Cacao Growing Regions

A global overview of cacao cultivation — the cacao belt, major producing countries, climate requirements, and how geography shapes flavor.

growing regionscacao beltgeographyclimateproduction

The Cacao Belt

Cacao (Theobroma cacao) grows exclusively in a narrow tropical band known as the "cacao belt" — roughly 20 degrees north and south of the equator. The tree requires specific conditions that only this region reliably provides: consistent warmth, high humidity, abundant rainfall, and protection from direct sun and strong winds.

Climate Requirements

FactorIdeal Range
Temperature21-32°C (70-90°F) year-round
Rainfall1,500-2,500mm annually
Humidity80-100%
Altitude0-800m (up to 1,200m for some varieties)
SunlightFiltered (understory tree)
WindSheltered

Cacao is an understory tree — it evolved beneath the canopy of tropical rainforests. Commercial plantations often use shade trees (banana, coconut, or hardwoods) to replicate this environment.

Top Producing Countries

RankCountryAnnual Production% Global SupplyKey Varieties
1Ivory Coast~2.2M tonnes38-45%Forastero
2Ghana~800K tonnes15-17%Forastero
3Ecuador~400K tonnes7-8%Nacional, Forastero
4Cameroon~290K tonnes5-6%Forastero, Trinitario
5Nigeria~270K tonnes5%Forastero
6Indonesia~200K tonnes4%Forastero
7Brazil~200K tonnes4%Forastero, Trinitario
8Peru~160K tonnes3%Criollo, Nacional
9Colombia~70K tonnes1.5%Criollo, Trinitario
10Dominican Republic~70K tonnes1.5%Trinitario

Over 70% of the world's cacao comes from West Africa, while South America — cacao's ancestral home — produces the majority of "fine flavor" cacao.

Regional Characteristics

West Africa

The powerhouse of global cacao production. Ivory Coast and Ghana together produce over half the world's supply. Dominated by robust Forastero varieties, West African cacao is the backbone of mass-market chocolate. Several cacao juice companies, including Koa and bevCacao, source from this region.

South America

The origin continent of cacao, home to the greatest genetic diversity. Ecuador's Nacional variety is prized for its floral aromatics. Peru harbors ancient Criollo genetics in the Amazon basin. Colombia is experiencing a cacao renaissance as former coca-growing regions transition to cacao farming.

Central America & Caribbean

The birthplace of cacao cultivation — where Maya and Aztec civilizations first domesticated the plant. Today, Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras produce smaller quantities of high-quality cacao. The Dominican Republic is a significant Trinitario producer.

Southeast Asia

Indonesia and the Philippines produce cacao primarily for bulk markets, though specialty operations are emerging.

Climate Change Concerns

Rising temperatures threaten cacao production in traditional growing regions. By 2050, some current cacao-growing areas may become too hot or dry. This has spurred research into heat-tolerant varieties and pushed production to higher altitudes. The sustainability implications extend to the cacao juice industry, which depends on healthy cacao farming systems for its raw material.