What Can You Add to Your Coffee at McDonald's?

Discover all the flavors you can add to your favorite cup of McCafé at McDonald's! From classic flavors like French vanilla and hazelnut to new flavors like chocolate and coconut.

What Can You Add to Your Coffee at McDonald's?

When it comes to coffee, you have a lot of options. And while you may be the type of person who turns to Starbucks, Dunkin', Tim Horton's, or any other coffee shop, McDonald's is often overlooked as a go-to option. McDonald's McCafé coffee not only comes in many forms, but it's also absolutely up to the task, as it's one of the best quick-service caffeine stops. From frappes and cappuccinos with sweet caramel or vanilla to thirst-quenching iced coffee, there's something for everyone.

Drip coffee at McDonald's is by far their most popular drink: in the United States alone they sell around 500 million cups a day. Order the iced coffee alone and enjoy it as is, or add the coffee and cream base with the flavors you like the most. Unlike McCafé iced coffee, iced latte starts with espresso and contains water, milk and ice, and contains liquid sugar. The main suppliers of McDonald's coffee beans are Gaviña Gourmet Coffee, Newman's Own, Green Mountain Coffee and Seattle's Best.

The creamy and sweet mocha base is mixed with ice to an ice-cream like consistency with a whisper of coffee flavor. Savor the flavors of Cappuccino Caramelo and enjoy the frothy foam with notes of caramel and dark coffee. In an effort to improve its coffee game in a major way, the brand introduces 10 new McCafe Flavor Shots that will add a little cheer to your morning latte. These flavors include classic options such as French vanilla, hazelnut and caramel, as well as new and fun tasty coffee drinks like chocolate, coconut, blueberry, cinnamon, Irish cream and raspberry.

Even though McDonald's is not primarily a coffee chain, it sells hundreds of millions of cups of coffee a day. While Robusta may be more popular with coffee connoisseurs (that doesn't mean that these people don't enjoy Arabica beans), the flavor profile tends to be more earthy and more bitter, two qualities that prevent many people from drinking coffee on a more regular basis. In addition to being able to stop by a McDonald's restaurant and drink your beer, you can also buy their pre-ground coffee for use in any coffee machine with a flat bottom filter. I consulted with someone well versed in absurdly sweet iced coffee drinks (a man who drinks a Venti Mocha Frapp weekly) and he said he would never do it with this drink.

Glenna Matthys
Glenna Matthys

Hardcore internet practitioner. Wannabe beer advocate. Infuriatingly humble beer expert. Devoted coffee evangelist. Hardcore social media scholar. Friendly beer fanatic.