Malaysia’s biggest cafe and beverage show returns bigger, bolder, and with more to offer than before

The International Cafe and Beverage Show marks its milestone fifth edition with a first-ever tea segment, as Malaysia’s beverage scene grows more diverse, more competitive and more globally relevant.

The International Cafe and Beverage Show (ICBS) 2026, held at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre (KLCC) from May 7–9, 2026, highlighted a transformative phase in Malaysia’s coffee culture.

The event showcased a shift toward a more diverse, innovation-driven beverage scene, moving beyond traditional coffee toward specialized tea, Ready-to-Drink (RTD) products and sophisticated hi-tech sensory experiences.

Now in its 5th edition, ICBS has outgrown the label of trade shows. It is now the clearest annual read on where the industry is, where operators are placing their bets, and what kind of cafe culture Malaysia is building for the decade ahead.

The numbers reflect a market with momentum. Over three days, ICBS 2026 welcomed 650 brands, 1,000 baristas, 2,000 cafe owners and about 13,000 attendees from 55 countries, marking a significant increase in scale and industry focus.

It saw high-intent conversations between producers, operators and buyers from 55 countries, focusing on cross-border partnerships and innovation.

International participation and exhibiting brands were up and the conversations on the floor – between producers, operators and buyers from across Southeast Asia – were notably sharper and more cross-border in character than editions past.

“Coffee built this industry in Malaysia, but it doesn’t get to decide alone where it goes next,” said Alun Jones, project director of Montgomery Asia, which organised ICBS 2026 in partnership with Barista Guild Asia and Eciatto.

“The cafes winning right now are the ones who read the room early – they put something new on the menu before the customer had to ask for it. That instinct is what ICBS exists to sharpen,” added Jones.

Malaysia’s coffee market is rapidly expanding, with the market projected to grow from USD 753.8 million in 2024 to USD 1.07 billion by 2030, and the broader cafe and bar sector expected to reach USD 3.2 billion by 2028. What ICBS is capturing in real time is an industry mid-expansion – one where the question is no longer whether the market will grow, but who will define what it grows into.

This year’s edition introduced a first for the show’s five-year run: a dedicated tea segment featuring local and international tea producers. The move reflects a genuine shift already visible across cafe menus – not a displacement of coffee, but a broadening of what the modern Malaysian cafe offers.

Alongside artisanal teas, the exhibition floor showcased advanced brewing equipment, ready-to-drink and functional beverages and hybrid concepts blending coffee, tea, and mixology into formats the market is still learning to categorise.

That appetite for reinvention ran through this year’s competitions. The Malaysia Open Coffee Championship (MOCC) drew 38 competitors across three categories – the Malaysia Open Barista Championship, Malaysia Open Brewers Cup and Malaysia Open Latte Art Championship.

The judges noted that more participants are incorporating local ingredients and unconventional techniques into their routines, pointing to a barista community evolving beyond technical execution toward genuine creative expression.

The Unite Malaysian Taste Challenge 2026 pushed this further, with mixologists crafting story-driven mocktails drawn from Malaysia’s culinary heritage, turning familiar local flavours into cafe-ready beverages that resonated as much with trade visitors as with the public crowd. 

The broader picture is of an industry in active self-definition. Independent cafes still command a substantial majority of Malaysia’s cafe market, even as homegrown chains scale aggressively – a dynamic pushing the entire ecosystem toward faster menu innovation, stronger concept differentiation and a sharper eye on what consumers in Kuala Lumpur, Penang and Johor Bahru are actually ordering.

The operators gaining ground are not waiting for trends to arrive. They are moving ahead of them.

“As we mark five editions, ICBS is not just reflecting the industry – it is actively shaping it,” Jones said. “What starts on this floor, whether it is a new beverage category, a local flavour given a modern format, or an idea that travels back with a buyer from Seoul or Jakarta – that is the measure of what the show has become.”

For more information, visit https://intl-cbs.com/.