Coffee & Tea
On this Coffee & Tea category page, you’ll find everyday cupboard staples alongside more specific options like single-origin roasts, caffeine-free blends, and botanical infusions. Some partners group items by roast level, bag count, or jar size, while others split each flavour or strength into separate variants, so the same product can appear more than once in different formats. Packaging details matter here: 200g and 227g bags sit side by side, and tea can switch between 40- and 80-count boxes without warning. It’s a practical category. Availability also shifts as partners update listings and rotate lines, so a preferred strength, grind, or pack size can drop out and return later.
Read on for how Coffee & Tea listings vary by format, size, and spec
Main product groupings you’ll notice
Most ranges break out into roast-and-brew staples: coffee beans in 200g–1kg bags, pre-ground options labelled espresso or cafetiere, and jarred granules in 100g–200g sizes. Some partners publish each roast as separate listings, while others roll flavour and strength into one card with multiple variants. Tea sits alongside, from 40–160 count boxes through to 250g pouches. It looks busy. At Tesco, the same blend may appear twice when a multipack and single pack run in parallel, with pack count and roast notes shown differently across entries.
Formats, bundles, and variant handling
Expect mixed formats: single bags, twin-packs, and “case of” bundles, plus mixed selection boxes where flavour changes but the box count stays fixed. tea bags are published either as one listing with a size selector (40/80/160) or as separate entries per count, which affects how quickly you can scan pack size. Some partners attach “family pack” to the title; others place it in the description line, so two near-identical items can sit apart. Small differences show up fast. At Sainsbury’s, multipacks can be grouped as one line while single packs remain separate, even when the blend name matches exactly.
Strength, grind, and caffeine specs
Strength and processing are not presented consistently, so check the spec fields as well as the title. decaf coffee may be labelled “decaffeinated”, “caffeine free”, or shown only via a small badge, and it can appear as beans, ground, or pods in 10–30 capsule packs. Grind matters. Espresso, filter, and cafetiere grinds can share the same roast name but differ in texture and brew result, and some partners publish grind as a variant while others treat each grind as its own product line.
Ingredients, cut, and packaging details
Material details here are ingredient-led: black tea vs green tea, single-herb infusions vs blended botanicals, and coffee described by origin and roast profile rather than flavour alone. loose leaf tea listings often specify leaf cut (whole leaf vs broken) and come in 100g–250g pouches or tins, while bagged tea may note paper bags vs plastic-free bags and whether strings are attached. Small build cues matter. At Waitrose, you’ll sometimes see the same blend in both a box and a refill pouch, with different storage formats and different “best before” windows shown in the details.
Practical checks people make while browsing
Pack size is the first filter in reality—40 vs 80 bags, 100g vs 200g jars, 227g vs 250g bags. instant coffee needs a quick check for granules vs powder, and whether the jar is standard or “microground” style that behaves differently in milk. Tea benefits from a glance at caffeine level, added flavours (bergamot, lemon, mint), and whether it’s a blend or single ingredient. Some listings feel duplicated. That usually comes down to a new pack design appearing alongside an older barcode for a short period.
How discount codes can reduce the cost of Coffee & Tea shopping on Discount Promo Codes
Discount codes relate to saving money on Coffee & Tea orders when a retailer offers a code for baskets that include everyday formats like 80-count boxes or 200g bags of ground coffee. The platform provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and links to those retailers’ discount code pages may sit alongside product listings as you browse. Operationally, product links and code links are separate routes—even when they point to the same merchant—so the listing you open isn’t the same thing as a code page. There’s also a wider commitment in the background: 20% of profits are donated to charity each month. At Morrisons, listings can turn over quickly between pack designs, so the code link (where present) remains tied to the retailer rather than a specific barcode.