Is £2.20 too much to pay for a cup of tea?
- Published
How much is too much to pay for a cup of tea?
An anonymous customer wrote to the Toast Cafe and Deli in Wrexham on Monday after their "shock" about having to pay £2.20 for a cuppa.
But is this expensive? I called up cafes across the UK and discovered it could cost anywhere from £1 to £3.30 in Wales, about £2.80 in Manchester and £3 in London.
One cafe owner said customers can be "blind" to the "hidden costs" of running businesses.
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Serena Hancock, 28, from Cardiff, said she had just been to a chain restaurant with her friends and paid £3.30 for a cup of tea.
Her sister Tianna Hancock, 28, added: "You've got to think about it, it's literally a tea bag."
Amaris Powell, 28, from Cardiff, said: "If you buy a whole pack of teabags and then break it down per tea bag it would cost you nothing."
Serena said elderly people should be given a free tea or one at a reduced rate as £2.20 is "expensive for them based on what they would have paid".
"And it gives them a reason to go out each day."
Amaris Powell said: "It's not going to dent us, they get free bus passes, free trains, I'm pretty sure you could allow them to have a free tea."
Tianna Hancock agreed and said it should cost everyone else £1.50.
David Mort, 90, from Risca in Caerphilly said: "For old age pensioners it's getting worse."
"A cup of tea, 20p - that's plenty. £2.20 is not a fair price," he said. "If it were me I wouldn't go in there, it's as simple as that."
Fadhili Maghiya, 40, from Cardiff, said: "It depends on what kind of tea it is and where it's coming from - the cost of shipping and the producer being paid a fair wage."
"But then paying more than £1.50 maybe is a little bit too much," he said.
"Obviously when you go to buy tea in a coffee shop and it's more than the whole box of 50 teabags. That's mental.
"To be priced out is extortion really, and it's not just older people it's younger people as well."
He added it was different if it was an independent shop as opposed to a chain and would be willing to pay "a bit more" because "you want to support small businesses."
Leo Lee-Thomas, 21, from Cardiff, said the maximum they would pay would be £2.50 but thought it should cost £2.20 to £2.30 for one cup of tea.
Aiden Forrester, 22, from Aberdare, said: "It's boiling water at the end of the day.
"They've got to make money so £2.20 is fair," they added.
Jane Hides, 49, from New Quay in Ceredigion said she would expect to pay £1.50 to £2.
"I think people do look at it and think it's just a tea bag and some water," she said. "However, it's still a product and everything comes at a cost."
She said paying £2.20 is fair because businesses have "bills to pay".
Gary Solomon, owner of The Crows Nest Cafe in Milford Haven said he had to put the price of his cups of tea up from £1.25 to £1.50 when the minimum wage increased in April.
He said he factors in the delivery from the warehouse, the electric, the staff and the clearing up as well as the teabag and the water.
The cafe owner added that: "If it's hot and it's inside, 20% of that goes straight to the government - so that's 30p already off the cost."
"The other part of the cost is holiday pay, PAYE contributions and national insurance."
He said when the menu's prices went up he put a sign out explaining the reason so has had no complaints.
Mr Solomon said a cup of tea is more than a teabag and people "can be a bit blind to understand exactly what happens behind the door if they just see one person making a cup."
"It's the hidden costs people don't see," he added.
Mr Solomon said £2.20 does "seem a bit expensive".
Jason Hughes, the general manager of Bwyd Da Bangor sells a pot of tea [which makes two cups] for £3 and said the price factors in the tea bag, the sweeteners, the milk, the hot water and the teapot - as well as the washing up of the mug and pot when the customer is finished.
"We pay a fair living wage of £12 per hour." He added that rent and ingredients were "expensive".
Mr Hughes said: "People don't mind paying £3 for a coffee for some reason.
"There seems to be a higher perceived value."
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