How to Ship Vietnamese Coffee Home (Without It Getting Stuck in Customs)
Everything you need to know about shipping Vietnamese coffee internationally — packaging rules, customs tips, and which countries accept coffee imports.
Vietnamese coffee is legendary. Whether it’s the rich robusta from the Central Highlands, weasel coffee (ca phe chon), or instant G7, tourists can’t get enough of it. And the natural next question: can I ship a bunch of it home?
Yes, you absolutely can. Coffee is the single most shipped item from our tourist shipping service. We send thousands of kilograms of Vietnamese coffee to homes around the world every month.
Here’s how to do it right.
The golden rule: commercially sealed packaging
This is the one rule that matters most. Regardless of destination country, your coffee must be in sealed, commercial packaging. That means:
- Factory-sealed bags or cans (Trung Nguyen, Highlands Coffee, G7, etc.)
- Original retail packaging with proper labeling
- Brand name and ingredients visible
What does NOT work:
- Coffee measured out from bulk bins into plastic bags
- Homemade packaging or repackaged coffee
- Open or resealed bags
Why? Customs agencies use sealed commercial packaging as a quick indicator that the product is commercially produced, properly labeled, and safe. Unsealed or unlabeled coffee gets flagged for inspection or rejected.
Country-by-country rules
United States — roasted coffee (ground or beans) is allowed. The FDA regulates food imports, but commercially packaged coffee clears customs routinely. Green (unroasted) beans may face additional scrutiny.
Australia — coffee is allowed when commercially sealed. Australia’s biosecurity rules are strict, but they don’t restrict properly packaged coffee. Just make sure there’s no soil or plant matter mixed in.
Japan — no issues with coffee imports. Commercially sealed coffee clears Japanese customs quickly.
South Korea — commercially packaged coffee is fine. MFDS doesn’t flag standard coffee products.
UK — no restrictions on coffee imports. VAT may apply if total shipment exceeds 135 GBP.
China — coffee is allowed. Chinese customs (GACC) may inspect food items but commercially sealed coffee is standard.
How much coffee can you ship?
There’s no strict limit for personal-use quantities. We regularly ship 5-20kg of coffee for individual tourists. If you’re shipping 50+ kg, it starts to look commercial and may require import permits in some countries.
Our recommendation: ship as much as you want for personal use and gifts. Just keep the total under reasonable quantities (under 30kg is always fine).
Best coffees to ship
If you’re wondering what to buy, here are the most popular choices:
- Trung Nguyen Legend — the premium Vietnamese coffee brand, widely loved
- G7 instant coffee — incredibly popular and lightweight for shipping
- Highlands Coffee — well-known chain with retail bags
- Weasel coffee (ca phe chon) — the famous civet coffee, a luxury gift
- Central Highlands single-origin — for coffee enthusiasts
Packing tips
Coffee is easy to ship, but a few tips help:
- Check seal integrity — make sure every bag is properly sealed. We check before shipping.
- Mix coffee with other items — coffee is dense and heavy. Mixing with lighter items like clothing can balance the shipment weight.
- Buy at markets for better prices — supermarkets and markets offer better prices than airport shops. Ship from your hotel and save.
How we handle coffee shipments
We pick up from your hotel in HCMC and Da Nang. Our team checks that all packaging is sealed, prepares the customs declaration (listing each coffee type and quantity), and ships via DHL, FedEx, or UPS.
Delivery time: 2-5 business days depending on destination.
Want to ship coffee home? Check what items you can ship or get a free quote — just tell us how much coffee and where it’s going.