Starbucks customers in Florida 'pay it forward' for over 11 hours

Hundreds of Starbucks customers paid it forward on Wednesday. More than 400 Starbucks customers at a Florida store paid for the drink of the customers behind them in line.

Sandy Roberts pours samples of Starbucks Reserve Sun Dried Ethiopia Yirgacheffe coffee during the company's annual shareholders meeting in Seattle, Washington on March 19.

David Ryder/Reuters/File

August 21, 2014

The rally of java generosity began on Wednesday morning at a Starbucks in Florida, when one patron offered to buy an iced triple grande latte for the next customer in the drive-through line.

The pay it forward movement began at 7 a.m. when a woman at a St. Petersburg Starbucks paid for her iced coffee and a stranger's caramel macchiato, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

The woman paid for her own drink, then asked to pay for the drink of the person behind her in the drive-through. That person returned the favor and paid for the person behind, and so did that person, until the employees at the St. Petersburg Starbucks on Tyrone Boulevard began a tally on green laminated paper near the drive-through window.

Then the next wanted to pay it forward. And the next. According to the Tampa Bay Times:

Tracing fentanyl’s path into the US starts at this port. It doesn’t end there.

People ordered a drink at the speaker. When they pulled through to the next window, the barista, Vu Nguyen, 29, leaned through and said with a smile that their drinks had already been paid for by the person in front of them. Would they like to return the favor?

The apparently spontaneous chain of kindness continued for about 11 hours, a store manager said, totaling 457 transactions by the time it ended around 6 p.m., with nearly everyone paying for someone's drinks, just not their own.

"It was just somebody wanting to do a nice thing," said Celeste Guzman, a shift supervisor at the Starbucks, located near a busy shopping mall in St. Petersburg, Florida.

She wasn't sure how the chain had ended, but said baristas understood that some people didn't want to or couldn't afford to participate.

Inspired by local media reports, customers were rallying again at the store on Thursday morning. Someone bought a $40 gift card to share with the drive-through line.

By mid-morning, the chain had reached 100 customers, nearly as many as participated in a similar effort at the store several months ago, when 141 customers paid it forward.

"We've had a wealth of people trying to come in and be generous," Guzman said.