What to Look for When Buying Matcha Online
Buying matcha online means making a quality assessment without the most useful tool: taste. But there are reliable signals in product listings that guide you toward good choices.
Origin and transparency
Look for specific origin information — not just 'Japan' but the growing region: Yame, Wazuka, Nishio, Uji. Producers proud of their sourcing name it clearly. Vague phrases like 'sourced from Japan' without further detail are less reassuring, though they do not necessarily mean poor quality.
Grade and harvest information
The presence of harvest information (spring 2025, ichibancha) suggests a producer who tracks freshness. Matcha without any date information may be old stock. Ceremonial grade is for drinking straight; culinary for lattes and cooking.
Colour in photos
If product photos show the powder, assess its colour. Vivid, bright green is good. Dull, yellow, or brownish powder has oxidised. Check reviews mentioning colour and freshness — they are more reliable than star ratings alone.
Ingredient list
Matcha. Just matcha. Any additional ingredients — sugar, flavourings, fillers — mean you are buying a blend, not pure matcha.
Packaging described
Airtight, opaque container. A transparent pouch or a tin with a window is a quality concern — light degrades matcha.
Price as a signal
Genuine ceremonial grade matcha is not cheap. A 30g tin under €10 claiming to be ceremonial grade is almost certainly not. Production costs alone make low prices at high grades implausible. High price alone is not a guarantee of quality either.