline USD number understates how aspirational this product is in the local context.
5. Korea overtakes Japan, quietly. South Korea at $3.85 is now ~15% more expensive than Japan ($3.33). Korea also has the highest Starbucks density in Asia — approximately 1,800 stores nationally. The combination is unusual: high price plus high density usually compresses one or the other. Korean consumers’ willingness to treat Starbucks as a default daytime workspace is what’s holding both up.
Three macro trends to watch
Trend 1: Currency, not menu price, is doing most of the work. Across the 22-country panel, local-currency price changes year-over-year were modest (typically 3–8%). USD-denominated price changes were much larger (often 10–20%) because USD strengthened against most emerging-market currencies through 2025. Translation: if you’re using GCPDex as a leading indicator for Starbucks’ international revenue, separate currency from real pricing.
Trend 2: Licensee vs company-operated divergence is widening. Markets where Starbucks is operated by a licensee (Brazil, parts of Latin America, Middle East franchises) are increasingly priced below directly-operated markets (US, Canada, China, Japan, Korea). The gap has roughly doubled since 2023. This is structural, not cyclical — licensees prioritize volume; corporate prioritizes margin.
Trend 3: The “espresso defense” is spreading. Starbucks’s pricing strategy in Italy — match the local coffee bar baseline rather than fight it — is being copied in other strong-coffee-culture markets. France ($5.16) and Germany ($5.33) have priced more aggressively than the GDP-per-capita model would predict, partly to compete with the post-2020 explosion of independent third-wave cafes.
What we’re watching for the Q3 update (July 2026)
Three specific data points will determine whether the Q3 report tells a continuation story or a break story:
- Japan ¥500 → ¥530? Watch the next Starbucks Japan menu update. A move would push Japan from rank 14 to roughly rank 10 in our index.
- Brazil SouthRock resolution. If SouthRock is acquired or recapitalized, expect immediate pricing realignment — likely upward by 15–25% to match regional norms.
- China RMB and tariff environment. China at $4.14 sits in the middle of the pack currently. Currency moves or US-China trade frictions affecting input costs could shift this materially.
The full Q2 dataset (22 countries × 5 drinks × all sizes, including alternative beverages) is available as JSON on request. We refresh quarterly. — GCPDex Research, April 2026
Methodology
The GCPDex Starbucks Index collects Tall size prices for 5 standardized drinks across 22 countries. Data is sourced from official Starbucks websites, verified third-party menu aggregators, Uber Eats store listings, and financial news articles.
- Standard basket: Caffè Latte, Cappuccino, Caramel Macchiato, Brewed Coffee (drip/filter), Coffee Frappuccino
- Substitutions: Where a drink isn’t available, the closest equivalent is used (e.g., Americano for Drip in UK, Espresso Frappuccino for Coffee Frappuccino in Korea/UAE/Singapore, Pour Over for Drip in India)
- Exchange rates: Bloomberg mid-rates as of April 2026
- Tax: Prices reflect what’s shown on the menu — tax-inclusive in most countries, pre-tax in US/Canada
- Limitations: Prices can vary by city and store location. Some countries rely on estimated data from news sources rather than official pricing.