There’s the $6 café version… and then there’s this.
Your favourite iced matcha latte — cold, creamy, lightly sweet — made in literally 2 minutes at home. No lines. No barista skills required. No daily budget damage.

It’s the kind of recipe you make once “just to try”… and suddenly you’re frothing matcha in your kitchen every afternoon.
Because when something this simple tastes this good, there’s really no going back.

For Iced Matcha Latte
- Matcha Powder – the star of the drink. Use a good-quality matcha for a vibrant green color and smooth, earthy flavor without bitterness.
- Hot Water – helps dissolve and whisk the matcha properly so you don’t end up with clumps.
- Honey or Simple Syrup or Vanilla Syrup – adds sweetness and balances matcha’s natural earthiness. Adjust to taste depending on how sweet you like your latte.
- Milk – any milk works beautifully here. Dairy, almond, oat, soy — choose what you love or have on hand.
- Ice – essential for that refreshing, café-style chill and the perfect iced texture.


2-Minute Starbucks Iced Matcha Green Tea Latte
Notes
Ingredients
- 1 tsp matcha powder
- 3 tbsp hot water
- 2–3 tsp honey or simple syrup or vanilla syrup
- 1 cup milk (any milk works great)
- 1 cup ice
Instructions
- Place the matcha powder in a glass. Pour the hot water over the matcha and use a handheld frother to blend until smooth and lightly foamy. Add the honey (or syrup of choice) and froth again for about 10 seconds to fully combine.
- 1 tsp matcha powder
- 3 tbsp hot water
- 2–3 tsp honey
- Fill the glass with ice. Pour the milk over the top, stir well, and serve immediately.
- 1 cup milk
- 1 cup ice

1.How do I keep my matcha from getting clumpy?
Matcha loves to clump. The trick? Whisk it with hot water first before adding anything else. Even better — sift it through a fine mesh strainer before mixing. Smooth matcha = smooth latte.
2.Does the water need to be boiling?
Nope! In fact, don’t use boiling water. Water that’s too hot can make matcha taste bitter. You want hot water — just not aggressively boiling. Let it sit for a minute after heating if needed.
3.What if I don’t have a frother?
No problem at all. A small whisk works great. You can also shake it in a tightly sealed jar or blend it quickly. The goal is simple: dissolve the matcha completely and create a little foam.
4.What’s the best milk to use?
Whatever you love. Whole milk makes it extra creamy, oat milk gives it that café-style texture, almond milk keeps it lighter. There’s no wrong choice — just different vibes.
5.How sweet should it be?
Start small. You can always add more sweetness, but you can’t take it out. Begin with 1–2 teaspoons of honey or syrup, stir, taste, and adjust from there.
