Starbucks Medicine Ball Recipe
Starbucks medicine ball recipe is my cozy copycat Starbucks recipe for the viral honey citrus mint tea everyone orders when cold and flu season hits. It’s a soothing mix of mint and peach tea, hot lemonade, and honey that you can easily customize for sweetness, caffeine and comfort at home.

If you’ve spent any time on TikTok or Instagram this cold and flu season, you’ve probably seen people clutching a warm cup of Starbucks Medicine Ball and swearing by it. This cozy honey citrus mint tea started as a secret menu hack and became so popular that Starbucks officially added it to the menu as Honey Citrus Mint Tea.
As a nutritionist and recipe developer, I had to recreate this viral drink at home – with a version that still tastes like your favorite Starbucks Medicine Ball tea, but lets you control the sugar, caffeine and ingredients.
In this post, I’ll walk you through:
- What exactly Starbucks Medicine Ball / Honey Citrus Mint Tea is
- What’s really in it and how much sugar & caffeine it has
- Whether it actually helps when you’re feeling under the weather
- My easy Starbucks Medicine Ball tea recipe
- Lower-sugar, caffeine-free and vegan variations
- Iced Medicine Ball and make-ahead options
- How to order a Medicine Ball at Starbucks or on the app
What Is Starbucks Medicine Ball | Honey Citrus Mint Tea
Starbucks Medicine Ball is a hot tea drink made with:
- A minty green tea
- A peach herbal tea
- Hot water + steamed lemonade
- A spoonful of honey
The result is a warm, lemony, minty drink that tastes like a hug in a mug. Sweet, citrusy, with a hint of peach and that refreshing mint finish.
Originally it was a “secret menu” drink that customers nicknamed:
- Medicine Ball
- Cold Buster
- Cold Buster Tea
It became so popular that Starbucks brought it onto the official menu under the name:
Honey Citrus Mint Tea
So if you walk into Starbucks and don’t see Medicine Ball on the board, look for Honey Citrus Mint Tea it’s the same drink, just with a more official name.
Why You’ll Love This Starbucks Medicine Ball Copycat
Let me quickly sell you on why this homemade Starbucks Medicine Ball tea recipe deserves a place in your winter and allergy season routine:
- Ready in 5 minutes with simple pantry ingredients
- Much cheaper than ordering it at Starbucks every time
- You can control the sweetness and sugar to match your goals
- Easy to make caffeine-free, kid-friendly and vegan
- Works as a comforting warm drink in winter and a refreshing iced honey citrus mint tea in summer
- Perfect when you’re feeling a bit run down, sniffly, or just want a non-coffee cozy drink
This is one of those recipes I like to have on standby for “blah” days when you’re not sick enough to live on soup, but you want something that feels caring and soothing. The honey citrus tea is not a medicine, but each ingredient plays a small role in why people reach for it and feel comforting while sipping the medicine ball.
Water + Tea
Hot water plus herbal or green tea gives you:
- Hydration
- Gentle warmth and steam that feels good when you’re stuffy
- Tea antioxidants, depending on the blend you use
Lemon or Lemonade
Lemon or lemonade adds:
- Bright, citrusy flavor
- That fresh and clean feeling when you’re congested
- A little vitamin C from the lemon juice
In the original Starbucks Medicine Ball, the citrus comes from a combination of lemonade and citrusy tea.
Mint / Minty Green Tea
Mint and minty green teas are:
- Naturally cooling and refreshing
- Great for that clear feeling in your nose and chest
- A source of light caffeine if you use green tea, much lower than coffee
Peach / Chamomile
The peach herbal tea layer:
- Adds gentle fruit sweetness and aroma
- Balances the lemon and mint
- Often includes calming herbs like chamomile in many blends
Honey
Honey is what makes this drink feel:
- Soothing for a scratchy throat
- Slightly thick and comforting in texture
- Naturally sweet
Important: Honey is not safe for children under 1 year. For little ones, always follow your pediatrician’s advice.
