Fundamentals & tasting

What is the difference between bright and flat acidity in coffee?

Bright acidity is a lively, clean, and positive acidity that stimulates the salivary glands and enhances fruity aromas — it is a prized quality in specialty coffee. Flat or dull acidity is a lifeless, listless acidity that makes the cup feel hollow and depressed without adding aromatic value. The distinction is qualitative, not quantitative: a coffee can be very acidic yet flat, or mildly acidic yet brilliantly bright.

Bright acidity results from the presence of high-quality organic acids — primarily phosphoric acid (dominant in Kenyan SL-28), malic acid (green apple, plum, in Ethiopian coffees), and citric acid (citrus, in many Central American coffees). What these acids share is structural 'cleanliness' — they have no undesirable secondary acid compounds attached. In the cup they produce a liveliness at the attack that stimulates the palate and primes the perception of the fruity aromas that follow. Brightness is not about intensity: a coffee can have moderate but brilliant acidity if the acids present are of high quality.

Flat acidity, by contrast, arises from several different situations. It can result from a dark roast (organic acids decompose above 220 °C, replaced by phenolic acids and bitter quinolides). It can come from coffee that is too old (organic acids oxidise in storage and lose their lively character). It can also be a natural characteristic of some low-altitude origins — Brazilian naturals grown below 900 m, for instance, structurally contain less malic and phosphoric acid than high-altitude African coffees.

A practical test to tell them apart: a coffee with bright acidity triggers immediate salivation at the attack — like a fresh olive or a light citrus — and leaves an impression of freshness. A coffee with flat acidity feels slightly harsh or limp, without salivation, like reheated coffee. Q-graders score SCA acidity on two dimensions: intensity (1-9) and quality (1-9). It is possible to score intensity 3 / quality 8 (mildly but brilliantly acidic) or intensity 7 / quality 4 (very acidic but flat — often a sign of under-extraction or defect).

Bright vs flat acidity in coffee: comparison

DimensionBright acidityFlat acidity
MouthfeelImmediate salivation, freshness, livelinessHarsh, limp impression, no stimulation
Dominant acidsQuality phosphoric, malic, citricPhenolic acids, degraded chlorogenics
Typical originsKenya, Ethiopia, Costa Rica, high-altitude ColombiaRobusta, low-altitude Brazil, stale coffee
Roast levelLight to medium (< 218 °C bean temp)Dark (> 225 °C) or very old
ExtractionWell-extracted (TDS 1.3-1.5 % filter)Under-extracted (sharp sour) or poorly stored
SCA quality score7-9 / 93-5 / 9