Linda Rampen, owner of Het Zuyderblad Tea Garden in the Netherlands, demonstrates that European-grown tea is gaining a reputation for quality. Photo credit: Laura Tommasina
Tea cultivation in Europe is no longer a curiosity. Across the Azores, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Portugal, boutique tea gardens are producing Camellia sinensis in cool climates with shorter growing seasons and strict environmental standards — challenging the long-held assumption that high-quality tea only comes from Asia or Africa.
Now, the first systematic scientific assessment of European teas suggests the continent’s young industry may be carving out its own identity — one shaped less by health claims and more by terroir, transparency, and taste.
A peer-reviewed study, European Teas (Camellia sinensis) as a New Frontier in the Specialty Tea Market: Characterizing the Antioxidant, Polyphenolic, and Sensory Profiles Through a Systematic, Comparative Approach (Antioxidants, 2026), systematically compared antioxidant capacity, polyphenolic composition, caffeine levels, and sensory profiles of teas grown across five European gardens. The research found that European green and black teas are chemically comparable to teas from traditional origins, but teas rated highest in sensory appreciation did not always have the highest polyphenol or antioxidant levels.
A Grower’s Perspective: Quality and Taste Must Lead
For Linda Rampen of Het Zuyderblad Tea Garden in the Netherlands — one of Europe’s pioneering tea growers — the study marks a milestone.
“As this is one of the first serious studies done on European teas, it’s interesting to get a scientific review,” Rampen says. “Because of the lack of research, I didn’t have a clear idea what’s chemically in our teas. So in that sense, all the outcomes are a surprise.”
What resonates most with her is the finding that consumer preference does not always align with antioxidant concentration. “At first, you drink tea for the taste,” she says. “Health benefits are a bonus, but not the main reason to choose tea. Otherwise, you’re shortchanging the product.”
For European producers, who operate on a small scale and with high labor costs, that distinction matters. Unlike traditional tea economies built on volume, European growers cannot compete on price. “We can only produce half the year, and with European wages, mass production is not an option. We can only choose quality,” Rampen adds.
Scientific Insight Meets Terroir
The study’s lead author, Elisabetta Damiani, associate professor at the Polytechnic University of Marche, argues that scientific metrics and consumer enjoyment should not be positioned as competing forces. “Antioxidant capacity represents only one dimension of quality,” Damiani says, urging producers to avoid reductive “health-washing” and to respect sensory enjoyment as part of overall well-being.
While the research found no major chemical distinction separating European teas from Asian or African counterparts, sensory differences linked to microclimate were evident. Damiani describes European tea as exhibiting “evolving site expression.” However, she notes that longer-term, site-specific studies are still needed to firmly establish terroir narratives comparable to those in wine.
Rampen, however, already perceives recurring sensory signatures. “In my Dutch tea, there is a certain level of umami and fruitiness that returns every year,” she says. “The umami gives body and depth; the fruitiness makes it an easy-drinking green tea.”
Sustainability as Strategy
Beyond flavor, European tea’s strongest differentiator may be structural. Production is small, local, and often organic. Supply chains are short. Transparency is high.
European consumers, Rampen observes, fall broadly into two segments: curious tea enthusiasts and high-end restaurants seeking local sourcing. “It’s powerful to serve tea and explain exactly where it’s from, when it was harvested, and how it was processed,” she says. “Local origin, full transparency, and short supply chain are key.”
The study’s findings could help growers make informed decisions on cultivar selection, propagation methods, and processing techniques aligned with market demand. It also suggests that Europe’s competitive advantage may lie less in claiming superior health benefits and more in offering traceability, sustainability, and distinctive sensory experiences.
Redefining Value
While European tea production remains limited and cannot rival established exporters in scale, the research indicates that targeted investment and further comparative studies could allow this emerging sector to contribute meaningfully to a more diversified global tea supply chain.
For Damiani, science offers credibility. For growers like Rampen, flavor ensures survival. Together, their perspectives suggest that Europe’s tea future will not be built on volume or exaggerated health claims — but on the quieter foundations of terroir, sustainability, and taste. In doing so, European tea may be redefining what value means in the modern tea industry — not more polyphenols, but more pleasure, provenance, and purpose.