Yes, Starbucks introduced popping “pearls” in 2024 and again in 2025, but they aren’t the chewy tapioca boba used in classic bubble tea.
True Tapioca
Popping Pearls
Custom Options
Best Bets
- Summer-Berry Refreshers
- Lemonade base for tart pop
- Coconutmilk for creamy feel
Go-to picks
Customize
- Ask for pearls in iced tea
- Matcha pairs with berries
- Try light ice for stronger flavor
Barista add-in
What To Expect
- Fruit-filled spheres
- Wide compostable straw
- While supplies last
Seasonal note
Starbucks answered the boba buzz with texture-forward drinks, but the chain went with fruit-filled popping spheres rather than the chewy tapioca balls that define bubble tea. That choice steers the experience: crisp bursts instead of long chew, a wider straw for a clean sip, and flavors tuned to berries rather than brown sugar. So if you’re asking whether Starbucks brought “boba” to stores, the short answer is yes for boba-inspired pearls, and no for true tapioca.
Where Starbucks Stands On Boba-Style Drinks
In May 2024, Starbucks rolled out three blue-hued Summer-Berry Refreshers poured over popping raspberry pearls across the United States for a limited run. The pearls returned on the summer menu in 2025 at many locations. Earlier, the company tried coffee-filled spheres in late 2021 at two pilot stores. That trail shows interest in texture add-ins, but chewy tapioca still isn’t part of the standard lineup.
| Year | What Launched | Where/Scope |
|---|---|---|
| 2021–2022 | Coffee popping pearls in two test drinks | Palm Desert, CA & Bellevue, WA pilots |
| May 2024 | Raspberry popping pearls with three Summer-Berry Refreshers | US stores nationwide, limited window |
| May 2025 | Summer-Berry Refreshers return with pearls | US menu period, while supplies last |
Cold drinks lead the brand’s sales, so a bright, photo-ready add-on fits. Raspberry spheres pair easily with lemonade, coconutmilk, or water-based Refreshers. You can also add pearls to iced tea or matcha during promo windows. Starbucks described the pearls and wide straw in its press post announcing the 2024 summer menu, and outlets amplified the launch with dates and drink names. See the official press page and this news report for the core details.
If you like crisp pops more than chew, these spheres hit the spot. They sit under the drink like a layer of fruit caviar and burst as you sip. That’s a different mouthfeel from tapioca, which stays bouncy from the first sip to the last. The choice comes down to texture. For caffeine planning across drink types, check typical ranges in caffeine in common beverages and match the size to your needs.
What Differs From A Classic Boba Shop
Traditional shops use tapioca starch to make pearls that soak in syrup and keep a springy bite. Starbucks’ spheres are thin-skinned and filled with flavored liquid. That swap changes texture, flavor release, and even pacing. Popping pearls fade as the cup warms; tapioca holds shape and chew much longer.
Texture, Flavor, And Straw Size
Chewy pearls bring steady sweetness and a slow sip. Popping spheres fire quick bursts, then vanish. If you chase chew, stick with specialty tea shops. If you like a quick hit of fruit inside a familiar cup, the Starbucks take lands closer to popping boba served at frozen yogurt bars.
Customization During Promo Windows
Baristas can drop raspberry pearls into many iced drinks, from matcha to lemonade. That opens room for playful pairings. The pearls don’t always show on every drink tile in the app, so it’s worth asking at the register when they’re in stock.
Where You’ll Actually Find Chewy Tapioca
For the classic milk tea experience, visit local boba shops or regional chains. Many steep fresh tea, shake with milk, and finish with slow-simmered tapioca. In some Starbucks markets overseas, you’ll see coffee jelly in blended drinks, which adds a soft bite, though it isn’t tapioca.
Why Starbucks Picked Popping Spheres
The brand leans on speed and consistency. Popping pearls arrive ready to use, with no hours-long simmer. They keep texture in cold liquids and don’t stress equipment. Tapioca is wonderful fresh, but it ages fast and needs tight timing. That makes a national rollout hard.
Availability Can Shift
These pearls run on limited seasons. Stores can sell out early, and some regions may skip an item. Watch the in-app menu near summer, or ask a barista if the wide straw is back. That straw is a quiet hint pearls are on hand.
Close Variant: Did Starbucks Launch Bubble Tea-Style Drinks In The US?
Yes for boba-inspired drinks, not for the full milk-tea format. You’ll spot pearls in berry Refreshers when the summer menu drops, but you won’t find a permanent milk tea with tapioca. If you want the real chew, head to a boba shop; if you want a quick pop inside a Starbucks cup, watch for summer.
How The Pearls Compare To Tapioca
| Feature | Starbucks Pearls | Tapioca Boba |
|---|---|---|
| Core Material | Thin alginate skin with fruit liquid | Tapioca starch balls cooked in syrup |
| Texture | Soft pop that dissolves | Chewy bounce that lingers |
| Best Pairings | Refreshers, lemonade, coconutmilk drinks | Milk tea, brown sugar drinks, taro blends |
| Straw | Wide compostable straw during promos | Wide straw as standard |
| Prep In Store | Ready to use; quick service | Slow simmer; tight holding window |
Tips For Ordering During Pearl Season
Pick A Base That Lets The Pearls Shine
Berry Refreshers match the flavor of the pearls, so the drink stays balanced. Coconutmilk softens the pop and adds a creamy edge. Lemonade turns the sip tart and punchy.
Mind The Ice And Sweetness
Refreshers skew sweet. Ask for light ice if you want a slower melt, or extra ice for a crisper sip. If you prefer less sugar, pick the water-based version and skip extra pumps.
Watch Caffeine If You’re Sensitive
Refreshers contain green coffee extract. If you want fewer milligrams, choose a smaller size or switch to a tea base without added caffeine. Our guide to coffee vs tea health effects can help you weigh broad patterns before you order.
What The Official Sources Say
Starbucks introduced the pearls with its US summer menu on May 7, 2024, and described them as raspberry flavored spheres with a wide straw for sipping. Coverage from well-known outlets noted the nationwide rollout and the return on the 2025 summer menu. Earlier reporting also captured a tiny 2021 pilot of coffee-filled pearls at two stores. Together, those records show boba-inspired texture on summer menus, not a permanent tapioca drink.
Bottom Line For Boba Fans
If you’re chasing chew, go to a tea shop. If you’re open to a playful pop, Starbucks has offered pearls during summer windows the last two years. You’ll get a bright sip, quick flavor bursts, and a cup that looks great in photos. Want more on drink choices across energy and focus? Try our drinks for focus and energy guide.
