By Fabricio Scocco

The global matcha market is standing at a precarious crossroads. While the vibrant green powder has become a staple of wellness culture in the Northern Hemisphere, a new player is beginning to stir: South America. As an industry, we must face a sobering reality—matcha production is not infinitely scalable. When South America fully “activates” its demand, we will see a massive stress test on an already fragile global system.

  • Current Market Snapshot

In South America, market maturity is still in its infancy. While the presence of matcha is visible in specialty cafes and among wellness-focused early adopters, there is a significant gap between interest and education.

On the ground, we observe frequent confusion between ceremonial and culinary grades, and even between true matcha and generic green powders. Furthermore, access to fresh matcha is extremely limited. Information regarding transparent origin, milling dates, and harvest standards remains largely unavailable to the general consumer.

  • Structural Constraints

Matcha production is inherently limited by nature and craft. Key bottlenecks include:

Limited cultivation regions and strict shade-growing requirements.

Labor-intensive harvesting processes.

Physical limits on stone-milling capacity.

High risks of quality degradation at scale.

Ceremonial-grade matcha is already scarce, and producers are prioritizing long-term buyers with predictable volumes.

  • The South American Activation

When demand in South America accelerates, we anticipate several global shifts:

Supply Pressure: Increased competition for high-grade matcha will lead to longer lead times and price volatility.

Quality Risks: A surge in demand increases the likelihood of old stock being sold as premium, blends with filters, and mislabeling of origins.

Logistics: Matcha is highly sensitive to oxygen, light, and heat. Long transport routes into South America increase the risk of degradation, making freshness management a core competitive advantage.

  • Strategic Opportunities

For South American brands and global producers, the advantage will not come from mass availability, but from precision.

Producers: Secure long-term partnerships before demand spikes to protect pricing integrity.

Distributors: Act as quality gatekeepers by investing in cold chain awareness and faster stock rotation.

South American Brands: Focus on workshops, tastings, and transparent communication to build trust before scaling.

  • Bottom Line

South America is late to the trend, but it is not irrelevant. The winners in this market will not be those who sell the most matcha, but those who secure supply early, protect quality relentlessly, and educate before scaling. This market will reward patience and credibility over speed alone.