Burundi is a small, landlocked country in East Africa bordered by Tanzania, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Lake Tanganyika. Despite covering just under 28,000 square kilometers, it is home to nearly 13 million people, making it one of Africa’s most densely populated nations. Most Burundians rely on subsistence farming, with coffee and tea among the few cash crops that provide essential income for education, livestock, and household needs.
Coffee production is centered in the country’s northern highlands, reached by traveling from the capital, Bujumbura, through Kayanza and into remote farming communities such as Munkaze. Washing stations play a critical role in the supply chain, with facilities like Umoco serving as regional processing hubs. Cherries are typically delivered by foot, bicycle, or motorcycle. Coffee is grown largely in full sun at elevations between 1,800 and 2,200 meters, often without chemical fertilizers, alongside food crops including bananas, maize, cassava, and beans.
Processing involves extended sundried fermentation, followed by careful parchment resting and slow drying on traditional raised beds to ensure airflow and consistency. The region’s red clay soils, high altitude, and proximity to Kibira National Forest create a cool, high-rainfall microclimate locally known as the “up country,” an area that also holds historical significance as a royal burial ground.
Coffee production in Burundi operates under severe constraints. Extreme poverty, political instability, food insecurity, and bureaucratic oversight—particularly through the national coffee authority, ODECA—limit profitability and long-term trade stability. Despite these challenges, many producers continue to focus on quality and resilience, supported by partners working to build sustainable market access and fairer pricing.