By Evie Liu
Despite a cautious outlook on the broader coffee market, Dutch Bros -- a quickly growing beverage chain from the West Coast -- can keep forging ahead, wrote Citi analyst Jon Tower in a Tuesday note.
The bank initiated coverage of Dutch Bros with a Buy rating and an $82 price target, indicating a 41% upside from the stock's current price of $58. Tower is betting that the drive-thru beverage chain has built a rare combination: a strong brand, a young and growing customer base, and a marketing machine that turns novelty, social media, and impulse into repeat traffic.
He expects Dutch Bros' same-store sales to grow 5.3% in 2026 and 5.9% in 2027, respectively.
Dutch Bros is still small -- about 3.5% of the U.S. specialty coffee and tea market. But the company's footprint is expanding rapidly, and its awareness and loyalty among consumers are growing even faster, fueled by social-media-friendly product drops, giveaways, and an active cadence of innovation.
The results show up in the data. Foot traffic jumped about 18% year over year in the fourth quarter of 2025, while market share edged higher. App usage hit new highs in early December, while loyalty members now account for more than 70% of total sales, wrote Tower.
Dutch Bros skews toward a young customer base that favors cold drinks and energy beverages and tend to engage in group visits rather than solo routines. That dynamic fuels social sharing and impulse purchases, which Citi sees as especially effective in a category where buying decisions are often spontaneous.
The company has more levers to pull for further growth, including planned expansion of its food menu, the rollout of a mobile ordering system, and improvements in employee productivity.
Dutch Bros also plans to start selling packaged coffee in grocery stores through a licensing deal starting in 2026, a move that requires no capital investment. Even a 1% share of the U.S. packaged coffee market could translate into meaningful additional revenue, wrote Tower.
To be sure, the coffee chain faces a range of risks, from macro consumer pressure to rising lease costs -- a headwind that Wall Street may be underestimating, said Tower.
Still, the analyst believes the brand's momentum and marketing flywheel could outweigh the headwinds. Despite rising coffee bean prices in recent years, the cost pressure is expected to ease in 2026 as supply improves.
Write to Evie Liu at evie.liu@barrons.com
This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 27, 2026 16:51 ET (21:51 GMT)
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