Does Oolong Tea Have Caffeine? Yes — 25–45 mg Per Cup
Updated: May 7, 2026 · 12-min read · By Nepali Tea Traders — 14 years sourcing direct from Ilam, Nepal
Yes — oolong tea contains caffeine. A standard 8-oz cup delivers approximately 25–45 mg, placing it comfortably between green tea (~20–45 mg) and black tea (~40–70 mg) — and well below drip coffee (~80–100 mg). Three variables determine exactly where your cup lands: leaf amount, water temperature, and steep time. If you want a single award-winning place to start, our Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong Tea is USDA Organic, single-origin from Ilam, Nepal, and brews a honeyed, stone-fruit cup that delivers calm, focused energy without the coffee spike — perfect for morning or afternoon. This guide covers the full caffeine chart, every brew lever, taste guide, side effects, and which Nepal oolongs suit different energy needs.
Key takeaway (TL;DR): Yes — oolong tea naturally contains caffeine. A typical 8-oz cup lands around 25–45 mg — between green and black tea, well below coffee. Your actual cup depends on leaf amount, water temperature, and steep time. Brew cooler and shorter for a gentler afternoon cup; hotter and longer for a brighter morning lift.
Ready to try? Shop Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong → | Explore all Nepal Oolongs →
Caffeine comparison chart: oolong tea vs coffee, black tea, green tea, and matcha
| Beverage (typical brew) | Approx. caffeine per 8 oz (237 ml) |
|---|---|
| Oolong tea | ~25–45 mg (stronger steeps can run higher) |
| Green tea | ~20–45 mg |
| White tea | ~15–30 mg |
| Black tea | ~40–70 mg |
| Matcha (2–4 g whisked) | ~40–140+ mg (depends on grams used) |
| Coffee (drip) | ~80–100 mg |
| Espresso (1 oz shot) | ~60–80 mg (smaller volume, higher concentration) |
Treat these as ranges, not single fixed numbers — your brew choices change the result significantly.
What does oolong tea taste like?
Oolong tea spans a wider flavor spectrum than any other tea type — oxidation level and roast shape how it tastes far more than origin alone.
Light oolong (10–30% oxidation)
Floral, grassy, sometimes vegetal. Bright and delicate with a clean finish — similar to a fine green tea but with more complexity and body.
Amber oolong (50–70% oxidation)
Honeyed, fruity, toasty. Rich body with stone-fruit notes — apricot, peach, or plum — and a naturally sweet, smooth finish. Our Annapurna Amber is a classic example.
Roasted oolong (heavily fired)
Deep, toasty, sometimes nutty or caramel-like. The roast adds warmth and rounds out any astringency — full-bodied, satisfying, and very coffee-friendly.
Nepal oolong (Ilam terroir)
High-altitude growing at 4,000–8,000 ft concentrates sweetness and aroma. Nepal oolongs tend to be cleaner, sweeter, and more nuanced — with a lingering finish that sets them apart.
Why your mug won't match a single caffeine number — and why that's useful
1) Leaf and processing. Oolong isn't one style — it's a spectrum. Greener oolongs (lighter oxidation) feel bright and floral; amber or roasted oolongs feel rounder and toasty. Oxidation and roast shape flavor and extraction behavior but don't create caffeine. The caffeine you experience is mostly about how you brew.
2) Particle size and format. Whole, hand-rolled leaves — a hallmark of premium oolongs like our Annapurna Amber — release caffeine and flavor more gradually than broken grades or tea bags. That's why short, repeated gongfu infusions can taste profound yet feel gentle.
3) Leaf-to-water ratio (dose). More leaf per 8 oz → more dissolved solids → more caffeine in the cup. Western style commonly uses 2–3 g per 8–12 oz; gongfu uses more leaf in less water but for very short infusions.
4) Water temperature and time. Hotter water and longer steep time extract more caffeine. Much of the caffeine comes out early, but meaningful amounts continue to dissolve as steeps lengthen.
