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Friday 03 October 2025 6:00 am  |  Updated:  Friday 03 October 2025 10:33 am

Green is good: How has Blank Street taken over London?

By: Amber Murray

Retail Reporter

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Blank Street's Gracechurch location. Credit: Blank street
Blank Street's Gracechurch location. Credit: Blank street

Given the ubiquity of Blank Street’s pastel green branding across the capital, it is almost surprising to think the New York-based company only opened its first London shop in the summer of 2022.

In fact, it only opened its very first shop in Williamsburg in 2021, after spending nearly a year housed in a Brooklyn coffee cart.

Just four years later, the company has announced its first-ever, company-wide profitability, tripling turnover to £36m over the last two years.

Co-founder Ignacio Lladó describes 2025 as a “landmark year” for Blank Street. “We’ve really hit visibility… and showed the success of the business,” he said.

Blank Street’s success sits alongside a difficult time for older coffee chains like Costa Coffee, Pret A Manger and Starbucks, which are all struggling with a cost-of-living crisis as well as higher wage taxes and an uncertain global macroeconomic environment.

So, what is Blank Street doing differently?

A matcha made in heaven

There are a few key drivers of Blank Street’s success. The first, unsurprisingly, is some hefty venture capital backing from funds like General Catalyst and Tiger Global.

The two founders, Issam Freiha and Vinay Menda, raised over $67m (£49m) in 2021, super-charging the brand’s expansion in the US and further afield.

The second is something a little more difficult to quantify, and ends up coming down somewhere between luck and foresight.

Blank Street came along at the right time, with the right aesthetic, for a generation eager to enjoy ‘Instagrammable’ treats.

Everything from the shops to the drinks and the counter is sleek, simple, and – however intentionally or not – looks brilliant on camera.

It is also more affordable than your average pint or social, placing it in the right bracket for a mid-afternoon social visit.

Crucially, Blank street nailed its timing on the post-pandemic matcha boom. The chain’s blueberry matcha, launched in 2024, became a social media trend and briefly made Google tag the company as the ‘home of the blueberry matcha’.

“[We] pioneered a full matcha menu in a way that had, realistically, never been done before in the high street… we were the first at this scale to really go out with a matcha menu of this quality,” Lladó said.

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Costa Coffee was acquired by Coca-Cola in 2019. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

“We saw the spark of matcha in 2023,” he explains. “We decided to launch our blueberry matcha into our spring menus, and it started to take off small circles.”

Over June and July, Matcha sales increased by 114 per cent this summer compared to last year, outpacing every other espresso-based drink, while cappuccinos and cortados actually saw sales decline, according to Square Payments.

“Matcha has gone from niche to mainstream in the UK… compared with older high-street chains, sellers like Blank Street seem to be benefitting most from first-mover advantage,” head of UK strategy at Square, Fi Sellick, said.

Blank Street staying on-trend

While rivals wrestle with a shaky consumer backdrop, Blank Street has leaned into collaborations and experiences, which are designed to resonate with younger customers. 

Customer experience is designed to push past the boundaries of ordering a drink, and tips into the Gen Z-centric trend of experiencing and consuming a brand as an aesthetic – both online and in real life.

Events range from a surprise in-store event with pop star Sabrina Carpenter to a month-long padel pop-up at Battersea Power Station, while last year concluded with a drink collaboration with influencer and stylist, Melissa’s Wardrobe.

A Mel’s Maple Matcha secret menu exclusive generated a significant amount of social media buzz, and sits alongside countless other menu collaborations with brands like Supergoop! and Haley Bieber. 

“[Blank street] are quick to embrace order-ahead, online ordering and digital loyalty schemes, and turn drinks into social moments,” Sellick added.

“Cafe culture isn’t about what’s in the cup – it’s the experience.”

The company has not escaped criticism however, with detractors questioning its VC-fuelled model and consistency across outlets – but Lladó insists expansion has not come at the cost of standards.

“[The question] is actually, how do we increase the quality of what we do as we scale?” he said. “And a big part of that is not just [quality of the drink] but store design and customer experience.”

“We’re incredibly ambitious, and we’re improving, evolving every day. But that’s our mindset for growth: With every new store, are we able to up the Blank Street experience one notch higher?”

“People are coming for the blank street experience,” Lladó said. “That’s what makes us stand out and makes us special.”

For a coffee chain that started in a Brooklyn cart just a few years ago, its rapid rise – and first taste of profitability – suggests that strategy may be paying off.

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