KeepCup Original Clear Reusable Coffee Cup
KeepCup Founders Jamie & Abigail Forsyth posing in front of Bluebag Cafe for a photo.

The World's First Barista-Standard Reusable Cup
The Original KeepCup launched in Melbourne in 2009. It mimicked the form of a disposable cup — barista-standard sizing, splashproof lid — with the rather important distinction of being designed to last for years, not minutes.
It was colourful. It was considered. It worked in a café without any drama.
The reuse movement that followed was consumer-driven and café-endorsed — a quiet groundswell that turned out not to be so quiet after all. KeepCup is now used in more than 75 countries, including, we're pleased to report, a great many of them in the UK.

The Range
One original insight has guided everything we've built: pleasure drives reuse. Make something people genuinely want to use, and they will. Make something they're merely tolerating, and they won't.
For hot drinks, the Brew Glass in tempered glass delivers taste-pure coffee as it should be tasted, while the vacuum-insulated Thermal and leakproof Commuter in stainless steel handle the realities of British commuting — reliably, without drama, for hours at a stretch.
Cold coffee is no longer a niche habit, and the KeepCup Cold Cup range was designed specifically for it — not adapted from a hot cup, but built from scratch for cold drinks and iced coffee. The double-wall Longplay Glass keeps condensation where it belongs; the Cold Thermal with press-fit lid and Cold Commuter with screw-fit lid travel well; and the Cold Brew Cork brings natural tactility to cold carry. Each one considered. None of them an afterthought.
The KeepCup Original in BPA-free plastic and the Brew Cork glass-and-cork cup round out the hot range, joined by the Camp Mug for outdoor occasions.

The Go Bowl extends the reuse philosophy to food. And the KeepCup Water Bottle launches 14 April 2026 — built to the same standard as the cup that started all of this.

What We Stand For
We're sceptical of sustainability that's more aesthetic than substance. So here's ours, plainly:

We are a certified B Corporation. We manufacture and assemble locally, using recycled and recovered materials where possible. Our packaging takes a lightweight cardboard-first approach — because the thinking has to extend beyond the product itself. We publish our lifecycle assessments — the numbers, not just the narrative. We sell spare parts, because replacing a lid shouldn't mean replacing a cup. We give 1% of revenue to not-for-profits protecting the natural world. And since 2009, over one billion disposable cups have been diverted from landfill.


The Best Reusable Cup Is the One You Actually Use

That's been our design philosophy since the beginning. Make it beautiful enough to reach for. Reliable enough to trust. Personal enough to feel like yours.
One KeepCup, used daily, offsets approximately 1,000 disposable cups over its lifetime. Not a bad return on a cup of coffee.
KeepCup. Make it yours.

Started in London in 2010. Used in 75+ countries. Independently owned. Shop the full range →

KeepCup: then to now 

KeepCup Founders Jamie & Abigail Forsyth posing in front of Bluebag Cafe for a photo.

1998

Abigail & Jamie found Bluebag cafes

Nicely made latte in a grey KeepCup Original Reusable Coffee Cup with the lid off to show the latte art.

2009

KeepCup launches the first barista standard reusable cup

Freshly brewed coffee pouring into a KeepCup coffee glass cup with cork band. The removable lid is set to the side of the coffee cup.

2013

Brew Cork glass range launches

Hand holding a KeepCup Brew Cork reusable glass cup filled with coffee reaching to the sky.

2014

KeepCup becomes founding member of BCorp in Australia

Hand reaching to a KeepCup Camp Mug in the colour pine green, surrounded by various KeepCup products like thermal & iced coffee cups.

2018

Key events

  • Single-use word of the year in Collins Dictionary
  • KeepCup publishes LCA
  • KeepCup becomes member of 1% for the Planet
Woman lifting up white travel mug lid with KeepCup branding to show nicely poured latte art.

2020

Insulated stainless steel range launches - Thermal, then Helix

Hand reaching for a drink in an insulated container filled with ice and drinks. The drinks are in various KeepCup straw cups such as brew cork glass, thermal, and longplay iced cold cups.

2023

Cold Cup Range Launch

Two people sitting on a couch against a brick wall, holding drinks in insulated coffee tumblers.

2025

Commuter Travel Mug Launch

Two women holding coffee tumblers in front of a pink wall.

Individual action drives change

Never doubt that a small group of committed citizens can change the world: indeed it’s the only thing that ever has.  

Margaret Mead, Cultural Anthropologist

KeepCup and the reuse movement has been built from the bottom up, inspiring individuals to make everyday change. From the very beginning we have sought to inspire change by making it fun, inclusive and easy. For many people KeepCup is the beginning of a journey, to consider the impact of single-use, and new ways to lighten our impact on the planet. It all counts.

Our society, and our workplaces are collections of individuals. We are a business built on the advocacy of individual users. We are at our best when we arrive at decisions that consider all perspectives and look forward with optimism and authenticity.

When we consider the financial backing and deep pockets of the single-use industry, what we have achieved together is extraordinary. Let’s keep going.

2020 a turning point

As a society we’re at a critical juncture, sliding over the precipice.  We’re in a climate emergency, on track to 4–6 °C temperature rise when we need to limit warming to 1.5°C.  

In the wake of Covid-19 the world is likely to reduce emissions by 5% in 2020, but this only underscores the scale of the problem - at least 45% reduction in annual emissions is required to stay below 1.5°C. 

Single-use plastics accelerate climate change and jeopardise progress toward the Paris climate agreement. In 2015, the last published count, 148 million tonnes of single-use packaging was produced in the world, less than 9% was recycled and up to 12% of it burned - compounding emissions impact.

Let’s debunk two myths.

Myth 1: Single-use equals sterile

This basic misunderstanding of food safety has again gained traction during Covid-19, despite medical professionals the world over coming out in support of reuse. When KeepCup first launched, this misunderstanding of food safety was such a barrier to reuse that we got a letter of legal advice to share with cafes confirming that reusables are supported by the health and safety regulations and a letter from then Victorian Premier John Brumby, endorsing KeepCup and the positive impacts of reuse on our health and the environment. 

Myth 2: Convenience culture is consumer driven

This myth is perpetuated by Big Plastic and the large corporates responsible for much of the world’s single-use packaging waste, who claim to “just be giving customers what they want.” In ten years, the activism of individuals and organisations has demonstrated that convenience at the cost of the planet is not actually what people want - we want better choices.

Peaceful environmental protest in Melbourne CBD

Our Future

Thinking beyond growth

Covid-19 provides unparalleled opportunity to pivot to a post growth economy. This won’t happen via business as usual with the odd tweak here and there. This is transformational change. This is about circular systems that remove waste and keep materials in play for as long as possible. It’s about behaviour change, a reversal of hyper consumption to refocus on reducing, reusing and repairing. It’s a shift to 100% renewable energy. It’s about protecting biodiversity and committing to leave the few remaining wild places protected. And it’s all interconnected. We view our role in this through the four lenses below.

Boxes stacked on pallets at the KeepCup warehouse.

Financial

KeepCup team holding up protest signs on environmental and sustainability concerns.

Our team

Man leans towards the rivers while stabilising himself to clean the Yarra River.

Environment

KeepCup founder Abigail Forsyth reviewing products at the head office next to stacks of pantone colour swatches.

Design