What’s in a Starbucks Medicine Ball vs My At-Home Version
The Starbucks version Honey Citrus Mint Tea is made with:
- Half hot water, half steamed lemonade
- 1 Jade Citrus Mint tea bag (a citrusy green tea with spearmint)
- 1 Peach Tranquility tea bag (peach, chamomile, citrus)
- A pump or two of honey blend
For this homemade Starbucks Medicine Ball copycat, we’ll keep the same flavor profile but use ingredients that are easy to find in most grocery stores:
- Water
- Lemonade (regular, light, or homemade)
- A minty green tea or herbal mint tea
- A peach herbal tea (or another fruity herbal tea if that’s what you have)
- Real honey (or maple/agave for a vegan version)
You’ll get that same cozy honey citrus mint tea flavor, but with more control over the sweetness, caffeine, and overall ingredients.
Starbucks Medicine Ball Nutrition
Let’s talk numbers in simple, practical terms.
A Grande (16 fl oz) Honey Citrus Mint Tea at Starbucks typically comes in around:
- Roughly 130 calories
- Around 30+ grams of carbs, mostly from sugar
- Low caffeine – thanks to the green tea, it’s much less than a regular coffee, but not caffeine-free
Most of the sugar comes from:
- Lemonade
- Honey / honey blend
That’s totally fine as an occasional treat. But if you’re sipping it regularly or trying to reduce sugar, the homemade version makes much more sense.
With my Starbucks Medicine Ball tea recipe, you can:
- Dilute the lemonade with extra water
- Use light or low sugar lemonade
- Or use fresh lemon juice + water + honey instead of ready-made lemonade
- Start with less honey and sweeten only as much as you really need
I’ve also included a lighter variation below if you want to cut sugar even more.
Does Starbucks Medicine Ball Really Help When You’re Sick?
Short answer: it can help you feel better, but it doesn’t cure anything.
Here’s how I like to think of it as a nutritionist:
- The warm drink can ease a sore, dry throat and feel soothing when you’re chilled.
- The steam can help you feel less congested temporarily.
- Honey can coat the throat and may help calm mild cough and irritation.
- Lemon and mint make everything taste fresher and “cleaner” when you’re stuffy.
- Staying hydrated always supports your body while it recovers.
So, Medicine Ball firmly is more of a comfort rituals that support you , not a magic cure.
Reminder: This post is purely for information and recipe inspiration. It’s not medical advice. If you’re unwell, have underlying health conditions, or are on medication, always check with your healthcare provider.
Tools You’ll Need
Nothing fancy here part of the appeal of this Starbucks Medicine Ball copycat is you don’t need many equipment.
- Small saucepan or electric kettle
- Heatproof mug (I like using a clear glass mug)
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Spoon for stirring
- Optional: milk frother if you want to froth the top slightly for a café-style touch
How to Make Starbucks Medicine Ball Tea at Home
Here’s the step by step method, followed by a recipe card style version you can paste into WP Recipe Maker.
Starbucks Medicine Ball Ingredients
- ¾ cup (180 ml) water
- ¾ cup (180 ml) lemonade (regular or low-sugar)
- 1 minty green tea bag
- 1 peach herbal tea bag
- 1 teaspoons honey, or to taste
- Optional garnish: lemon slice, fresh mint

How To Make Starbucks Medicine Ball Recipe
- Heat the water and lemonade
- Add water and lemonade to a small saucepan.
- Heat until steaming hot but not at a rolling boil (you want it very hot, not aggressively boiling so the lemonade doesn’t taste bitter).
- Add tea bags to your mug
- Place the minty green tea bag and the peach herbal tea bag in your mug.
- Pour the hot water–lemonade mixture over the tea bags.
- Steep
- Let the tea steep for 3–5 minutes.
- For a milder, softer flavor, stop at around 3 minutes. For a stronger, more intense Medicine Ball, go closer to 5 minutes.
- Sweeten with honey
- Remove the tea bags and discard.
- Stir in 1–2 teaspoons honey, starting with 1 teaspoon and tasting before you add more.
- Garnish and serve
- Add a slice of lemon and a sprig of fresh mint if you like.
- Sip warm and enjoy.
