Why India is falling for expensive chocolate?
Hi folks,
In the last issue, we unpacked the edtech bubble and how quickly things can fall apart when growth runs ahead of fundamentals. This time, the trigger was much simpler.
While scrolling through Blinkit, we noticed something unexpected. India now has its own premium chocolate brands. Not just one or two, but an entire section filled with names we hadn’t really seen before. ₹300, ₹400, even ₹600 for a single bar.
That naturally raised a question. When did chocolate in India become something you actually think about before buying?
So we dug deeper. And what we found wasn’t just about expensive chocolate. It was about a much bigger shift in how chocolate is made, sold, and consumed in India today.
If you go into a grocery store or a supermarket in Mumbai or Bangalore today, you’ll notice something odd. The chocolate shelf doesn’t look like it used to. It’s no longer just Dairy Milk, KitKat, Amul and a few imported Lindt bars locked behind glass.
Instead, you’ll find neatly packed bars with names like Idukki 70%, Anaimalai Dark, or even Jamun Chocolate. Some cost ₹350. Some go up to ₹600 for a small bar. And people are actually picking them up, turning them around, reading where the cocoa came from, and then buying them like it’s a bottle of wine.
That small moment tells you something bigger has already changed.
Because for the longest time, chocolate in India was never about origin, process, or even taste complexity. It was about familiarity. Sweet, creamy, affordable, and mostly seen as a treat for kids.
In fact, chocolate wasn’t even originally an Indian thing. It was brought here by the British in the late 1700s, when they tried growing cacao in parts of South India like Courtallam in Tamil Nadu. The variety they introduced, called Criollo, was prized for its delicate flavour but couldn’t handle India’s humid, pest-heavy conditions.
Those early experiments didn’t go anywhere commercially. And for a long time after that, chocolate remained more of a colonial luxury than an everyday product. It was largely consumed by British officials and a small section of Indian elites, especially in Anglo-Indian and Parsi households where Western-style desserts had already found a place.
The real shift came much later. After Cadbury entered India in 1948, chocolate slowly moved from being a niche indulgence to a mass product. Over the decades, it became widely available, affordable, and deeply familiar.
Today, that mass market still dominates a roughly $3 billion industry. But underneath it, a quieter shift is underway.
A premium, artisanal segment, already valued at close to $290 million, is growing faster than the rest of the market at around 8 to 9% annually. And this segment is not just selling chocolate. It’s changing how India thinks about chocolate altogether.
To understand why this is happening, you have to go back to something most people don’t associate with India at all. Cocoa farming.
India produces roughly 26,000 to 30,000 metric tonnes of cocoa every year, largely concentrated in Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and Karnataka. But Cocoa in India is rarely grown as a standalone crop. It grows under coconut trees, alongside areca nut, and sometimes even with spices. Which means the beans are constantly interacting with a very diverse ecosystem. Soil, humidity, rainfall, and even neighbouring crops all start influencing flavour.
This is what people in the chocolate world call terroir. It sounds like a wine term, but it’s basically the idea that where something is grown changes how it tastes.
So beans from Kerala, especially regions like Idukki and Wayanad, often carry fruity acidity, sometimes compared to green apple or raisin. Tamil Nadu’s Pollachi region produces beans with more floral and earthy notes because of the surrounding coconut and spice farms. Andhra Pradesh, which focuses more on hybrid high-yield varieties, produces beans that are creamier and higher in cocoa butter, making them ideal for milk chocolate.
For decades, none of this really mattered. Industrial chocolate doesn’t care about flavour nuances. It cares about consistency. Beans from different regions get blended, roasted at high temperatures, mixed with sugar, milk solids, and often vegetable fats to reduce costs. The outcome is predictable, stable, and scalable. You can produce over 10,000 bars per hour and sell them at ₹50.
But the bean-to-bar movement flipped this logic completely.
Instead of blending beans, it isolates them. Instead of masking flavour, it highlights it. Instead of optimising for scale, it optimises for taste.
And this shift is not just philosophical. It’s deeply technical.
Bean-to-bar basically means the chocolate maker controls the entire journey of chocolate, starting from raw cocoa beans all the way to the final chocolate bar. In regular chocolate, companies usually buy processed cocoa (like cocoa powder or cocoa butter) and then just mix, flavour, and package it. But in bean-to-bar, the maker starts with raw cocoa beans, then roasts, grinds, refines, and turns them into chocolate themselves.
Chocolate making is basically a series of controlled chemical reactions, and most of the flavour is built during fermentation. Over 5 to 7 days, yeast converts sugars into alcohol, then bacteria turn that into acids, raising the temperature to around 50°C and triggering flavour development.
If this step goes wrong, no amount of roasting can fix it. The chocolate will still taste flat or bitter.
