Domestic coffee prices
Recorded at 11:30 on August 5, domestic coffee prices increased by VND 1,000/kg, causing the average coffee bean price in key growing areas to reach VND 100,000/kg.
Specifically, the average coffee price in Dak Lak is 100,000 VND/kg.
Coffee prices in the old Dak Nong growing area, now Lam Dong, have the highest price of VND100,200/kg and the lowest is VND99,700/kg. Coffee prices in Gia Lai are priced at 99,800 VND/kg.
World coffee prices
Robusta's September 2025 term on the London exchange increased by 91 USD/ton (+2.73%), to 3,421 USD/ton; the November 2025 term increased by 79 USD/ton, reaching 3,338 USD/ton.
Arabica's September 2025 term on the New York exchange increased by 4.35 cents/pound (+1.53%), to 288.55 cents/pound; the December 2025 term increased by 4.10 cents/pound, reaching 281.65 cents/pound.
Coffee prices increased sharply in the first session of the week due to below-average rainfall in Brazil, causing some fake buying transactions in the futures coffee market. Somar Meteorologia reported on Monday that Brazil's largest arabica coffee growing area, Minas Gerais, received 2.7 mm of rain in the week ended on August 2, just 31% of the historical average.
The strengthening Brazilian real also supported coffee prices after the real increased to a 3.5-week high against the dollar on Monday.
The decline in ICE's Arabica coffee inventories also supported Arabica prices, as ICE's Arabica coffee inventories fell to a 5.5-month low of 760,529 packs on Monday.
In contrast, ICE's robusta coffee inventories increased, a factor that caused a decrease in prices, after ICE's robusta coffee inventories increased to a one-year high of 7,029 lots last Monday.
Funds holding too many fake Robusta coffee selling positions could aggravate any offset price increase in the future Robusta coffee market. ICE Futures Europe reported last Friday that funds increased their net selling positions in the ICE Robusta futures coffee market by 1,226 positions, to 5,854 fake positions in the week ended July 29, the highest in two years.
Coffee prices have decreased in the past three months due to the prospect of abundant coffee supply. Last month, arabica coffee prices fell to an 8-month low and robusta coffee prices fell to a 1.25-year low compared to the most recent futures contract price.
On June 25, the Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) under the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) forecast that Brazil's coffee output in the 2025/26 crop year will increase by +0.5% over the same period last year, reaching 65 million bags and Vietnam's coffee output in the 2025/26 crop year will increase by 6.9% over the same period last year, reaching the highest level in 4 years of 31 million bags. Brazil is the world's largest producer of arabica coffee, and our country is the world's largest producer of robusta coffee.