Skip to main content

Coffee Roast Levels Explained: Light vs Medium vs Dark and What It Actually Means

Coffee Roast Levels Explained: Light vs Medium vs Dark and What It Actually Means

Freshly roasted coffee beans showing the characteristic brown colour and slight surface oil development that indicates a medium to medium-dark roast level, where the coffee has developed roast flavours while retaining some of the origin characteristics of the green bean before roasting
Coffee roasting transforms green coffee beans (which taste grassy and unpleasant brewed as-is) through a precise thermal process of between 8 and 15 minutes, during which the beans undergo the Maillard reaction (browning and development of hundreds of new flavour compounds) and caramelisation of sugars. The degree to which this process is carried determines the roast level and fundamentally shapes the flavour profile of the finished coffee. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

The confusion about coffee roast levels has two sources: the labels themselves are not standardised (one roaster's "medium" is another's "dark"), and the most common assumption about roast levels (that darker roast equals stronger coffee) is incorrect in the way most people understand it. Roast level affects flavour profile profoundly, affects caffeine content marginally, and affects the type of flavour compounds present in the cup far more than the "strength" of the brew. Understanding roast level is the single most useful piece of knowledge for selecting a coffee that will produce what you actually want to drink.

Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine

Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine

The ultimate home espresso setup. Replaces daily cafe visits with barista-quality coffee.

View on Amazon →

What Happens During Roasting

Green coffee beans contain approximately 300 flavour precursor compounds, mostly in the form of sugars, amino acids, and organic acids. During roasting, the application of heat (roasting temperatures reach 200 to 230°C inside the drum, though bean surface temperature is lower) drives a cascade of chemical reactions:

  • Drying phase (until approximately 160°C internal bean temperature): Moisture evaporates (green beans are 8% to 12% moisture; roasted beans 1% to 3%). The bean turns from green to yellow, then tan.
  • Maillard reaction (from approximately 150°C): Amino acids and reducing sugars react to form hundreds of new compounds including melanoidins (responsible for brown colour), pyrazines (nutty, earthy notes), furans (caramel notes), and thousands of volatile aromatic molecules. This is the same reaction that browns bread and seared meat.
  • First crack (approximately 196 to 205°C): Steam pressure inside the bean causes it to expand and crack audibly. This marks the beginning of a light roast; the coffee is now drinkable. The bean volume increases by 50% to 100% from green coffee size.
  • Development phase: Between first crack and second crack, the roaster develops the flavour profile. Short development time (20 to 30 seconds) produces a light roast; longer development produces medium roast.
  • Second crack (approximately 224 to 230°C): The cell structure of the bean fractures more completely, releasing oils to the surface. Entering or exiting second crack defines dark roast territory. Oils become visible on the bean surface.

Roast Levels: What Each Means in Practice

Light Roast

Internal bean temperature at drop: 196 to 210°C (just after or slightly into first crack)
Bean appearance: Light brown, matte surface, no oil visible
Common names: Light roast, Blonde (Starbucks), Cinnamon roast, Half-City roast

Light roasts retain the most of the original coffee's terroir (the flavour characteristics derived from the farm's soil, altitude, variety, and processing method). A light roast from an Ethiopian natural process coffee will taste fruity and floral; a light roast from a Kenyan washed coffee will taste bright and acidic with berry and citrus notes. These characteristics are not "added" by the roaster; they were present in the green bean and preserved by the shorter roasting time. Light roasts are the choice of specialty coffee shops and third-wave roasters precisely because they showcase the origin coffee's character.

Light roasts have slightly higher caffeine than dark roasts by weight (caffeine begins degrading above 200°C; the difference is approximately 5%, which is negligible in practice). They have higher acidity than darker roasts. They require a slightly finer grind and longer extraction time than the same coffee at a darker roast level.

