Loose Leaf Decaffeinated Teas

Shop online for loose-leaf decaffeinated (decaf) teas made from whole tea leaves sourced directly from the artisan farmers who tend them. Decaf varieties include Chai, Earl Grey, Ceylon and other decaffeinated teas. Enjoy a variety of delicious flavors, ranging from vanilla to cream to cinnamon to mango, with options for a strong, dark tea or lighter profiles, as well as the many health benefits associated with regularly drinking decaf tea. Our decaf teas are decaffeinated using the superior carbon dioxide (CO2) process, which retains the most flavor and antioxidants. Our direct-trade advantage ensures superior taste, freshness and value.

15 Decaf Teas

What Is Decaf Tea?

Decaf tea is real tea — made from the same Camellia sinensis plant as all black, green, oolong, and white teas — that has had its caffeine removed through a processing step after the leaves are prepared. The tea starts as a fully caffeinated leaf and the caffeine is extracted before packaging. What remains is the same leaf, with the same flavor compounds, the same antioxidants, and the same character as the caffeinated version — minus the caffeine.

This is different from herbal tea, which contains no Camellia sinensis at all and is therefore naturally caffeine-free rather than decaffeinated. Decaf tea tastes like black tea or Earl Grey or chai because it is black tea, Earl Grey, or chai. Herbal tea tastes like chamomile or peppermint because that's what it is. The distinction matters when someone says "I want something without caffeine" — if they mean something that tastes like real tea, decaf is the answer. If they mean something botanical and herbal, rooibos or chamomile is the answer.



Why the Decaffeination Method Matters

Not all decaf tea is created equal — and the reason most decaf tea has a bad reputation for flat, thin flavor is the decaffeination method. There are four main methods used commercially, and they produce very different results:

  • CO2 (carbon dioxide) process — pressurized carbon dioxide acts as a solvent that selectively targets and removes caffeine molecules while leaving the flavor compounds, essential oils, and antioxidants largely intact. No chemical residue remains in the tea. The result is a decaf that tastes like the original caffeinated tea rather than a diminished version of it. This is the process Adagio uses for all decaf teas.
  • Ethyl acetate process — a chemical solvent derived from either natural fruit fermentation or petroleum processing. While the naturally-sourced version is sometimes marketed as "naturally decaffeinated," ethyl acetate strips a significant portion of flavor compounds alongside caffeine. Produces the flat, thin cups that give decaf tea its poor reputation. The most commonly used method for commodity decaf tea.
  • Swiss Water Process — water-based osmosis rather than chemical solvents. More effective at preserving flavor than ethyl acetate but less effective than CO2. More common in decaf coffee than decaf tea.
  • Methylene chloride process — a chemical solvent increasingly restricted by regulatory bodies in some markets due to concerns about residual traces. Least desirable from a consumer health perspective and largely avoided by premium producers.

The practical takeaway: CO2-decaffeinated loose leaf tea is a qualitatively different product from ethyl acetate-decaffeinated commodity teabags. The difference is immediate and significant in the cup. Adagio's decaf collection uses CO2 decaffeination exclusively — which is why the teas in this collection are scored 93–96 rather than the lower scores that typically accompany decaf teas from less careful producers.



The Loose Leaf Decaf Tea Collection

Decaf Cream

The highest-rated decaf tea in the collection at a score of 96 — and one of the most surprising teas in the entire Adagio catalog for anyone who approaches decaf with low expectations. Decaf Cream layers a natural vanilla cream character over the CO2-decaffeinated black tea base, producing an indulgent, dessert-adjacent cup that needs nothing added. The cream character is genuine rather than artificial, and the CO2 process preserves enough of the base tea's character to give it the structure the flavoring needs. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Peach

Tied for the highest score in the collection at 96 — ripe, soft peach character over the decaffeinated black tea base. Decaf Peach is the evening fruit tea for anyone who loves the flavored tea category but wants to drink it after dinner without caffeine consequences. Cold brewed and served over ice, it becomes one of the most naturally sweet, vibrant iced teas in the Adagio catalog — a decaf iced tea that requires no sweetener and tastes genuinely of the fruit it's named for. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Earl Grey

The most ordered decaf tea by name — because Earl Grey is the tea that the most people love and the most people want in a caffeine-free version. Adagio's Decaf Earl Grey delivers the characteristic bergamot citrus-floral character of a quality Earl Grey through the CO2 process, without the flat, papery quality that ethyl acetate-decaffeinated Earl Grey typically produces. Scored 95. The decaf tea for anyone who drinks Earl Grey throughout the day and wants to continue that habit into the evening. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Breakfast

