A breve and a latte are the same drink with one swap: the milk. A latte is espresso with steamed whole milk. A caffè breve is espresso with steamed half-and-half — half milk, half cream. That single change makes a breve dramatically richer, creamier, and heavier, while the espresso and caffeine stay exactly the same.
If you’ve ever seen “breve” on a menu and wondered whether it’s worth the extra dollar, this guide breaks down every real difference — texture, taste, calories, foam, and when to order which. (New to the term? Start with our explainer on what a breve actually is.)
Breve vs latte: at a glance
Both are espresso-and-dairy drinks built in the same proportions. The dairy is the whole story.
| Latte | Breve | |
|---|---|---|
| Espresso | 1–2 shots | 1–2 shots |
| Dairy | Steamed whole milk | Steamed half-and-half |
| Foam | Thin microfoam (~1 cm) | Thick, dense, sweet foam |
| Texture | Light, silky | Rich, velvety, custard-like |
| Sweetness | Mild, from milk | Noticeably sweeter, from cream |
| Calories (12 oz) | ~180 kcal | ~425 kcal |
| Caffeine | Same as breve | Same as latte |
| Best for | Everyday milky coffee | A dessert-like treat |

What is a latte?
A latte (short for caffè latte, “milk coffee”) is one or two shots of espresso topped with steamed whole milk and a thin layer of microfoam, in roughly a one-to-three espresso-to-milk ratio. That makes it the mildest, milkiest of the classic espresso drinks — coffee-forward but smooth, kept light by the thin foam.
Because the milk does most of the talking, bean quality and steam matter a lot — the same reason a cappuccino and a latte taste different despite sharing ingredients. Want it silkier with less foam? You’re edging toward a flat white.
What is a breve?
A caffè breve is an American twist on the latte: same espresso base, but the milk is swapped for half-and-half — equal parts whole milk and light cream (around 10–18% fat, versus whole milk’s 3.25%). “Breve” is Italian for “short,” but the drink is pure US coffee-shop culture.
That extra fat changes everything in the cup. Half-and-half steams into a thicker, denser, sweeter foam, and the body turns velvety and almost custardy. A breve tastes indulgent — closer to a dessert than a morning coffee — which is why people love it, and why it costs more.

How they’re made: half-and-half vs milk
Pull the espresso, steam the dairy, combine. The method is identical — only the carton changes:
- Latte: pull 1–2 shots, steam whole milk to silky microfoam, pour so the foam sits ~1 cm thick.
- Breve: pull 1–2 shots, steam half-and-half — it foams faster and denser, so go gentler and stop the steam earlier to avoid scorching.
Half-and-half is less forgiving than milk — the higher fat can break or scorch if you over-steam. If you’re new to it, our guide to frothing and steaming milk at home applies to both, just watch the temperature more closely with half-and-half.
Taste and texture: rich vs light
This is where they split. A latte is light and milky, letting the espresso come through cleanly. A breve is rich, sweet and heavy — the cream coats your palate and softens the coffee into something closer to a warm dessert. Neither is “better”; they’re built for different moods. If you usually finish a latte wishing it were more indulgent, the breve is your drink.
Calories and fat: the breve is far heavier
The cream is the catch. Swapping whole milk for half-and-half roughly doubles the calories and multiplies the fat for the same cup:
| Per 12 oz | Latte | Breve |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | ~180 kcal | ~425 kcal |
| Fat | ~7 g | ~36 g |
| Sugar | ~14 g | ~14 g |
| Protein | ~10 g | ~11 g |
Watching calories? A latte is the everyday choice and a breve is an occasional treat. The sugar is similar because both come from natural lactose, not syrup — the difference is almost entirely the cream’s fat.
Caffeine: identical
Caffeine comes from the espresso, not the dairy, so a breve and a latte with the same number of shots have the same caffeine — about 63 mg per shot, so ~126 mg for a typical two-shot drink. A breve is richer, not stronger. Want more kick? Add a shot to either.
How a breve relates to other espresso drinks
Every classic espresso-and-dairy drink is the same few parts in different ratios. Here’s where the breve sits:
| Drink | Dairy | Character |
|---|---|---|
| Latte | Steamed whole milk | Mild, milky, everyday |
| Breve | Steamed half-and-half | Rich, sweet, dessert-like |
| Cappuccino | Equal milk & foam | Foamy, lighter, coffee-forward |
| Flat white | Steamed milk, little foam | Silky, strong, small |
| Cortado | Equal espresso & warm milk | Balanced, small, smooth |
If the richness appeals but the calories don’t, a cortado gives a smooth, balanced cup with far less dairy, while a mocha scratches the dessert itch with chocolate instead of cream.
Which should you order?
- Order a latte for a smooth everyday milky coffee that lets the espresso show through — and when calories matter.
- Order a breve when you want something indulgent and dessert-like, or you love a thick, creamy texture.
- Try a breve once if you’ve only had lattes — it’s the easiest way to see how much the milk choice changes a drink.
Can you make both at home?
Easily — same kit. Pull your espresso (or a strong stovetop/AeroPress shot), then steam or froth your dairy: whole milk for a latte, half-and-half for a breve. A steam wand is ideal, but a handheld or electric frother works for both.
Making one at home? A good frother is the difference between flat coffee and café-quality foam — see our roundup of the best milk frothers, and to nail the technique our guide to frothing and steaming milk covers both whole milk and half-and-half. For the base, the right espresso beans matter as much as the dairy.
The bottom line
A latte and a breve are the same drink with one swap. Whole milk gives you a light, everyday latte; half-and-half gives you a rich, sweet, dessert-like breve with roughly double the calories and the same caffeine. Order by mood, not by “strength” — they’re equally caffeinated.
Frequently Asked Questions About Breve vs Latte
A breve is a latte made with steamed half-and-half instead of steamed milk. Everything else — the espresso, the ratio, the method — is the same. The half-and-half makes a breve much richer, creamier and higher in calories, with a thicker, sweeter foam.
No. Caffeine comes from the espresso, not the dairy, so a breve and a latte with the same number of shots have identical caffeine — around 126 mg for a two-shot drink. A breve tastes richer and heavier, but it is not stronger.
Because half-and-half contains light cream. A 12 oz latte is around 180 calories; the same breve is around 425, with roughly five times the fat. The sugar is similar — the extra calories are almost entirely the cream’s fat.
Yes. The higher fat and protein in half-and-half whip into a thicker, denser, sweeter foam than whole milk, which is part of why a breve feels so indulgent. It also has to be steamed more gently to avoid scorching.
Yes — it uses the same equipment as a latte. Pull your espresso and steam or froth half-and-half instead of milk. Watch the temperature, because the cream can scorch or break more easily than milk.
Essentially, yes. “Breve” is the coffee-shop name for an espresso drink made with steamed half-and-half. Order a latte “made with half-and-half” and you’ll get a breve.

Hey there! I’m Austin and I love coffee. In fact, I drink about 5 americanos a day. I started BrewingCoffees because I wanted to share my love of coffee with the world. Before starting BrewingCoffees, I worked as a Barista for 7 years.

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