![]() | This article needs to be updated.(March 2024) |
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![]() Coffee Shop in Manhattan | |
Formerly | RS-RH Opco 1 [1] |
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Company type | Private |
Industry | Retail coffee |
Founded | 2020 |
Founders | Vinay Menda, Issam Freiha & Ignacio Llado [2] |
Headquarters | , U.S. |
Number of employees | ~1,300 [1] |
Website | www |
Blank Street is an American coffeehouse chain founded in 2020, in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. As of July 2025, the company is valued at approximately $500 million [3] and operates 90 locations in New York, London, Birmingham, Manchester, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Boston, and Washington, D.C. [4]
Blank Street is best known for its flavored variations of matcha and espresso drinks. [5]
Blank Street was established in May 2020. It launched in August 2020 with a location near Wythe Diner in Brooklyn. Founders Issam Freiha and Vinay Menda began selling coffee out of their battery-powered mobile coffee cart, in partnership with EV Foods and industry team Jai Lott and Laura Simpson. [6] Menda from the UAE and Freiha from Lebanon, the two came to New York to study at NYU and Columbia respectively. [7]
The pair claim inspiration from small-format, and mobile-first food retail businesses in Asia, such as Hey Tea in China and Kopi Kenangan in Indonesia. [7] [8] However, in February 2021 Blank Street opened its first static location on Bedford Avenue in Williamsburg. [9]
In October 2021, the chain obtained $25 million in Series A round venture capital funding. [8]
By 2022, Blank Street had opened 40 locations across Brooklyn and Manhattan. Its investors included General Catalyst and Tiger Global. [10]
In March 2022 the chain opened its first location in the United Kingdom in the Fitzrovia district of London. [3] [11]
In August 2022 Blank Street opened its first location in Boston, at Beacon Hill, [5] and in October in Washington, D.C., at Dupont Circle. [12]
In early 2025, the chain opened stores across Edinburgh and Glasgow, Scotland. [6]
Blank Street is considered a competitor to Starbucks in the US and London, as well as to Dunkin' Donuts in Boston. [3] [5]
Writer Li Goldstein attributed its success to partnerships with "it-girl" social media influencers, including brands owned by Kendall Jenner and Emma Chamberlain. [4]
The Wall Street Journal attributed the chain's success to its matcha options, accounting for approximately 50% of business. It also highlighted the high sugar content of drinks, up to 25 grams, as the daily limit for women suggested by the American Heart Association, as well as the chain's reliance on teenage customers. [13]