Medium Roast

Internal bean temperature at drop: 210 to 220°C (fully through first crack, before second crack)
Bean appearance: Medium brown, matte to very slightly oily surface
Common names: Medium roast, City roast, City+ roast, Full City (approaching dark)

Medium roasts balance origin characteristics with roast-developed flavour. The Maillard reaction has produced more brown-sugary, nutty, and caramel compounds that complement rather than overpower the underlying coffee character. Most commercial "specialty" blends intended for espresso use medium roast profiles because they produce consistent results across extraction variables and work well with milk. Supermarket "premium" coffees (Lavazza Qualità Rossa, Illy classico, most branded arabica blends) are medium to medium-dark roasts. This is the most versatile roast level for multiple brewing methods.

Baratza Encore Conical Burr Coffee Grinder

Baratza Encore Conical Burr Coffee Grinder

The single most important upgrade for home brewing. A precision grinder transforms average beans.

View on Amazon →

Dark Roast

Internal bean temperature at drop: 220 to 230°C (approaching or entering second crack)
Bean appearance: Dark brown to near-black; oily or very oily surface
Common names: Dark roast, French roast, Italian roast, Vienna roast, Espresso roast

Dark roasts have undergone significant sugar caramelisation and pyrolysis (thermal decomposition of organic compounds at high heat), producing smoky, chocolatey, and bitter flavour compounds that dominate or completely obscure the original bean's character. The acidity of the original green coffee has been degraded; dark roasts taste less acidic and more bitter. The common belief that dark roast is stronger in caffeine is incorrect: the lower caffeine degradation from lighter roasting means light roast actually has marginally more caffeine by weight. Dark roast has lower density (more moisture and CO2 driven off), meaning a scoop of dark roast coffee has fewer grams than the same scoop of light roast; if measured by volume rather than weight, this can produce a stronger brew, which may be the origin of the misconception.

Italian espresso tradition has historically used dark or very dark roasted robusta-dominant blends (Illy, Lavazza, Kimbo) for espresso; the bitterness was considered a quality characteristic and the lower acidity was preferred. Third-wave specialty coffee has challenged this with lighter espresso roasts that preserve origin character; both approaches are legitimate, producing fundamentally different cup profiles.

Which Roast for Which Brewing Method

Brewing Method Recommended Roast Why
Pour over / V60Light to mediumHigh extraction clarity showcases light roast's origin complexity
French pressMedium to medium-darkFull immersion and oil retention suits medium roast body and chocolate notes
Espresso machineMedium to darkHigh pressure extraction requires less soluble coffee (dark roast degasses more, provides cushion for timing)
Moka potMedium-dark to darkHigh extraction ratio and small volume suits dark roast's stronger flavour development
Cold brewMedium to darkCold extraction reduces acidity anyway; medium-dark roast's chocolate notes translate well
AeropressAny roast levelVersatile method; adjust recipe parameters to suit the roast level used

Related: Pour Over Guide: The Best Method for a Single Cup | How to Make Cold Brew Coffee at Home

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Kenya AA: Africa's Most Complex and Celebrated Cup

Kenya AA: Africa's Most Complex and Celebrated Cup Mount Kenya (5,199m) — on its central and southern slopes, at elevations of 1,400–2,100m, Kenya's most celebrated coffee is produced. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) In a blind cupping of the world's finest single-origin coffees, Kenya regularly emerges as the origin that stops experienced tasters in their tracks. Not because it is the most delicate (that is Panama Geisha), or the most complex florally (Ethiopia Yirgacheffe), but because it possesses a flavour characteristic that no other origin reliably produces: a vibrant, intensely fruity acidity that registers specifically as blackcurrant — sometimes blackberry, sometimes tomato-like in savoury applications — combined with a body and structure that makes Kenyan coffee feel substantial rather than merely acidic. It is an assertive, confident cup that divides opinion: some find it thrillingly complex; others find it startling. But no one who tastes a well-prepared K...