The classic everyday black tea blend in decaffeinated form — bold, full-bodied, and capable of taking milk in a way that most decaf teas can't manage without tasting thin. Decaf Breakfast scored 95 is the right choice for anyone who wants a morning-style cup at any hour of the day or night. The CO2 process preserves enough of the Assam-forward character to make it genuinely satisfying rather than a pale echo of a real breakfast tea. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Chai

Masala chai spices over a CO2-decaffeinated black tea base — the warming, spiced evening cup for anyone who loves chai but wants to avoid caffeine. Decaf Chai scored 94 delivers the cinnamon, cardamom, ginger, clove, and black pepper character of masala chai in a cup that works at 9pm without consequence. Brewed double-strength with steamed oat milk, it becomes a genuinely satisfying caffeine-free chai latte. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Chocolate Truffle

Real cocoa nibs, chocolate pieces, and cocoa powder over a CO2-decaffeinated black tea base — scored 95. The most indulgent decaf tea in the collection and one that genuinely rivals hot chocolate as an evening treat without the sugar load. 100% milk-free. The CO2 process preserves the tea's structural integrity in a way that makes the cocoa and chocolate additions taste integrated rather than applied. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Hazelnut Cinnamon Crème

A complex dessert-inspired decaf tea — hazelnut, cinnamon, and cream over the decaffeinated black tea base, scored 95. One of the most distinctive individual teas in the collection for anyone who wants a flavored decaf with more complexity than a single-note fruit or cream variety. The hazelnut and cinnamon combination produces a warm, nutty, spiced cup that is genuinely unusual in the decaf category. From 17¢/cup.

Decaf Fruit Teas

The broadest segment of the decaf collection — fruit-flavored decaf black teas for anyone who wants the flavored tea experience without caffeine:

  • Decaf Apricot (95, 17¢/cup) — soft honeyed apricot over the decaffeinated base. One of the most naturally sweet of the fruit decaf teas.
  • Decaf Blueberry (94, 17¢/cup) — vivid blueberry character with good color and a naturally tart-sweet balance. Cold brews particularly well.
  • Decaf Raspberry (94, 17¢/cup) — bright, tart raspberry over the decaffeinated black tea base.
  • Decaf Mango (93, 17¢/cup) — tropical mango sweetness for an evening cup with genuine fruit character.
  • Decaf Orange (93, 17¢/cup) — clean citrus orange character over the decaffeinated base. A lighter, brighter option alongside the warmer fruit teas.

Decaf Ceylon

Single-origin Ceylon in decaffeinated form — clean, bright, and citrus-forward, scored 94. Decaf Ceylon is the unflavored single-origin option for decaf drinkers who want a tea-forward experience rather than a flavored one. At 20¢/cup it is the only decaf tea priced above the standard 17¢ in the collection, reflecting the higher-quality single-origin base. Also works well as a cold brew decaf iced tea base.



Does Decaf Tea Still Have Antioxidants?

Yes — and this is one of the most commonly misunderstood facts about decaffeinated tea. Caffeine and antioxidants are different compounds with different chemical properties. The CO2 decaffeination process targets caffeine specifically without significantly affecting the polyphenol and antioxidant content of the leaf.

Research comparing CO2-decaffeinated tea with its caffeinated equivalent has found that the decaffeinated version retains 80–95% of the original catechin and polyphenol content. The antioxidant benefits that make regular tea consumption associated with cardiovascular health, reduced oxidative stress, and other documented health outcomes are largely preserved in CO2-decaffeinated tea.

Ethyl acetate-decaffeinated tea retains significantly less — the solvent process that strips flavor compounds also strips a higher proportion of antioxidants. This is another reason why the decaffeination method matters beyond flavor alone.



Who Should Drink Decaf Tea?

The range of people for whom decaf loose leaf tea is the right choice is broader than most people assume:

  • Evening tea drinkers — anyone who wants a proper cup of tea after dinner without disrupting sleep. Decaf Earl Grey, Decaf Chai, and Decaf Cream are three of the most naturally suited evening teas available.
  • Caffeine-sensitive individuals — people who experience anxiety, heart palpitations, or sleep disruption from caffeine at any quantity can enjoy the full tea experience with decaf. CO2-decaffeinated tea typically retains 2–5mg of residual caffeine per cup — negligible for most caffeine-sensitive people.
  • Pregnant tea drinkers — standard medical guidance recommends limiting caffeine to under 200mg per day during pregnancy. A cup of decaf loose leaf tea contributes 2–5mg toward that limit, making it a practical everyday tea choice throughout pregnancy. Always consult with a healthcare provider about specific dietary decisions during pregnancy.
  • High-volume tea drinkers — anyone who drinks four or more cups of tea per day benefits from replacing some caffeinated cups with decaf to manage total daily caffeine intake without eliminating the tea ritual.
  • Afternoon and late-morning drinkers with caffeine cutoffs — the increasingly common practice of setting a daily caffeine cutoff (typically 12–2pm) to protect sleep quality makes decaf tea the practical choice for the second half of the day.


