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El Salvador

From a turbulent past riddled with challenges, El Salvador continues to move forward, leaning heavily into the production of specialty coffee. Discover the origin’s rich flavours and unique varieties, and meet a new generation of young farmers driving this transformation.

El Salvador's coffee journey is one of challenges and resilience. Despite conflicts, price crises and problems with leaf rust, the country has embraced specialty coffee and direct trade, offering the world unique varieties such as Pacas and Pacamara. With a legacy of high-quality coffee featuring notes of berries, stone fruits, and chocolate, Salvadoran coffee is a testament to the dedication of its producers. Led by a new generation of tech-savvy farmers and featuring significant female representation, Salvadoran producers are ideal partners for roasters seeking exceptional coffee and sustainable practices.

Verified Sellers from

El Salvador

Discover the right supplier for your roastery, from innovative farmers and independent exporters to certified cooperatives. Volume lots, micro-lots, blends or single varieties... You'll find what you're looking for.

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Finca Las Brisas

Single Farm

Pola Handcrafted Coffees. Honeys and naturals dried on raised beds. Located in Juayua, Apaneca-Ilamatepec mountain range. Carlos comes from a family of farmers (he is the 5th generation) and worked in the textile industry for 20 years before becoming fully dedicated to coffee. Today, he manages Finca Las Brisas and 2 other family farms and is determined to bring coffee farming to the 21st century by investing in technology and sustainability. Carlos describes his approach to farming as “dramatically new and sustainable”. He doesn’t produce washed lots because the process results in the contamination of water sources. The farmer is also a big believer in the power of Mycorrhizal fungi, a type of fungi that forms a mutually beneficial symbiotic relationship with the coffee plants.

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Loma La Gloria

Single Farm, Mill, Exporter

Our coffee lands have hosted from the very beginning The Bourbon and The Pacamara families. Year after year we see them thrive. We tend to their needs, offer them a nice shelter under a lush canopy of trees with magical nature surround sounds, and make sure their kiddos get picked up, bathed, dried, and get a nice rest before prepping them for their lifetime trip to diverse corners of the world. OUR WHEEL OF COLORED FLAVORS' magic happens in our drying patios. Where all the sugar-coated beans - after several days of having fun under the sun, flipping, turning, jumping, star-gazing, and napping – develop their colorful array of flavors. … more www.lomalagloria.com

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MAV COFFEE

Grupo de granjas
Q Certified

MAV COFFEE is the realization of a dream: to recuperate the farms of our first generations and to make coffee a sustainable means for both the land and the people. Our Farms are where we work alongside Lean Coffee Management and get to know each and every plant in the premise. Together we represent 3 farms in El Salvador with 3 unique Ecosystems: Finca San Antonio 1890: Resilient Sarchimor Blend. Finca Valle de Oro: Avant-garde farm. No pestisides Marsellesa. Finca La Pacaya: 3 x Cup of Excellence Winner. Geisha and 86+Microlots We have proudly cared for this farm for five generations, maintaining our forefather's values of quality, work ethic, and respect for the land and workers. Today it is under a renewal process, since we have replaced the traditional varieties that are affected by rust, for a more resistant grain, such as the Sarchimor blends and Marsellesa. We also renewed our growing techniques through state of the art technology and science for improved quality and consistency to keep up with a steady crop.

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Sicafe S.A. De C.V.

Single Farm, Mill, Exporter

Sicafe is owned by the Silva family. We grow, process, export and roast coffee in Apaneca, Ahuachapán, El Salvador. We market coffees from our 6 family farms, located around the summits of the Apaneca-Ilamatepec mountain range, and also from 30 other producers around the country. We are proud to say we have had coffees amongst the winning lots of the national Cup of Excellence 7 times! La Siberia Estate, in our family since 1870, produced a lot that was awarded 94 pts. by Coffee Review in 2008. We also received 3 awards from AVPA Paris for our roasted coffees for two consecutive years. In 2017, our mill San Pedro was named the most environmentally friendly in the country. We grow mainly 2 varieties: Bourbon and Pacamara. Our trees are covered by shade and fertilized with organic matter produced by us. We also care deeply for our staff by providing workshops, scholarships and full pensions for those that retire because of old age. Visit our website sicafesa.com.

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Cafe Pacas

Single Farm, Commercial Representative, Mill, Exporter

Our family grows coffee in multiple farms in the Western part of El Salvador within the Apaneca-Ilamatepec mountain range, a region known for its fertile volcanic soil. The Pacas variety was discovered in one of our farms, as well as the Bernardina. Some of our farms have been COE winners with coffees scoring above 90! Our mantra is "To love coffee as we love family". We watch it grow from seedling, we look after it, we nourish it with everything it needs to be its best. We cultivate and treasure our coffee. We believe in it. And when it grows and it is ready, we let it free to go wherever it wants, to all corners of the planet. Doesn't matter how far it goes and where it settles, we still feel it is part of us and we are proud of it. As a company, we are committed to providing our staff with good working conditions, decent wages and training. We also have an internal competition to motivate farm managers to increase the quality of the coffees. Read more about us here: cafepacas.com.

