Starbucks Is Ditching Olive Oil Coffee From Its 'Overly Complex' Menu The move is part of an effort to turn around lagging sales.

By Erin Davis

Key Takeaways

  • Starbucks's new CEO Brian Niccol is making big changes to the menu.
  • To start, the company will remove its lineup of olive oil-infused drinks in early November.

The viral olive oil-infused drinks that Starbucks introduced last year are on their way out as the company's new CEO begins to revamp the coffee giant to turn around lagging sales.

The "Oleato" drinks will be removed from the menu in the U.S. and Canada early in November, Bloomberg News reported.

Bloomberg reported that Niccol, who can reportedly earn more than $100 million in his first year as CEO, wants to bring Starbucks back to its coffee roots and simply the "overly complex menu."

There are currently two options: a latte infused with extra virgin olive oil and a toffee nut iced shaken espresso with "golden foam," which is made with vanilla sweet cream infused with the extra virgin olive oil into a cold foam.

Related: The Side Hustle She Worked on in a Local Starbucks 'Went From Nothing to $1 Million.' Now It Will Make Over $30 Million This Year.

"While this decision was made prior to Brian Niccol taking the role of CEO, the decision to remove the beverages aligns with his strategy to simplify our menu," a Starbucks spokesperson told the BBC.

In other changes, the company clarified this week that its corporate hybrid work policy (three days a week in the office) will be enforced beginning in January.

"I believe that our problems are very fixable," Niccol said in a video posted to the Starbucks website on Oct. 22.

Related: Starbucks Tells Corporate Staff to Work in the Office 3 Days a Week or It's 'Separation' Time

Erin Davis

Entrepreneur Staff

Trending News Writer

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Leadership

'I Don't Know How I Know This, But I Know This': Learn This Psychic Medium's Method for Trusting Your Intuition

Psychic medium John Edward on the power of your gut instincts, his new platform EvolvePlusTV, and his new book, "Chasing Evil."

Starting a Business

You're Sabotaging Your Startup By Doing Everything Alone — Here's Why You Need Founder Friends

For founders, especially solo founders, having someone who understands the unique pressure of building something from scratch can make all the difference.

Thought Leaders

I Didn't Just Monetize My Hobby. I Scaled It Into a Startup That Empowers Writers Worldwide — Here's How.

Making money from your passion sounds like a dream. However, most entrepreneurs think rationally and prefer 'promising' ideas instead of following their hobbies. Nevertheless, I took a chance.

Franchise

These Are the Top 10 Burger Franchises in 2025 — And They Can Make More Than $1 Million a Year

The top 10 burger franchises on the Franchise 500 aren't just fan favorites — they're smart investments with brand strength, franchisee support and growth to back them up.