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Rwandan Black

Black tea

About this tea

Rwandan Black is the bright, full-bodied cup of the 'Land of a Thousand Hills' — grown on some of the highest, coolest tea slopes in East Africa, often above 1,800 meters in the volcanic foothills near Lake Kivu and the Nyungwe rainforest. Where neighboring Kenyan CTC is prized for sheer briskness, Rwanda's smaller, cooperative-driven gardens lean into a softer, rounder edge: still brisk and coppery in the cup, but with a gentler astringency and a faint honeyed sweetness that comes from slower leaf growth at altitude. Rebuilt almost from scratch after the 1994 genocide, Rwanda's tea sector is now one of the country's most important exports and a centerpiece of its agricultural recovery story.

How to brew: 95°C, 3.5 min, 3 g per cup.

Caffeine

High

How to brew

95°C
3.5 min
3 g per cup

Flavor notes

honeyed, full-bodied, smooth, lightly sweet

Often associated with

Energy, Calm alertness

Best time to enjoy

Morning, Mid-afternoon

Tags

WarmFocusSweet

Origin & Production

Rwanda — Nyaruguru, Nyamasheke, Rutsiro and Rulindo districts; volcanic highlands near Lake Kivu and Nyungwe Forest

Rwandan tea gardens sit at altitudes of 1,800–2,500 meters — among the highest in Africa — across volcanic, iron-rich soils in the country's western and southwestern highlands. The cool, misty climate around Lake Kivu and the Nyungwe rainforest slows the bushes' growth, concentrating sugars and aromatic compounds in each leaf. Unlike Kenya's vast estate model, Rwandan tea is grown largely by smallholder farmers organized into cooperatives, who sell green leaf to around a dozen factories scattered across the highlands — Gisovu, Pfunda, Mata, Nyabihu and Sorwathe among the best known. The National Agricultural Export Development Board (NAEB) oversees grading and quality, and tea remains one of Rwanda's top two export earners alongside coffee.

Production process

1

Smallholder plucking

Most leaf is hand-plucked by smallholder cooperative members — two leaves and a bud — and delivered fresh to nearby factories within hours to preserve quality before withering begins.

2

High-altitude withering

Leaf is spread in troughs in the cool highland air for 12–18 hours. The naturally lower temperatures at altitude slow withering, allowing more gradual moisture loss than in lowland CTC factories.

3

CTC and orthodox processing

The bulk of Rwandan output is processed via CTC (Crush, Tear, Curl) for fast-brewing granules destined for export blends, while a small but growing share of estates produce orthodox whole-leaf teas for the specialty market.

4

Cool-climate oxidation

Oxidation rooms benefit from the highland climate's natural coolness, which slows the reaction slightly compared to lower-altitude East African factories, helping preserve the leaf's softer, sweeter character.

5

Firing and grading

Tea is dried in fluid-bed dryers, then sorted into standard export grades. Most is sold through the Mombasa Tea Auction or direct contracts, with Rwanda also developing its own domestic Kigali tea auction infrastructure.

High-altitude volcanic soilSmallholder cooperativesLake Kivu highlandsPost-genocide recovery crop

History & Tradition

Rwandan tea is a young industry by world standards, planted under Belgian colonial administration in the mid-20th century, nearly destroyed by the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi, and rebuilt since as one of the clearest symbols of the country's agricultural and economic recovery.

1
1952

First experimental plantings

Belgian colonial authorities established the first experimental tea gardens in Rwanda, testing Assamica cultivars at altitude as a potential cash crop for the densely populated territory.

2
1960s

Independence-era expansion

Following independence in 1962, the new Rwandan government expanded tea plantings as a strategic export crop alongside coffee, building state-run factories such as Mulindi and Shagasha.

3
1994

Genocide devastates the sector

The genocide against the Tutsi killed an estimated 800,000 people and displaced millions, halting tea production almost entirely as factories were abandoned and rural infrastructure collapsed.

4
Late 1990s–2000s

Privatization and rebuilding

The Rwandan government privatized many state-run tea factories and invested heavily in rehabilitating gardens, with companies like Sorwathe and Rwanda Mountain Tea helping rebuild quality and export capacity.

5
2010s

Cooperative model strengthens

Smallholder cooperatives became the backbone of the industry, with NAEB supporting farmer training and quality improvement programs that pushed Rwandan tea toward higher-value specialty markets.

6
2020s

Top-five African producer

Rwanda solidified its place among Africa's leading tea exporters alongside Kenya, Malawi and Uganda, with growing interest from specialty buyers drawn to its high-altitude, cooperative-grown leaf.

Health Benefits

Bright, sustained lift

Rwandan black tea typically delivers a solid 45–70 mg of caffeine per cup, offering a brisk but slightly gentler lift than punchier Kenyan CTC, well suited to a steady morning or early-afternoon cup.

Polyphenol-rich leaf

High-altitude growth slows leaf maturation, which is associated with higher concentrations of catechins and theaflavins — black tea polyphenols studied for their antioxidant activity.

Heart-healthy ritual

Like other black teas, regular moderate consumption of Rwandan tea is associated in observational research with favorable cardiovascular markers, traditionally attributed to its flavonoid content.

Calm alertness

The combination of caffeine and L-theanine naturally present in the leaf supports a smoother, more even-keeled alertness than coffee, without the sharp peak-and-crash some drinkers report.

Smallholder, low-input farming

Much of Rwanda's tea is grown on small cooperative plots with limited mechanization, often alongside other crops, supporting biodiverse rural landscapes compared to large monoculture estates.

Grades & Varieties

BP1 / PF1 (CTC export grades)

The standard CTC granules that make up most of Rwanda's exports — strong, coppery and fast-brewing, similar in style to Kenyan CTC but with a slightly softer, rounder finish from the cooler highland terroir.

Best for

  • Strong milk tea
  • Everyday breakfast cup
  • Blending base

Orthodox whole-leaf

A smaller, growing category from estates focused on the specialty market. Whole, twisted leaves yield a smoother, more layered cup with honeyed sweetness and gentle malt notes, best appreciated without milk.

Best for

  • Single-origin tasting
  • Drinking plain
  • Specialty tea exploration

Sorwathe estate grade

Tea from Rwanda's pioneering organic and Fair Trade-certified estate near Nyabihu, known for meticulous hand-plucking and consistent quality — often considered the benchmark for premium Rwandan black tea.

Best for

  • Ethically sourced tea drinkers
  • Gifting and specialty retail
  • Sipping solo to appreciate terroir

Did you know?

Rwanda's tea sector was nearly wiped out during the 1994 genocide, when factories were abandoned and rural infrastructure collapsed — today it is rebuilt on smallholder cooperatives farming some of Africa's highest tea gardens, above 1,800 meters near Lake Kivu.

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