Yunnan Province (云南省) in southwestern China is the birthplace of puerh tea and one of the most historically and botanically significant tea-producing regions in the world. Yunnan is home to the world’s oldest cultivated tea trees (some over 1,000 years old in areas like Bingdao, Laobanzhang, and Jingmai), and is hypothesized by many botanists to be the center of origin for Camellia sinensis as a species — where the tea plant first evolved before spreading across Asia.
For the comprehensive entry on Yunnan’s tea history and regions, see Yunnan.
Overview
Location: Southwestern China; borders Myanmar, Laos, Vietnam; shares borders with Sichuan, Guizhou, Guangxi
Elevation: 700–2,000m+ in major tea areas
Climate: Subtropical highland; high humidity; distinct wet and dry seasons
Major tea producing areas:
- Xishuangbanna (西双版纳): Menghai, Mengla, Jinghong; home to Laobanzhang, Bingdao, Yiwu — the most celebrated puerh villages
- Pu’er Prefecture (普洱市): Historical puerh trade hub; Jingmai, Ai Lao Mountains
- Lincang (临沧): Mengku Rongshi, Bingdao; increasingly famous for premium ancient-tree puerh
- Dehong (德宏): Bao Shan; some Yunnan black tea (Dian hong) production
What Yunnan produces:
- Puerh tea (生普/熟普): The iconic Yunnan product; compressed or loose; aged
- Yunnan black tea (Dian hong, 滇红): Famous for golden tippy style; full-bodied, malty; produced in Fengqing and Lincang areas
- Yunnan green tea: Moon bud buds; less well known but of good quality
- Ancient tree material: Gushu (古树, old tree) tea from trees 100–1,000+ years old; premium puerh raw material
See Yunnan for comprehensive geographical, historical, and tea production details.