Decaf Tea vs. Herbal Tea: Which Should You Choose?

The most common question for anyone reducing caffeine — and one with a specific, practical answer:

  • Choose decaf tea when — you want something that tastes like real tea. Decaf Earl Grey tastes like Earl Grey. Decaf Breakfast tastes like breakfast tea. Decaf Chai tastes like masala chai. The flavor, the body, the ability to take milk — all the properties of the caffeinated version are preserved, minus the caffeine.
  • Choose herbal tea when — you want something botanical, floral, or fruit-forward that tastes nothing like tea. Chamomile, peppermint, hibiscus, and rooibos all deliver genuinely different flavor experiences from tea and are completely caffeine-free by nature rather than by processing.

Many tea drinkers find that decaf tea serves the moments when they want "real tea" without caffeine, and herbal or rooibos serves the moments when they want something lighter and botanical. The two categories complement rather than replace each other. See Adagio's herbal tea collection and rooibos collection for the full caffeine-free range.



How Much Caffeine Is in Decaf Tea?

Decaf tea is not caffeine-zero — it is caffeine-reduced. CO2-decaffeinated loose leaf tea typically retains 2–5mg of caffeine per 8oz cup, compared to 40–70mg in a standard cup of black tea and 95–200mg in a cup of coffee. For context:

  • A cup of Decaf Earl Grey contains approximately 2–5mg of caffeine
  • A standard cup of caffeinated Earl Grey contains approximately 40–70mg
  • A cup of coffee contains 95–200mg depending on preparation
  • A bar of dark chocolate contains approximately 20–30mg

At 2–5mg per cup, CO2-decaffeinated loose leaf tea is functionally caffeine-free for the vast majority of people — including most caffeine-sensitive individuals and most pregnant women following standard dietary guidance. The residual caffeine is below the threshold that produces physiological effects in most adults.



How to Brew Loose Leaf Decaf Tea

CO2-decaffeinated loose leaf tea brews identically to its caffeinated equivalent — no modified temperature, no special equipment, no different technique:

  • Water temperature — fully boiling (212°F/100°C) for all decaf black tea varieties. The CO2 process doesn't change the leaf's brewing requirements.
  • Leaf quantity — one teaspoon (2–3g) per 8oz cup. Identical to the caffeinated version.
  • Steep time — 3–5 minutes for black-base decaf teas. Decaf Chai benefits from the full 5 minutes to develop the spice character; fruit teas are pleasant at 3 minutes.
  • With milk — Decaf Breakfast, Decaf Earl Grey, and Decaf Chai all take milk well, identically to their caffeinated counterparts.
  • Cold brew — Decaf Peach, Decaf Blueberry, Decaf Ceylon, and other fruit and plain decaf teas cold brew effectively. Add 2–3 teaspoons per 8oz of cold water, refrigerate overnight, strain and serve over ice.


Decaf Tea as a Gift

Loose leaf decaf tea makes a particularly thoughtful gift for recipients with specific needs — a pregnant friend who misses her Earl Grey, a colleague who has been told to cut back on caffeine, a family member who wants to drink tea in the evening without sleep consequences. A decaf tea sampler covering Earl Grey, Breakfast, Chai, and a fruit variety gives the recipient the full range of what CO2-decaffeinated tea can be at this quality level. At 17¢/cup across most of the collection, decaf tea is also one of the most accessible gift categories in the Adagio catalog.



Buy Loose Leaf Decaf Tea Online

Browse all 15 loose leaf decaf teas above — Decaf Earl Grey, Decaf Breakfast, Decaf Chai, Decaf Cream, Decaf Peach, Decaf Chocolate Truffle, Decaf Apricot, Decaf Blueberry, Decaf Ceylon, and more, all CO2-decaffeinated, from 17 cents a cup. Free shipping on qualifying orders. Buy loose leaf decaf tea online and have it delivered from Adagio's New Jersey warehouse within one business day. Also available in pyramid teabag format.

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