Background: Coffee consumption has been consistently associated with a lower risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus in cohort studies. In addition, coffee components increased insulin sensitivity in animal models. However, data from intervention studies on the effect of coffee consumption on glucose metabolism have been limited by small sample sizes, lack of blinding, short follow-up duration and the use of surrogate indices of insulin sensitivity. We designed the Coffee for Metabolic Health (COMETH) study to evaluate the effect of coffee consumption on insulin sensitivity. Methodology: The COMETH study is a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled 24-week trial. Participants were overweight, male and female habitual coffee consumers who were of Chinese, Malay and Asian-Indian ethnicity. We excluded smokers, persons with diabetes, and persons with low insulin resistance (HOMA-IR