Yes, coconut refreshers contain caffeine, typically 35–110 mg per serving from green tea or green coffee extract, depending on brand and size.
Small/Tall
Medium/Grande
Large/Venti+
Dunkin’ Coconut Refresher
- Green tea + coconutmilk base
- Small ~46 mg; large up to ~91–110 mg
- Fruit flavors vary by season
Tea-based caffeine
Starbucks Pink/Dragon Drink
- Green coffee extract in base
- Grande ~45–55 mg; Trenta up to ~110 mg
- Creamy coconutmilk texture
Coffee-derived caffeine
Canned/RTD Refreshers
- Label lists serving size
- Often 35–90 mg per can
- Fruit-forward, sparkling
Check the label
Do Coconut Refreshers Have Caffeine? Facts And Sizes
Coconut refreshers do have caffeine. Two big families drive most orders: Dunkin’ Coconut Refreshers and Starbucks drinks like Pink Drink or Dragon Drink. The lift comes from two sources. Dunkin’ uses brewed green tea and green tea extract in its flavor base. Starbucks uses green coffee extract in its Refresher base. Both routes add a mild buzz without the roasted coffee taste.
How much caffeine you get depends on size and brand. Typical ranges sit around 35–50 mg for a small or tall. Medium or grande lands near 65–100 mg. Large, venti, or trenta can reach 90–110 mg. That’s a light dose next to brewed coffee, yet enough to feel awake.
Quick Comparison: Sizes, Sources, And Typical Caffeine
The table below gives a broad snapshot so you can scan the numbers fast and pick the size that fits your plan.
| Brand/Drink | Common Sizes | Typical Caffeine |
|---|---|---|
| Dunkin’ Coconut Refresher | Small 16 oz • Medium 24 oz • Large 32 oz | ~46 mg • ~68–99 mg • ~91–110 mg |
| Starbucks Pink Drink | Tall 12 oz • Grande 16 oz • Venti 24 oz • Trenta 30 oz | ~35–45 mg • ~45–55 mg • ~70–85 mg • ~90–110 mg |
| Starbucks Dragon Drink | Tall • Grande • Venti • Trenta | Same as Pink Drink by size |
Numbers here reflect chain ranges shared in brand materials and drink trackers. If you want a broader context across drinks, a quick skim of caffeine in common beverages helps frame where refreshers sit against coffee, tea, and sodas.
What Counts As A Coconut Refresher?
At Dunkin’, “Coconut Refresher” means a fruit flavor concentrate shaken with ice and coconutmilk. The concentrate includes green tea extract, which supplies caffeine even though the sip tastes fruity and soft. Dunkin’ also sells non-coconut Refreshers made with green tea and fruit; those versions can run a bit higher in caffeine per size.
At Starbucks, the coconut variations fold coconutmilk into a Refresher base. Pink Drink pairs the Strawberry Açaí base with coconutmilk. Dragon Drink does the same with Mango Dragonfruit. The Refresher base includes green coffee extract, which provides caffeine while keeping a light fruit profile that doesn’t taste like brewed coffee.
Do The Coconut Refreshers Have Caffeine? Brands And Sources
Dunkin’ Coconut Refreshers
Dunkin’ describes its Refreshers as fruit-forward drinks made with B vitamins and energy from green tea. In stores and promos for the coconut line, the caffeine tie-in comes from the green tea extract used in the flavor base. Reported figures place a small around 46 mg, a medium near 68–99 mg, and a large around 91–110 mg. That lines up with what you’ll notice across sizes when you compare coconut versions with the standard green-tea Refreshers at the same shop.
Starbucks Coconut-Milk Drinks (Pink Drink, Dragon Drink)
Starbucks Refreshers are built on a base that includes green coffee extract. That’s the caffeine source across Pink Drink, Dragon Drink, and other coconutmilk twists. Starbucks lists size-based ranges for Refreshers: tall ~35–45 mg, grande ~45–55 mg, venti ~70–85 mg, and trenta ~90–110 mg. The coconutmilk add-in doesn’t change the dose, since the caffeine sits in the base.
How Coconut Refreshers Compare With Coffee And Tea
If you judge by buzz alone, a medium Coconut Refresher sits well under a brewed coffee of the same volume. A grande Pink Drink has far less caffeine than a grande hot coffee. That’s handy when you want a lighter lift in the afternoon or you’re tracking daily totals for sleep.
Most healthy adults keep daily intake under 400 mg, and many pregnant people stick near 200 mg or less. If you’re watching totals, scan size charts, order smaller cups late in the day, and space caffeine earlier when you can.
Flavor, Sweetness, And Add-Ins
Add-ins change calories and sugar, not caffeine. Lemonade swaps and cold foam add flavor and texture. The caffeine still rides in the Refresher base or tea extract. If you’re trimming sugar, ask for fewer pumps, more ice, or the base without lemonade.
Ordering Tips That Keep Things Simple
Pick A Size That Matches Your Plan
- Need a nudge? Small/Tall puts you near ~35–50 mg.
- Want a steady boost? Medium/Grande sits near ~65–100 mg.
- Ordering for two? Share a Large/Venti+ and sip slow.
Mind The Timing
Caffeine can hang around for hours. If sleep is sensitive, place your coconut refresher in the morning or early afternoon and switch to water or herbal tea later. That way you enjoy the flavor without late-night tossing.
Know The Outliers On The Menu
Some shops also sell iced energy drinks that hit 180–205 mg in a single venti. Those aren’t Refreshers. They sit closer to canned energy drink territory and can push you over your personal daily target if you add coffee.
Popular Orders And Estimated Caffeine
Here’s a second snapshot you can keep handy when you order for a group. It uses brand ranges from published materials and widely cited trackers.
| Order | Size | Approx. Caffeine |
|---|---|---|
| Dunkin’ Coconut Refresher | Small • Medium • Large | ~46 mg • ~68–99 mg • ~91–110 mg |
| Starbucks Pink Drink | Tall • Grande • Venti • Trenta | ~35–45 mg • ~45–55 mg • ~70–85 mg • ~90–110 mg |
| Starbucks Dragon Drink | Tall • Grande • Venti • Trenta | ~35–45 mg • ~45–55 mg • ~70–85 mg • ~90–110 mg |
Safety Tips And Daily Limits
Caffeine stacks up fast when you mix coffee, tea, and energy drinks. A medium Coconut Refresher plus a brewed coffee can put many people near half a common daily limit. If you’re sensitive, pick the smallest size, add water on the side, and avoid back-to-back caffeinated drinks late in the day.
Labels and chain pages help you ballpark your total. Look for size charts, note the caffeine source, and keep an eye on drink swaps that change sugar but not caffeine. When in doubt, order smaller and sip slower.
Your Order, Dialed In
Now you know the ranges by brand and size, and you know where the caffeine comes from. That makes it easy to choose the right cup for the moment. If you’d like a deeper primer on feel-good energy picks, take a spin through drinks for focus and energy for more ideas that play nice with your day.