The Best Coffee Machines for Home in 2025 — At Every Budget

The Best Coffee Machines for Home in 2025 — At Every Budget [Featured Image: A well-designed home kitchen counter with an espresso machine and grinder — aspirational lifestyle imagery. Source: Unsplash.com, search "home espresso machine" — free commercial licence.] The coffee machine market has never offered more options — or more confusion. From $30 French presses to $3,000 prosumer espresso machines, the range is bewildering without a roadmap. This guide cuts through the noise with honest recommendations across every realistic home budget, organised by brewing method and use case. Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine The ultimate home espresso setup. Replaces daily cafe visits with barista-quality coffee. View on Amazon → Understanding What You Actually Want Before choosing equipment, be honest about three things: Drink type : Do you primarily want espresso-based drinks (cappuccino, flat white, latte) or fil...

The History of Starbucks: From Pike Place Market to 36,000 Locations

The History of Starbucks: From Pike Place Market to 36,000 Locations A typical Starbucks interior. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) Starbucks is the largest coffeehouse chain in the world, operating more than 36,000 stores across 84 countries and generating $36 billion in revenue during fiscal year 2023. Yet the company began not as a cafe but as a single retail bean shop in Seattle's Pike Place Market in 1971. Its transformation from a local roaster into a global phenomenon is one of the defining business stories of the late twentieth century, shaped by a handful of pivotal decisions, bold personalities, and a fundamental bet on whether Americans would pay significantly more for a better cup of coffee. Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine The ultimate home espresso setup. Replaces daily cafe visits with barista-quality coffee. View on Amazon → The Original Founders and the Pike Place Store (1971) Starbucks was founded on 30 Marc...

Coffee Subscriptions: Are They Worth It? The Complete Guide

Coffee Subscriptions: Are They Worth It? The Complete Guide [Featured Image: A curated coffee subscription box arriving — specialty roasted bags, tasting notes card. Source: Unsplash.com, search "coffee subscription box" or "specialty coffee bag" — free commercial licence.] Coffee subscriptions — fresh-roasted beans delivered on a recurring schedule — have become one of the fastest-growing categories in both specialty coffee and food subscription boxes. The market has expanded from a handful of niche roasters offering direct delivery to a sprawling ecosystem of subscription services from single roasters, curated multi-roaster platforms, and algorithmically personalised services. The question is: do any of them genuinely serve the coffee drinker better than simply buying from a good local roaster? Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine The ultimate home espresso setup. Replaces daily cafe visits with barista-quality cof...

Specialty Coffee in Taiwan: Alishan, Taipei Café Culture, Simple Kaffa, Fika Fika, and World Barista Champions

Specialty Coffee in Taiwan: Alishan, Taipei Café Culture, Simple Kaffa, Fika Fika, and World Barista Champions The Alishan mountain range in central Taiwan, home to the island's highest-altitude coffee farms. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) Taiwan does not appear in the top tier of global coffee-producing or coffee-consuming nations by volume. Its domestic coffee production, spread across mountain ranges in the centre and south of the island, amounts to a few hundred metric tons annually, a rounding error relative to Brazil or Vietnam. Yet in the specialty coffee world, Taiwan is discussed with a seriousness that is entirely disproportionate to its size. The island has produced World Barista Champions, contributed landmark roasters and café concepts that have influenced café design from Seoul to Melbourne, built one of Asia's densest and most sophisticated urban café cultures in Taipei, and developed a domestic coffee-growing industry at Alishan, Gukeng, and Dongshan that sp...

Coffee Cocktails: Espresso Martini, White Russian, Kahlúa Origins, and How to Make Them at Home

Coffee Cocktails: Espresso Martini, White Russian, Kahlúa Origins, and How to Make Them at Home The espresso martini, created by Dick Bradsell in London in 1983, is the most popular coffee cocktail in the world. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) Coffee and alcohol have been combined since at least the seventeenth century, when Ottoman coffeehouses were occasionally spiked with araq and European colonists discovered that a shot of spirits into hot coffee produced warmth, energy, and conviviality simultaneously. But the modern canon of coffee cocktails is surprisingly young: the espresso martini dates to 1983, the Kahlúa recipe was commercialized in 1936, and the White Russian's cultural peak was the 1998 release of The Big Lebowski, which turned an obscure 1960s drink into a generational touchstone. Together these drinks define a category that is currently experiencing a global revival, driven by a generation of bartenders who now approach coffee with the same ingredient rigor they...

