If you think a $4-cup of coffee doesn’t make a coffee lover flinch, maybe a $500 one will. Here are the top 10 luxurious types of coffee available across the globe.1. FINCA EL INJERTO COFFEE: $500/POUNDThis is the most rare (and tiniest) coffee bean in the world. It is grown by Aguirre family in Guatemala’s famed Huehuetenango region.2. HACIENDA LA ESMERALDA ( PANAMA ): $350/POUNDThis coffee comes from the Geisha bean, grown in shade of guava plants on the hilltops of Panama.3. KOPI LUWAK: $80/CUPAlso called civet coffee, it refers to the process coffee berries go through to become one of the most expensive coffees in the world. It is obtained from the poop of Asian palm civets.4. SAINT HELENA COFFEE: $79/POUNDThis coffee is famed for it’s fragrant bouquet and light caramel fl avour. While most producers sun dry their beans for 4 days, it is a four month process for this one.5. BLACK IVORY COFFEE: $50/CUPThis coffee is made from the feces of elephants. It is smooth, and its bitterless taste is got by elephant’s stomach acids, which break down the proteins of the berry. These elephants reside on an elephant refuge in Northern Thailand.6. AMAICAN BLUE MOUNTAIN COFFEE: $50/POUNDThis coffee bean is grown 5,000 feet above sea level in the Blue Mountains of Jamaica. A majority of this coffee is exported to Japan.7. FAZENDA SANTA INES: $50/POUNDThis coffee is grown near the base of Brazil’s Mantiquera Mountains. It has been cultivated by the same family for over 100 years. It is grown using natural mineral water and processed naturally (sun dried).8. QUADRIGINOCTUPLE FRAP: $48/CUPThough not as good as say the rest , the price of this cup of joe ranks right up there with the best brews. It is supposedly the world’s most expensive Starbucks drink ever.9. LOS PLANES: $40/POUNDIt is described as the cream of the crop of El Salvador. Grown in northwestern El Salvador, it is depulped and dried by the farmers who grow it.10. HAWAIIAN KONA COFFEE: $34/POUNDDid you know Hawaii is known for producing one of the world’s fi nest coffee? Legally, only coffee grown in Kona districts here can be described as Kona coffee.(SOURCE: NATIONAL COFFEE ASSOCIATION)