Coffee Allergy From Drinking Coffee Is Rarely Reported

The reality, however, is that you’re probably at very little risk for being allergic to your morning (or afternoon or evening) cup of Joe. Indeed, there’s surprisingly little information in the medical literature regarding allergic reactions to drinking coffee.

One report from Italy, published in 2008, described a father and daughter who experienced a presumed coffee allergy after contracting a parasitic infection. The authors theorize that the parasite damaged the intestine and allowed the development of a coffee allergy to occur. Both father and daughter showed evidence of specific antibodies to coffee with positive blood testing and skin testing, and symptoms of hives and diarrhea occurred when drinking coffee and resolved when coffee was avoided.

Occupational Allergy to Raw Coffee Beans

The risk of developing an airborne coffee allergy (with symptoms similar to hay fever) is more likely for workers at coffee roasting and packaging facilities. The first reports of occupational allergy to coffee date back to the 1950s and 1960s, when workers at coffee production plants began to experience symptoms of nasal allergies and asthma with exposure to raw (green) coffee beans and roasted coffee dust.

This doesn’t seem to be the case, however.

As one editorial explains, the problem appears to be unique to workers at manufacturing plants, where sensitization occurs with coffee bean dust, which can be released throughout the entire plant, via inhalation or contact with the skin.

Drinking coffee doesn’t seem to pose the same problem. In fact, when a group of 17 coffee plant workers who complained of nasal allergies as a result of exposure to coffee dust was studied, none of them experienced any reaction with drinking coffee.

Caffeine Allergy

Most people who experience symptoms after drinking coffee, such as headaches, rapid heart rate, gastrointestinal upset (such as nausea or diarrhea), jitteriness, and insomnia, are having either a non-allergic food intolerance or pharmacologic side effects from the caffeine in the coffee.

There is only one reported case of possible anaphylaxis to caffeine worldwide.