
Coffee and cycling have shared the same culture long before they shared sponsorship deals. From espresso stops after training rides to café rides becoming a global cycling ritual, coffee has always been embedded in the sport’s identity. In 2026, that cultural connection is increasingly becoming a commercial one as more WorldTour teams add coffee brands and roasters to their sponsorship portfolios.
Coffee Brands in the WorldTour: A Growing Sponsorship Category
Over the last seasons, professional cycling teams have quietly expanded their partnerships with coffee brands, roasters and espresso companies. While nutrition, recovery and technology partnerships dominate many sponsorship announcements, coffee has emerged as a recurring — and surprisingly diverse — category within the peloton.
Lead Out identified multiple WorldTour and Women’s WorldTour teams with active coffee-related partnerships for the 2026 season.
Source: Teams’ public sponsor lists
New Coffee Partnerships in 2026
| Team | Brand | Country | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| INEOS Grenadiers | Café de Colombia | Colombia | Coffee Growers Federation / Coffee Brand |
| Soudal Quick-Step | Costa Coffee | United Kingdom | Coffee Chain |
| Team Picnic PostNL | Mokador | Italy | Coffee Roaster |
| XDS Astana Team | Cafés Baqué | Spain | Coffee Roaster |
Existing Coffee Partnerships
| Team | Brand | Country | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Team Jayco AlUla, Liv AlUla Jayco | Miscela d’Oro | Italy | Espresso & Coffee Roaster |
| Groupama-FDJ | Jura, Cafés Méo | Switzerland, France | Espresso Machines, Coffee Roaster |
| FDJ-SUEZ | Nespresso | Switzerland | Coffee Capsule Brand |
| Lotto Intermarché | Charles Liégeois | Belgium | Coffee Roaster |
| Movistar Team | Coma Coffee Roasters | Spain | Specialty Coffee Roaster |
| CANYON//SRAM zondacrypto | Il Magistrale Cycling Coffee | Netherlands | Cycling Coffee Brand |
The partnerships vary significantly. Some are large consumer brands with international visibility. Others are regional specialty roasters deeply connected to cycling culture and café communities.
Still, the underlying logic is similar: coffee naturally fits the rhythms, rituals and identity of cycling.
Why Coffee and Cycling Fit Together So Naturally
The overlap between cycling and coffee is not accidental.
Cycling culture has long been shaped by coffee rituals:
- pre-ride espresso stops
- café rides
- post-training recovery coffees
- cycling cafés as community spaces
- specialty coffee culture within amateur and professional cycling

In many cycling regions — especially Belgium, Italy, Spain and Colombia — coffee is almost inseparable from the social side of the sport. There is also a functional overlap.
Coffee and caffeine are directly connected to endurance performance, focus and alertness. While modern teams now work with highly structured nutrition systems, caffeine remains one of the most established performance tools in endurance sport.
For sponsors, this creates an unusual advantage:
coffee partnerships feel authentic inside cycling culture rather than artificially inserted.
Coffee Sponsorship Is Expanding Beyond Hospitality
Historically, coffee brands often appeared in cycling through hospitality and event catering. Today, partnerships are becoming more integrated into team identity and content ecosystems.
Coffee brands increasingly appear in:
- team social media content
- rider lifestyle storytelling
- recovery and travel routines
- fan activations
- branded cafés and pop-up experiences
- lifestyle merchandise collaborations
This reflects a broader shift in cycling sponsorship itself. Modern sponsorships are less focused on static logo placement and more focused on embedding brands into everyday team culture.
Coffee is particularly well suited to this environment because it combines:
- lifestyle
- performance
- ritual
- hospitality
- community
- premium branding
Few categories fit cycling’s identity this naturally.
Coffee and Cycling: A Long Shared History
The relationship between coffee and professional cycling is far older than the current sponsorship wave.
One of the most iconic examples is Faema. The Italian espresso machine company sponsored one of the most successful cycling teams of all time between 1955–1962 and again from 1968–1970.

During the Faema years, Eddy Merckx won:
- the Giro d’Italia (1968)
- the Tour de France (1969, 1970)
- the Vuelta a España (1970)
The partnership became deeply connected to Merckx’s rise and to the mythology of post-war European cycling. More than fifty years later, Faema returned to the sport as an official partner of the Giro d’Italia, reconnecting espresso culture with cycling heritage through the modern Giro villages.
Another historic example is Café de Colombia. In the 1980s, the Colombian coffee federation backed the famous Café de Colombia team, turning coffee into a symbol of Colombian cycling identity, climbing culture and national pride. In 2026, the brand returned to the WorldTour through its partnership with INEOS Grenadiers.
Spain offers another example through Cafés Baqué. The brand not only operated a professional cycling team in the 2000s, but also remained involved in amateur development structures connected to the Movistar Team ecosystem.
A Small Sponsorship Category With Strong Cultural Fit
Compared to finance, mobility or sports nutrition, coffee remains a relatively small sponsorship category in professional cycling.
But culturally, it may be one of the strongest fits in the entire sport.
Coffee brands do not need to artificially create relevance inside cycling. The connection already exists through rituals, cafés, group rides and endurance culture itself.
That may explain why more teams are now turning coffee partnerships into visible parts of their sponsorship portfolios — not simply as hospitality suppliers, but as lifestyle and identity partners embedded within the modern cycling ecosystem.
Sources
https://www.gcrmag.com/faema-makes-its-mark-at-giro-ditalia
https://colombiaone.com/2026/04/23/cafe-colombia-back-world-tour-ineos-grenadiers
https://www.baque.com/en/about-us/baque-foundation/
https://movistarteam.com/en/2023-10-27/partnership-cafes-baque-junior-2024
Image Faema:
Harry Pot for Anefo ]], [onbekend] – [1] Dutch National Archives, The Hague, Fotocollectie Algemeen Nederlands Persbureau (Anefo), 1945-1989 Access number: 2.24.01.05 File number: 914-0526
License: CC BY-SA 3.0 nl