Then comes roasting, where makers decide how much of the original flavour to preserve. Artisanal brands often prefer lighter roasting to retain fruity or floral notes, while industrial players use higher temperatures to ensure uniformity.
Next is conching, which smoothens the texture and removes harsh acids. Craft makers often take 48 to 72 hours here, compared to much shorter factory processes.
Finally, tempering controls how the chocolate sets. Done right, it gives that clean snap and glossy finish. Done wrong, it turns dull and crumbly.
All of this explains why artisanal chocolate is expensive. But the pricing is not just about the process. It’s also about inputs.
Most craft chocolate uses only 3 to 5 ingredients. Cocoa mass, cocoa butter, and sugar. No palm oil substitutes. No artificial flavours. Compare that to mass-market chocolate, which can have up to 20 ingredients, including emulsifiers and flavouring agents.
Then there’s sourcing. Many artisanal brands follow direct trade models, paying farmers 20-50% higher than commodity prices in exchange for better fermentation and drying practices. This improves quality but also increases costs.
So a 60-gram artisanal bar priced at ₹300 to ₹600 starts making more sense.
Now, the obvious question is, who is buying this?
The answer lies in how Indian consumption itself is evolving.
India’s urban population crossed 460 million in 2024, and with rising disposable incomes, spending is shifting from basic consumption to experiential consumption. People are no longer just buying products. They are buying stories, origins, and perceived quality.
Chocolate fits perfectly into this shift.
It has also quietly entered India’s gifting culture. During festive seasons, chocolate sales see volume spikes of up to 40%. Corporate gifting has especially moved towards premium chocolate boxes, sometimes priced at ₹3,000 to ₹5,000. The logic is simple. Chocolate has a longer shelf life than mithai, looks more premium, and feels more contemporary.
There’s also a behavioural angle at play.
Chocolate is not just food. It’s an emotional product. It triggers dopamine and endorphin release, making it a go-to comfort snack. Compounds like theobromine and phenylethylamine contribute to mild mood elevation. For a generation dealing with urban stress, long work hours, and fast lifestyles, chocolate becomes an easy, accessible reward.
And in the premium segment, it goes one step further. It becomes a signal.
Buying a single-origin bar from a brand like Mason & Co or Paul & Mike is not just about taste. It signals awareness. About ingredients, sourcing, and craftsmanship. In a culture increasingly shaped by Instagram and visual identity, even the packaging and backstory matter.
But while demand is rising, the supply side is still catching up.
India produces less than 25% of its cocoa requirement, which is close to 100,000 metric tonnes. This means both industrial and artisanal players remain exposed to global price volatility. In 2024, cocoa prices surged to nearly $10,000 per tonne due to supply issues in Ivory Coast and Ghana. That’s a fourfold increase, and it directly impacts margins.
On the farm side, productivity remains low at around 0.6 tonnes per hectare, below global averages. Many plantations are aging. Post-harvest infrastructure, especially fermentation units, is inconsistent. And because cocoa is mostly grown by small farmers as a secondary crop, investment in quality improvement is limited.
Even for brands, the business is not as glamorous as it looks.
While gross margins on premium bars can go as high as 60 to 80%, operating margins are much tighter. Digital platforms, which are critical for discovery, can take up to 40 to 45% of revenue through commissions and payment fees. Logistics is expensive because chocolate needs temperature control. Shelf life is shorter, often 3 to 9 months, compared to over a year for mass products.
This is why many brands are building direct-to-consumer channels, opening experience centres, or even cafes to improve margins and customer engagement.
And yet, despite all these constraints, Indian craft chocolate is gaining global recognition.
Brands like Paul & Mike have already won international awards. Manam has been globally recognised for its chocolate experience centre. Others like Soklet, Pascati, and Naviluna are carving out niches through organic, vegan, or single-origin positioning.
Exports are slowly picking up, especially to markets like the UAE, UK, and US, where Indian flavours like cardamom, masala chai, and tropical fruits actually stand out.
And the headroom for growth is massive.
India’s per capita chocolate consumption is still just 200 to 250 grams per year. In Europe, it’s closer to 8 to 10 kilograms. Even a small shift in consumption habits can significantly expand the market.
At the same time, trends like vegan chocolate, clean-label products, and regional flavour innovation are opening up new categories. Plant-based chocolate alone is growing at over 10% annually, driven by lactose intolerance and changing dietary preferences.
So what looks like a premium niche today could slowly become mainstream over the next decade.
Because this is not just about chocolate getting expensive or fancy. It’s about a deeper shift in how products are made, marketed, and consumed.
India is moving from a volume-driven food market to a value-driven one. From uniformity to differentiation. From price sensitivity to experience sensitivity.
And chocolate just happens to be one of the clearest, and honestly, most delicious, ways to see that change happening in real time.
If you’ve made it this far, thanks for reading.
We’ll be back next week, like clockwork.
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That’s your weekly brew. Bye!