Lighter & Special Diet Versions
Lighter Medicine Ball (Lower Sugar)
- 1 cup (240 ml) water
- ½ cup (120 ml) lemonade (or even less if you want)
- 1 minty green tea bag
- 1 peach herbal tea bag
- ½–1 teaspoon honey (sweeten to taste)
This simple tweak:
- Dilutes the lemonade
- Uses less honey
- Cuts total sugar while keeping the same cozy lemon–mint–peach profile
Caffeine Free Medicine Ball
Perfect for evenings or for those who avoid caffeine:
- Swap the minty green tea bag for an herbal mint tea bag (peppermint or spearmint herbal tea). Keep the peach herbal tea.
- Everything else stays the same. You’ll get all the honey citrus mint vibes, but with zero caffeine.
Vegan Medicine Ball
To make your Starbucks Medicine Ball tea vegan:
- Swap honey for maple syrup or agave syrup.
- Start with 1 teaspoon and sweeten as needed.
Maple adds a deeper, slightly caramel note; agave is more neutral.
Medicine Ball Tea Variations and Substitutions
If You Can’t Find the Starbucks Teas
If you don’t have access to Jade Citrus Mint and Peach Tranquility, try:
- Any green tea with mint and/or citrus
- Any peach herbal tea
- A mix of peppermint tea + chamomile tea if you don’t have peach still delicious and soothing. The exact flavor will vary slightly, but the drink will stay true to the honey citrus mint tea idea.
No Lemonade? No Problem.
If you don’t keep lemonade at home or want even more control over sugar:
- Use water + fresh lemon juice instead of lemonade.
- Sweeten with honey, maple, or agave to taste.
A simple ratio that works well:
- 1½ cups (360 ml) hot water
- 1 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
- Sweeten with 1 teaspoons honey or maple
Then proceed with the same tea steeping method.
Sugar Free Tweaks
If you absolutely need a sugar free option for medical reasons or strict diets:
- Use sugar free lemonade
- Use a sugar free honey style syrup or sweetener
Personally, I prefer using real honey in moderate amounts for flavor and simplicity. But you don’t take sugar you can make sugar free starbucks medicine ball.
Extra Soothing Add-ins
You can boost the comfort factor with:
- 2 thin slices of fresh ginger added to the mug before pouring hot liquid
- Extra mint leaves
- A pinch of grated lemon zest
- A small splash of peppermint extract (go very light because it’s strong!)
- A second herbal tea bag like chamomile for an extra calming evening version
Iced Honey Citrus Mint Tea (Iced Medicine Ball)
Yes, you can absolutely turn this into an iced Starbucks Medicine Ball for warmer days.
How to make iced Medicine Ball
- Prepare the classic recipe with:
- ¾ cup water
- ¾ cup lemonade
- Tea bags and honey as above
- Let the brewed tea cool for 15 minutes at room temperature.
- Fill a tall glass with ice.
- Pour the cooled honey citrus mint tea over the ice.
- Garnish with a lemon slice and fresh mint.
You get the same cozy flavor, but in a crisp, refreshing iced drink.
Make Ahead, Storage & Reheating
You can easily scale this recipe and keep it ready during cold and flu season.
To Make a Big Batch (4 Servings)
- 3 cups (720 ml) water
- 3 cups (720 ml) lemonade
- 4 minty green tea bags
- 4 peach herbal tea bags
- 4–8 teaspoons honey (start with less, taste and adjust)
Method:
- Heat water and lemonade in a medium saucepan until very hot.
- Add all tea bags and steep 3–5 minutes.
- Remove tea bags, stir in honey, and taste.
- Let cool slightly, then store in a glass jar or bottle in the fridge.
Storage
- Store your brewed Medicine Ball tea in the fridge for up to 3–4 days in a covered container.
- The flavor will mellow slightly over time, which many people enjoy.
Reheating
- Reheat gently in a saucepan or microwave until hot but not boiling.
- If it thickens a bit, add a splash of water to loosen.

Customising Honey Citrus Mint Tea at Starbucks
Most baristas still know it by the nickname Medicine Ball, but the official name on the menu is Honey Citrus Mint Tea. So if you want to order as customised version.
