Certified Barista exam — what does SCA actually test?

by amelia_f 60 views4 replies
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amelia_fOP
May 23, 2026

My café is paying for me to get SCA certified and I want to make sure I'm actually prepared before the assessment day. I've been making espresso for 2 years but I've never formally studied extraction theory or sensory evaluation.

I know the practical component involves pulling shots and calibrating a grinder but I don't know how precise the evaluators are about things like extraction percentage targets or TDS readings.

What level of coffee science knowledge does the exam actually expect?

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sophie_m
May 23, 2026

Milk texture for cappuccino and latte is also assessed — microfoam consistency, pouring technique, and temperature range (55–65°C). Spend time on milk if your café does mostly drip, since you might not steam daily.

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priya_s
May 23, 2026

The SCA barista exam does test extraction theory — you need to know the target extraction yield range (18–22%) and TDS range for espresso (8–12%). They won't expect you to calculate it on the fly but you should know what the numbers mean and how grind and dose affect them.

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brett_l
May 23, 2026

Sensory vocabulary matters for the oral/written component. Learn the SCA flavor wheel terms and practice describing coffees using it. "It tastes fruity" isn't enough — "stone fruit acidity with a round body" is the kind of language they expect.

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derek_v
May 26, 2026

The practical calibration piece is really about demonstrating a systematic process. Evaluators watch whether you adjust one variable at a time, taste and evaluate, then adjust again. Random fiddling fails even if you end up at the right extraction.

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