Oolong's smooth energy vs coffee — and why it feels different
A typical oolong cup delivers significantly less caffeine than a standard coffee at the same volume. But the feel is different too — not just the quantity. Tea naturally contains L-theanine, an amino acid that many people experience as a calming counterpoint to caffeine's edge. The result is calm, focused energy rather than a sharp spike followed by a crash.
Our Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong is particularly well-suited to people transitioning from coffee — its amber, honeyed profile with smooth stone-fruit finish brews a satisfying, full-bodied cup that holds up to the morning ritual without the jolt. USDA Organic, direct-trade from Ilam farmers we have worked with for over 14 years.
USDA Organic · Direct-trade from Ilam · Ships from Boston · Free shipping on $60+
Oolong tea vs green tea — what's the difference?
Both come from the same plant (Camellia sinensis), but processing creates two very different teas.
| Factor | Oolong tea | Green tea |
|---|---|---|
| Oxidation | 15–85% (partially oxidized) | 0–5% (unoxidized) |
| Caffeine | ~25–45 mg / 8 oz | ~20–45 mg / 8 oz |
| Flavor | Fruity, honeyed, toasty — complex | Grassy, vegetal, fresh — lighter |
| Body | Medium to full | Light to medium |
| Best for | Coffee switchers, complexity lovers | Refreshing, lighter sips |
| Re-steeping | Excellent — 4–8 infusions | 2–3 infusions typically |
The biggest differences are flavor, body, and brewing flexibility. Oolong rewards multiple infusions and suits people who want something richer and more complex than green tea without the strength of black tea. New to oolong? Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong is the easiest entry point — its natural sweetness and smooth finish tend to surprise people coming from green tea.
Brew settings to reduce caffeine in oolong — without losing flavor
- Water: 185–195°F (85–90°C)
- Time: 2–3 minutes (taste at 2:00; pull by 3:00)
- Dose: ~2 g per 8 oz (about 1 level tsp of rolled oolong)
- Leaf: Prefer larger, whole-leaf rolled oolong; avoid broken grades or bags
- Multiple infusions: Later short infusions are naturally gentler in caffeine
Brew settings to increase caffeine in oolong (morning mode)
- Water: 195–205°F (90–96°C)
- Time: 3–4 minutes (taste at 3:00; pull by 4:00 to avoid harshness)
- Dose: 2.5–3 g per 8 oz (heaping tsp)
- Leaf choice: Bud-heavy or lightly broken grades extract faster
- Style: Greener oolongs feel brighter; roasted oolongs feel rounder and more sustained
Western vs Gongfu vs Cold Brew — how each method affects oolong caffeine
Western method (familiar mug):
- 2–3 g leaf → 8–12 oz water → 2–4 minutes
- One larger caffeine dose per mug — simple, consistent, easy to adjust
Gongfu method (many short infusions):
- 5–7 g → 100–150 ml (3–5 oz) → 15–40 seconds, many rounds
- Total caffeine across the session can equal a Western mug, but it's spread out — many people experience calmer focus and layered flavor development
Cold brew (hands-off, mellow):
- 1 tbsp loose leaf per 12 oz cool water → 8–12 hours in the fridge → strain
- Lower extraction of tannins and bitterness; naturally sweet and often a gentler feel — Annapurna Amber cold-brews exceptionally well
Nepal's Ilam terroir — why our oolongs taste so clean and brew so predictably
Grown in the Himalayan foothills at 4,000–8,000 ft elevation, Ilam leaves mature slowly in cool nights and bright days. That extra time concentrates aroma precursors and polyphenols — including L-theanine, the amino acid that smooths caffeine's edge. The result: clear, honeyed profiles, ripe-fruit undertones, and smooth finishes that hold across multiple infusions.
Because our teas are hand-rolled and orthodox-processed in small batches — by the same Ilam farming families we have worked with directly for over 14 years — you get a leaf that brews beautifully at both Western and gongfu settings, with predictable caffeine extraction and excellent re-steep value.