- Ask for light lemonade or extra hot water to dilute the lemonade.
- Ask for less honey blend or no added sweetener if you prefer.
- For less caffeine, ask if they can make it with more herbal tea and less green tea.
FAQs About Starbucks Medicine Ball Tea
Is Honey Citrus Mint Tea the same as Medicine Ball?
Yes. Honey Citrus Mint Tea is the official Starbucks menu name for what most of us call Medicine Ball or Cold Buster Tea. Same drink, different name.
Is Starbucks Medicine Ball caffeine free?
Not completely. The original Starbucks version uses a green tea blend, so it does contain a small amount of caffeine – much less than coffee but not zero. To make a caffeine-free Medicine Ball at home, use herbal mint tea instead of green tea.
How much sugar is in a Starbucks Medicine Ball vs homemade?
A Grande Starbucks Honey Citrus Mint Tea often has around 30+ grams of sugar, mainly from lemonade and honey/honey blend.
With the homemade version, you can:
Use more water and less lemonade
Use a low-sugar or unsweetened lemonade
Use less honey or a sugar-free sweetener if needed
This can significantly reduce the sugar while keeping that comforting flavor.
Is Starbucks Medicine Ball good for weight loss?
No, I wouldn’t label it a weight loss drink. It’s best to think of it as a cozy, hydrating tea you enjoy in moderation.
If you’re working on weight loss:
Use the lighter version with less lemonade and less honey
Remember that it’s more of a comfort ritual, not a diet hack
Can kids drink Medicine Ball?
For older kids and teens, a milder, caffeine-free version can be a soothing warm drink, but:
Never give honey to children under 1 year.
Use less lemonade and less sweetener so it’s not overly sugary.
Opt for herbal teas (no green tea) to avoid caffeine.
Always check with your pediatrician if you’re unsure.
Can I drink Medicine Ball every day?
You can enjoy a homemade Medicine Ball tea regularly if you:
Keep an eye on the total sugar in your day
Choose the lighter or herbal versions more often
Treat it as a comforting, flavored tea rather than a medicine
If you have specific health conditions (blood sugar issues, reflux, etc.), talk with your healthcare provider about what works best for you.
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Starbucks Medicine Ball Tea Recipe (Honey Citrus Mint Copycat)
Ingredients
For the classic copycat
- ¾ cup water 180 ml
- ¾ cup lemonade (regular or low-sugar) 180 ml
- 1 minty green tea bag
- 1 peach herbal tea bag
- 1 teaspoons honey or to taste
- Optional garnish: lemon slice fresh mint
Instructions
- Heat the water and lemonade
- Add water and lemonade to a small saucepan.
- Heat until steaming hot but not at a rolling boil (you want it very hot, not aggressively boiling so the lemonade doesn’t taste bitter).
- Add tea bags to your mug
- Place the minty green tea bag and the peach herbal tea bag in your mug.
- Pour the hot water–lemonade mixture over the tea bags.
- Steep
- Let the tea steep for 3–5 minutes.
- For a milder, softer flavor, stop at around 3 minutes. For a stronger, more intense Medicine Ball, go closer to 5 minutes.
- Sweeten with honey
- Remove the tea bags and discard.
- Stir in 1–2 teaspoons honey, starting with 1 teaspoon and tasting before you add more.
- Garnish and serve
- Add a slice of lemon and a sprig of fresh mint if you like.
- Sip warm and enjoy.
Video
Notes
- If you want a bigger mug (about 16–18 oz), you can increase water and lemonade to 1 cup each and keep the same number of tea bags.
- For a more subtle lemonade flavor, use 2 parts water to 1 part lemonade instead of equal parts.
- Always adjust the honey depending on your taste and how sweet your lemonade is.
Nutrition

Important: Honey is not safe for children under 1 year. For little ones, always follow your pediatrician’s advice.
Reminder: This post is purely for information and recipe inspiration. It’s not medical advice. If you’re unwell, have underlying health conditions, or are on medication, always check with your healthcare provider.











