Border Green: Cannabis Smuggling Routes Then and Now
By Warren Tyler
If there’s one thing we South Africans have always done well, it’s turning a simple drink into a ritual. Tea has long been part of that story. It’s there when visitors arrive, when a day slows down, and when a conversation needs time to breathe. In 2026, that tradition is still very much alive—it’s just expanded, diversified, and become a little more experimental.
South Africa’s tea culture has moved well beyond the basic mug-and-biscuit moment. From proudly local rooibos to carefully blended herbal infusions and the rise of CBD-adjacent wellness teas, tea is having a quiet but confident revival. It’s less about caffeine jolts and more about comfort, intention, and how people want to feel.
Rooibos: still the heart of it all
No conversation about South African tea can start anywhere but rooibos. It’s the backbone of local tea culture and one of the country’s most successful exports. Naturally caffeine-free, low in tannins, and grown almost exclusively in the Western Cape, rooibos has earned its place as a national staple.
What’s interesting in 2026 isn’t rooibos itself; it’s how people are using it. It’s no longer just the “evening tea” option or the safe choice for kids. Rooibos is now:
- Blended with citrus peels, spices, and florals
- Served iced with fruit and herbs
- Used as a base for wellness-focused infusions
It’s familiar, trusted, and adaptable. Rooibos has managed to stay relevant without losing its identity, which is no small achievement in a trend-driven world.
The shift from caffeine to calm
One of the biggest changes in tea culture is why people are drinking it. For many South Africans, tea is no longer just a substitute for coffee — it’s an intentional pause.
With growing awareness around stress, sleep, and burnout, more people are reaching for caffeine-free or low-caffeine options. Herbal teas have comfortably stepped into that space.
Chamomile, peppermint, lemon balm, ginger, and fennel are no longer niche health-shop staples. They’re everyday choices found in kitchens, offices, and cafés. Tea has become part of a wind-down routine rather than a productivity tool.
In other words, tea is used to slow things down—not speed them up.
Blends with purpose (but not promises)
Modern tea drinkers are savvy. They’re interested in wellness, but sceptical of big claims. That’s where today’s herbal blends are getting it right.
Instead of promising miracles, most blends focus on gentle support:
- Relaxation and calm
- Digestion and comfort
- Hydration and warmth
- Ritual and routine
You’ll see teas described as “evening blends,” “gentle unwind,” or “daily balance” rather than cures for anything specific. This tone fits the current mood — supportive, not extreme.
Tea isn’t being sold as medicine. It’s being positioned as part of everyday care.
The rise of CBD herbal blends
One of the more noticeable additions to South Africa’s tea landscape is the appearance of CBD-infused or CBD-adjacent herbal blends. These are usually carefully positioned, given the regulatory environment, and often paired with familiar herbs like rooibos, chamomile, or mint.
What’s driving their popularity isn’t hype — it’s curiosity and familiarity. For many people, tea feels like a safe, approachable way to explore new wellness trends. A warm cup is less intimidating than oils or capsules.
Importantly, these blends are generally marketed around relaxation and ritual, not intoxication. They sit firmly in the wellness space, appealing to people who are already comfortable with herbal teas and natural remedies.
Whether CBD remains part of mainstream tea culture in the long term will depend on regulation and consumer trust. Still, its presence signals how open tea culture has become to gentle experimentation.
Local ingredients take centre stage
Another defining feature of the new tea culture is a renewed interest in local ingredients. South African plants like honeybush, buchu, wild sage, and African ginger are finding their way into thoughtfully crafted blends.
This isn’t just about flavour — it’s about storytelling. People want to know where their tea comes from, who grows it, and how it connects to local landscapes and traditions.
Smaller producers are leaning into this, offering limited batches, seasonal blends, and transparent sourcing. Tea is becoming less anonymous and more personal.
Iced teas and modern rituals
Tea culture isn’t confined to mugs and kettles anymore. Iced teas have become a staple, especially in warmer months. Rooibos iced tea, lightly sweetened or infused with citrus and herbs, has become a go-to alternative to sugary soft drinks.
Cafés and restaurants are also giving tea more attention. Instead of being an afterthought, tea menus now include:
- Loose-leaf options
- Herbal blends tailored to meals
- Cold infusions and tea mocktails
Tea has found its place at social tables, not just kitchen counters.
Tea as a social signal
What people drink often says something about how they see themselves, and tea is no exception. Choosing herbal or rooibos blends has quietly become a way of signalling values: balance, mindfulness, local support, and moderation.
There’s also less judgement around preferences. Whether someone drinks black tea with milk, a spiced rooibos blend, or a calming herbal infusion, it’s all part of the same broad culture. Tea has become inclusive rather than prescriptive.
A slower kind of luxury
In 2026, tea fits neatly into the idea of quiet or soft living. It’s affordable, accessible, and deeply comforting. The luxury isn’t in the price — it’s in the moment.
Brewing tea requires a pause. Waiting for water to boil, leaves to steep, flavours to develop, and in a fast, noisy world, that small delay feels almost rebellious.
It invites attention rather than demanding it.
What hasn’t changed
Despite all the new blends and formats, some things remain constant. Tea is still about connection. It still shows up during conversations, difficult moments, celebrations, and ordinary afternoons.
South Africa’s tea culture has evolved, but it hasn’t lost its soul. It’s simply expanded to reflect how people live now.
The takeaway
The new South African tea culture blends tradition with curiosity. Rooibos still anchors the experience, but herbal infusions and CBD-adjacent blends have added new layers of meaning and choice.
Tea in 2026 isn’t about trends or performance. It’s about comfort, intention, and small daily rituals that help people slow down.
The next time the kettle goes on, it’s worth noticing why. Chances are, it’s not just for the drink — it’s for the pause that comes with it.