Our flagship oolong, Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong, captures this terroir perfectly — honeyed amber liquor, smooth stone-fruit, USDA Organic certified, and one of the most re-steppable teas in our collection.
What else meaningfully changes caffeine in oolong (deeper dive)
Leaf part and grade. Tips or buds often skew slightly higher in caffeine; mature leaves extract more slowly. Whole rolled leaves keep extraction orderly; broken grades extract faster and stronger.
Harvest and season. Early-spring leaves can taste brighter and extract differently than late-season leaves; neither is "always stronger" — brew choices trump season.
Roast level. Roast shifts aroma and texture more than it boosts caffeine. It can slow extraction slightly, which is why roasted oolongs like Annapurna Amber often feel calmer and more rounded than green oolongs.
Water chemistry. Hard or chlorinated water can mute flavor perception. Use filtered water for cleaner results — you may brew shorter yet taste more.
Common oolong caffeine myths — debunked
"Dark color = more caffeine."
Color comes from oxidation, roast, and infusion strength — not caffeine alone. Brew temperature and time matter far more."Rinsing removes the caffeine."
A quick rinse unfurls leaves and warms your teaware. For less caffeine, brew cooler and shorter."Longer steep = better tea."
Past a point, you extract bitterness and more caffeine without adding balance. Taste at 2–3 minutes and stop where it's sweet."Oxidation creates caffeine."
Caffeine is present in the leaf. Oxidation shapes flavor and extraction behavior, not the caffeine content itself."Cold brew = decaf."
No — just gentler extraction. It still contains caffeine, but the feel is softer for many people.
Oolong tea caffeine — safety and daily limits
- Many healthy adults use ~400 mg/day as a practical upper limit from all sources combined
- Pregnant or breastfeeding? Many clinicians suggest ~200 mg/day; consult your provider
- Tea's tannins may reduce iron absorption from plant foods if sipped with meals; spacing tea between meals is a simple workaround
- If sleep is sensitive, keep your last caffeinated cup 6–8 hours before bed
Educational information only — not medical advice.
Oolong tea side effects — what to know
For most healthy adults, oolong tea is safe and well-tolerated at 1–3 cups per day. Side effects are uncommon and mostly caffeine-related.
- Caffeine sensitivity: Jitters, restlessness, or trouble sleeping if consumed in large amounts or close to bedtime. Solution: brew cooler and shorter, or cold-brew for evenings.
- Digestive sensitivity: Mild stomach discomfort when drinking strong tea on an empty stomach. Drinking tea with or after a meal usually resolves this.
- Iron absorption: Tannins can reduce iron absorption from plant-based foods when consumed together. Space your tea 1–2 hours away from iron-rich meals if this applies to you.
- Pregnancy: Most clinicians suggest limiting caffeine to ~200 mg/day. At 25–45 mg per cup, moderate oolong is typically within guidelines — always confirm with your provider.
- Medication interactions: Caffeine can interact with certain medications. Check with your healthcare provider if you take regular medications.
General educational information only — not medical advice.
Why loose leaf oolong tea brews better than bags
Whole-leaf, hand-rolled loose leaf oolong tea is not just a preference — it's a meaningful quality difference. Whole leaves have room to unfurl fully, releasing caffeine, aroma, and flavor gradually across multiple infusions. Tea bags use broken or dust-grade leaves that extract all at once, produce astringency faster, and can't be re-steeped.
Our Nepal oolongs — including Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong — are hand-rolled in small batches, so each leaf opens beautifully and gives you 4–8 full infusions from a single dose. Premium organic oolong tea is more economical than it first appears — you're not buying one steep, you're buying a full session.
