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The pioneer of mandarin sodas packs
a powerful combination of tangy and
sweet that will reawaken your palate
with every sip.

flavor-detail-title-lime
Everyone loves limonadas and sodas,
so we found a way to capture the
irresistible mix of citrus and
sweetness into a refreshing
bottle of goodness.

flavor-detail-title-guava
You’d never expect
sweet and sour to work together as
perfectly as they do in the refreshing
Jarritos Guava soda.


NATURAL SUGAR
Jarritos sodas consumed throughout the world are all produced in Mexico and made with cane sugar. Only real sugar guarantees the authentic Jarritos taste that families have loved for generations.


SO MANY SAMPLES
We want everyone in the world to try Jarritos, which is why we’ve given away 180 million ounces of Jarritos in the last 10 years. That’s enough ounces to fill 2.6 billion thimbles with Jarritos, if you wanted to do that for some reason!


OLD SCHOOL
Our original bottles were not labeled. People just knew what flavor it was by the color. And since we use real fruit flavors, we bet they could identify them just by taste. What are you doing this afternoon? Who wants to drink Jarritos blindfolded?


GREEN AND ORANGE
Long ago, when green was just a color and not a thing where you have to recycle and eat granola, Jarritos was already working with local farmers to grow mandarins locally instead of importing them. It costs more, but it makes a delicious Mandarin soda.


 
People are always underestimating tamarind, because it is weird and brown. But it is actually awesome. Tamarind provides shade for coffee plants and is part of Jarritos’ efforts toward sustainable farming.


RUMBLE
You win some and you lose some, and sometimes you lose three months’ worth of glass bottles in a big, huge earthquake that happened in 2010 in Mexico. Oh, well. At least no one was hurt!


PLANES, TRAINS, AND OTHER THINGS
Jarritos is too super fun to be delivered just by trucks. Boring! On their way to a store near you, some of our bottles are carried on boats across pirate-infested waters, just like in old-timey stories. They are also transported by planes and on bicycles driven by powerful luchadores.