Home › Wholesale coffee › St. Louis, MO
Wholesale coffee suppliers in St. Louis, MO
9 roasters in St. Louis, Missouri run wholesale programs — bulk fresh-roasted beans for coffee shops, restaurants, offices, and caterers. Buying from a roaster across town instead of a national distributor means beans roasted the same week they're delivered, a real person to help dial in your equipment, and a roastery you can visit to taste before you commit. With 9 programs in town, you can run a proper side-by-side tasting.
Hartford Coffee Company
4.5 ★★★★★ 1,057 reviews
Cafe with patio seating & a play area for kids offering sandwiches, salads & house-roasted coffee.
Blueprint Coffee - Delmar
4.5 ★★★★★ 794 reviews
Easygoing surrounds pouring out coffee roasted in-house, plus breakfast sandwiches & pastries.
Blueprint Coffee - Watson
4.6 ★★★★★ 427 reviews
Charming coffee shop in a former auto-repair shop offering roasted coffee drinks such as espresso, lattes and mocha, as well as sandwiches, salads and pastries.
Goshen Coffee Roasters
4.8 ★★★★★ 226 reviews
Blueprint Coffee - Washington Ave
4.4 ★★★★☆ 57 reviews
Kaldi's Coffee Roasting Co. Office & Roastery
4.3 ★★★★☆ 36 reviews
Headquarters & warehouse of the coffee roastery offering coffee cupping & roastery tours.
Blueprint Coffee HQ on 39th (not a cafe.... yet!)
4.8 ★★★★★ 4 reviews
Buying wholesale coffee in St. Louis: how to start
- Email or call for a wholesale sheet. Every roaster above supplies businesses; ask for current per-pound pricing, volume tiers, and order minimums. Minimums are usually lower than you'd guess — small cafés and offices are the core of local wholesale.
- Ask for a tasting. Most roasters will send samples or host a cupping (a structured side-by-side tasting) at the roastery. Taste Hartford Coffee Company and Blueprint Coffee - Delmar against each other, brewed the way you'll actually serve — the differences show up fast.
- Ask what comes with the account. Barista training, espresso dial-in help, brewing-equipment guidance, and sometimes equipment loan programs ride along with a supply commitment. Support is where local roasters beat distributors, so weigh it alongside price.
- Set a delivery cadence that keeps you fresh. Local accounts in St. Louis typically get weekly or biweekly delivery or pickup, which keeps your beans inside the peak-flavor window (roughly the first month after roasting). Order what you'll use, not what fits the shelf — the storage guide explains why.
- Ask about private label. If you want your own name on retail bags at the register, most roasters can roast and bag under your brand at higher minimums. Details in our wholesale buying guide.
All coffee roasters in St. Louis, MO (16) → · All wholesale cities →