The Basics
Cacao juice is a refreshing beverage made from the white, fleshy pulp that surrounds cacao beans inside the cacao pod. Unlike chocolate or cocoa powder — which come from the fermented, dried, and roasted beans — cacao juice comes from the fruit itself.
When you crack open a cacao pod, you'll find 30-50 cacao beans embedded in a thick, white, mucilaginous pulp. This pulp is naturally sweet, aromatic, and bursting with tropical flavors. For centuries, this pulp was considered a byproduct of chocolate production and was mostly discarded or used only during the fermentation process.
Today, innovative companies are pressing, bottling, and selling this pulp as cacao juice — and it's becoming one of the most exciting new categories in the beverage industry.
What Does Cacao Juice Taste Like?
Cacao juice tastes nothing like chocolate. Instead, it has a unique tropical flavor profile with notes of:
- Lychee and mangosteen
- Citrus — hints of lime and grapefruit
- Pear and peach
- Passion fruit and pineapple
- A subtle floral quality, sometimes described as elderflower
The juice is naturally sweet with a pleasant acidity, similar to a blend of tropical fruit juices. It's pulpy and bright, quite sweet, and slightly floral.
Nutritional Highlights
Cacao juice is packed with beneficial compounds:
| Nutrient | Benefit |
|---|---|
| Antioxidants | Up to 3x more than green tea |
| Electrolytes | Potassium, magnesium for hydration |
| Theobromine | Gentle, sustained energy without jitters |
| Polyphenols | Support cardiovascular and gut health |
| Vitamin C | Immune system support |
Importantly, cacao juice is naturally caffeine-free — the caffeine in chocolate comes from the roasted beans, not the fruit pulp. The gentle energy boost comes from theobromine, a milder stimulant.
How Is It Different from Chocolate?
| Cacao Juice | Chocolate | |
|---|---|---|
| Source | Fruit pulp | Roasted beans |
| Taste | Tropical, fruity | Rich, bitter-sweet |
| Caffeine | None | Yes |
| Processing | Cold-pressed, minimal | Fermented, roasted, conched |
| Calories | ~50 per serving | ~150+ per serving |
| Fat | Very low | High (cocoa butter) |
How Is It Made?
The basic process involves:
- Harvesting cacao pods from the tree
- Opening the pod to reveal the pulp-covered beans
- Separating the pulp from the beans
- Pressing or extracting the juice from the pulp
- Pasteurizing for shelf stability
- Bottling — sometimes with carbonation
For a deeper dive, see our article on how cacao juice is made.
Health Benefits
Research suggests that cacao juice offers several health benefits:
- Cardiovascular health — flavanols may improve blood flow and lower blood pressure
- Antioxidant protection — high polyphenol content fights oxidative stress
- Gut health — polyphenols act as prebiotics, feeding beneficial bacteria
- Natural hydration — rich in electrolytes like potassium and magnesium
- Mood support — contains compounds linked to feelings of well-being
See our research page for the full collection of peer-reviewed studies.
Where to Buy Cacao Juice
Cacao juice is becoming increasingly available. Some popular brands include:
- Blue Stripes — cacao water available at Walmart and Amazon
- Pacha de Cacao — available in 1,000+ European locations
- Koa — wholesale cacao fruit juice from Ghana
- bevCacao — still and sparkling options
Check our Where to Buy page for a complete list of brands and retailers.
The Sustainability Story
One of the most compelling aspects of cacao juice is its sustainability story. The traditional chocolate industry discards roughly 70% of the cacao pod — millions of tons of fruit pulp wasted every year. By turning this "waste" into a premium product, cacao juice companies are:
- Reducing agricultural waste
- Creating additional income for cacao farmers
- Lowering the carbon footprint of cacao farming
- Supporting the circular economy
Learn more about cacao upcycling and its environmental impact.