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Los Cipreses Farm

Granja individual

It has been more than 100 years since 5 generations of coffee farmers of the Contreras and Pimentel family began coffee cultivation in Monte Verde in 1915, close to El Chingo volcano in Santa Ana, El Salvador. Yesterday as today, we continue harvesting the best fruits of the arabic variety of Bourbon and Pacas, which are submitted in washing processes, honey and natural to highlight its citrus and floral flavors, chocolate in a clean cup, great fragrance and natural sweetness. In this century Contreras Valdez family has a collection of medium and small farmers who sell their products in the domestic and international markets, with the seal of excellence and good agricultural and manufacturing practices, that our customers demand without neglecting sustainability, environment and the corporate social responsibility of its employees.

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Finca San Antonio Amatepec

Granja individual
Rainforest Alliance

Finca San Antonio Amatepec & Finca San José are urban coffee farms located in San Salvador, El Salvador. We've been operating since 1970 and focus on specialty coffee production through sustainable methods. We're members of the International Women's Coffee Alliance (IWCA) and the Denomination of Origin Bálsamo Quezaltepec. We've been awarded a 2021 Sprudgie for "Notable Coffee Producer"!

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Finca Sabaneta

Fazenda única

Finca Sabaneta has remained in the family for almost 100 years. It all started with my grandfather Sabino Contreras who started growing red bourbon varieties but it was my father Beto Contreras who took the vision and became passionate about the crop by planting more areas of land. As we grew up, we understood the importance of innovating and that is how we made a leap in quality by installing a small mill and processing our coffee grape to parchment. Despite the difficult times we believe that united as brothers (Fredy, Rene, Mary, Alby, Saul and Milena) we have managed to maintain our coffee crops and planted new varieties such as bales, yellow and red Bourbon, pacamara, sarchimores, yellow icatu, anacafe, etc. always trying to obtain specialty coffees and achieve cupping from 82 to 86 points. Today we are again innovating drying in adobe patios and African beds processing honey, natural and washed coffees, working with organic bioferments to enrich the soils,

Specialty coffee became a lifeline for many producing countries after the price crisis of the early 2000s. El Salvador is a striking example of this. Today, the volume of coffee exported is only a quarter of what it was at the turn of the millennium. Low market prices and the leaf rust crisis of 2012-2013 led many producers to abandon coffee or their farms altogether. Yet, some farms still thrive. These are the ones that embraced specialty coffee and direct trade.

The Impact of War and Reform

There was a time when coffee was El Salvador’s main export. In 1910, the country was the largest coffee producer in Central America. Between the 1920s and 1940s, coffee symbolised wealth, bringing in revenue that funded investments in health and education. In 1970, El Salvador exported nearly four million bags of coffee—almost five times the amount exported today.

The Impact of War and Reform on coffee growing in el salvador

It was after the second World War that the country’s coffee production started to suffer. Many producers who had started growing coffee during the war due to a boom in demand went into debt shortly after. The 1980s brought significant changes with the government’s agrarian reform, which led many medium-sized farmers to lose their land. The last phase of this reform, “Land for the Tiller,” included the expropriation of small plots leased to others.

At the same time, the Salvadoran Civil War (1979-1992) severely impacted coffee production, reducing volumes by nearly 20% over seven years. Many producers in conflict areas abandoned their land. The war left the country’s economy in ruins, forcing many coffee farmers to mortgage their land for loans.

The Challenges of the 2000s

By the 2000s, coffee growing had become so risky that producers' love for coffee began to fade. The price crisis forced many smallholders to switch to other crops like beans and corn, costing the country hundreds of thousands of bags in exports. The final blow was the leaf rust crisis of 2012-2013, which led to the loss of around 60% of the plantations. With no government intervention or investment, many producers had no choice but to abandon their lands.

The Resilience of Salvadoran Coffee

Despite these challenges, Salvadoran coffee producers have built a great reputation for quality. When buyers think of El Salvador, they often think of the exotic varieties discovered here, like Pacas and Pacamara, rather than the country's scarred political past. Coffee from El Salvador is renowned for its full-bodied and creamy texture, with notes of berries, stone fruits, citric acidity, chocolate, and butterscotch. The producers who made it in the international market have adopted careful post-harvesting practices and embraced more high-quality varieties like Gesha, Bernardina, and Marsellesa.

The Resilience of Salvadoran Coffee

Today, most coffee is produced in the Western part of El Salvador, in the Apaneca-Ilamatepec and El Bálsamo Quetzaltepec mountain ranges. The country also has other coffee-producing regions: Alotepec-Metapán in the North, Chichontepec in the Centre, and Tecapa-Chinameca and Cacahuatique in the East. Most farmers sell their coffee to mills or intermediaries, and many are now following Costa Rica's example by using mills as service providers or building their own.

Since 2018, Salvadoran producers and mills have been using Algrano to sell and ship their coffees. Farms that have been in families for decades, sometimes over a century, are now led by a tech-savvy and highly connected new generation. New coffee producers are also entering the field, driven by a love of nature and the environment. This makes El Salvador an excellent place to find partners who speak buyers’ language. It’s also a great origin for roasters who value female-produced coffee, as more than 35% of the country’s 19,000 producers are women. Despite the challenges, there’s a positive outlook for Salvadoran coffee, with many opportunities for collaboration

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