Simple oolong brew guide — bookmark this
- Leaf: 2–3 g per 8 oz (heaping tsp for rolled oolong)
- Water: 185–205°F depending on flavor and strength preference
- Time: 2–3 minutes (gentler), 3–4 minutes (bolder)
- Gongfu: 5 g / 120 ml, 20–30 s, 6–8 rounds, ~95°C to start, adjust by taste
- Cold brew: 1 tbsp / 12 oz, 8–12 hours in the fridge, strain, serve over ice
Try this side-by-side: Brew Annapurna Amber at 190°F for 2:30 (gentler, sweeter) and again at 200°F for 3:30 (bolder, fuller body). You'll feel exactly how temperature and time shape both flavor and energy.
Real-world oolong caffeine scenarios and quick fixes
"I switched from coffee and still feel jittery."
Drop to 185–190°F, steep 2:00, and use ~2 g per 8 oz. Choose Annapurna Amber — its amber, roasted profile extracts smoothly and is one of the most coffee-friendly transitions in our range.
"I need a stronger kick before a workout."
Use 195–205°F, steep 3–4 minutes, 2.5–3 g. Try a greener oolong for brightness; consider two short infusions back-to-back for sustained lift.
"I love tea at night but sleep is tricky."
Pick a roasted oolong, brew at 185°F for ~2:00, small cup. Or cold-brew Annapurna Amber in the morning and enjoy a small glass with dinner — the cold extraction keeps it naturally sweet and gentle.
"My tea tastes flat."
Use filtered water, raise the dose slightly, shorten the steep to keep sweetness, and make sure your leaves have room to expand in a large basket or gaiwan.
Best oolong tea by time of day — our top picks for smooth energy
Morning — smooth lift
Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong ★
Honeyed amber liquor, smooth stone-fruit, USDA Organic. Brews a full-bodied, satisfying morning cup that won't spike or crash. 195–200°F, 3:00–3:30, ~2.5 g/8 oz.
Midday — richer focus
Ruby Oolong (Organic)
Richer body, ripe fruit, light toast. A satisfying mid-morning or post-lunch cup for body and aroma. 195–200°F, 3:00–3:30, ~2.5 g/8 oz.
Afternoon — structured clarity
Dragon Claw Oolong
Distinctive, structured cup. Brew shorter for clarity, longer for depth. 190–200°F, 2:30–3:30.
Evening — gentle and sweet
Annapurna Amber — cold brewed
1 tbsp / 12 oz cold water, 8–12 hrs in fridge. Naturally sweet, low tannin, the gentlest way to enjoy oolong at night.
Looking for the best organic oolong tea? All three Nepal oolongs above are USDA Certified Organic, hand-picked at high altitude in Ilam, and direct-trade sourced — no middlemen, full traceability, and freshness that commodity teas can't match. Browse all Nepal oolong teas → or start with our most popular: Annapurna Amber Organic Oolong Tea.
Related reading
- Choose the Right Oolong Tea for You
- Nepal Oolong Tea: Flavor, Health & Brewing
- How to Brew Nepali Loose Leaf Tea Perfectly Every Time
- Gong Fu vs. Western Tea Brewing: Master the Art
- Does Black Tea Have Caffeine? Yes — ~40–70 mg Per Cup
Frequently asked questions about oolong tea and caffeine
Does oolong tea have caffeine?
How much caffeine is in a cup of oolong tea?
Is oolong tea caffeinated?
Does oolong tea have more caffeine than green tea?
Does oolong tea have less caffeine than black tea?
How much caffeine is in oolong tea vs coffee?
Is oolong tea high in caffeine?
Is oolong tea good for energy?
Can I drink oolong tea at night?
Does rinsing or cold brewing remove caffeine from oolong tea?
How can I reduce caffeine in oolong without losing flavor?
What does oolong tea taste like?
Is oolong tea better than green tea?
Does oolong tea have side effects?
Is oolong tea good for weight loss?
What is the best organic oolong tea?
Which Nepal oolong should I try first?
Always check with your healthcare provider if you have ongoing symptoms, are pregnant, or take medications that may interact with caffeine.
USDA Organic · Hand-rolled · Direct-trade · Ships from Boston · Free shipping on $60+