The Best Coffee Subscription Services in 2025: Atlas, Trade, Onyx, Intelligentsia, and Mistobox Compared

The Best Coffee Subscription Services in 2025: Atlas, Trade, Onyx, Intelligentsia, and Mistobox Compared Specialty coffee subscriptions deliver roasted-to-order beans directly from roasters, often within 48 to 72 hours of roasting. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) The coffee subscription market has matured significantly since its early 2010s explosion, when every third-wave roaster launched a "coffee of the month" box and consumers were largely navigating blind. By 2025, the market has stratified clearly into distinct categories: single-roaster subscriptions (where you commit to one brand's rotating selection), multi-roaster curators (where a platform sources from dozens of roasters and personalizes your selection), travel-themed subscriptions (one country per shipment), and wholesale-adjacent services for serious home enthusiasts. Pricing has also consolidated, with most quality subscriptions falling between $17 and $32 per 250g bag including shipping, a figure that re...

The History of Instant Coffee: From Satori Kato in 1903 to Nescafé and the Modern Market

The History of Instant Coffee: From Satori Kato in 1903 to Nescafé and the Modern Market Nescafé sachets, one of the most widely sold consumer products in the world since 1938. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) Instant coffee occupies an unusual position in the world of coffee. Within the specialty coffee community it is often dismissed or ignored entirely, treated as a category so far removed from serious coffee that it barely warrants comment. Among the global population of coffee drinkers, it is the dominant form. According to data from the International Coffee Organization, instant coffee accounts for approximately 34 percent of all coffee consumed worldwide, and in some markets, including the United Kingdom, Australia, Japan, and much of Eastern Europe and South America, it commands majority or near-majority market share. The technology that makes it possible, the conversion of brewed liquid coffee into a dry soluble powder that reconstitutes instantly in hot water, is not trivia...

Matcha vs Coffee: Caffeine, Antioxidants, Focus, and Which Is Right for You

Matcha vs Coffee: Caffeine, Antioxidants, Focus, and Which Is Right for You Matcha and coffee deliver caffeine through different chemical contexts, producing distinct effects on focus and energy. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) The matcha vs coffee debate has become one of the most searched wellness comparisons of the 2020s, fueled by a matcha market that grew from $2.62 billion in 2019 to an estimated $4.5 billion in 2024, and by a generation of health-conscious consumers who approach their morning beverage choice as a metabolic decision rather than a mere preference. The comparison matters because the two drinks are not simply interchangeable caffeine sources with different flavors. They deliver caffeine through different chemical environments, contain different classes of bioactive compounds, and produce measurably different cognitive and physiological effects. This guide compares them on every dimension that research supports: caffeine content, L-theanine and its interaction wit...

Starbucks vs Costa vs Caffè Nero: UK Coffee Chains Compared

Starbucks vs Costa vs Caffè Nero: UK Coffee Chains Compared A Costa Coffee branch in Birmingham city centre. (CC / Wikimedia Commons) Britain has developed a sophisticated chain coffee culture over the past three decades, and three brands dominate the branded coffee shop market: Costa Coffee, Starbucks, and Caffè Nero. Together they account for roughly 75% of branded coffee shop locations in the UK, but they are not interchangeable. They differ meaningfully on price, coffee quality, food offering, loyalty programme generosity, and the experience of actually sitting in one of their stores. This guide uses specific, current data to help you decide which chain deserves your money and your stamp card. Breville Barista Express Espresso Machine The ultimate home espresso setup. Replaces daily cafe visits with barista-quality coffee. View on Amazon → Market Share: The Numbers Costa Coffee is the dominant branded coffee chain in the UK by...