I work for one of the worlds largest IT companies. They supply free water (which I think they are legally required to do) and that's it. It's not such a big deal (cost) for a smaller company to offer free tea and coffee and can potentially aid productivity / improve morale. But when you employee over (say) 100,000 people around the world. offering subsidised refreshments can become an expensive burden.
In my current local office, there is a vending machine with crisps and chocs and another with crap coffee, chicken soup etc. There is a fridge, microwave and kettle. A group of us (about 25 or so people I guess) paid £80 a year for unlimited access to "proper" coffee (passable drip filter and an ok nespresso machine), milk and tea. I don't think that this cost is entirely unreasonable given the cost of those Nespresso pods and you can always just bring your own coffee/tea/milk if you prefer.
In the last office in which I worked (same company), there were no tea making facilities but an onsite canteen and a costa coffee who would charge 10p for people with their own tea bags who just wanted a cup of hot water and milk.
Employees obviously have no "right" to free beverages. If it's important to you, check with your potential employer what they provide before you sign a contract with them.
In my current local office, there is a vending machine with crisps and chocs and another with crap coffee, chicken soup etc. There is a fridge, microwave and kettle. A group of us (about 25 or so people I guess) paid £80 a year for unlimited access to "proper" coffee (passable drip filter and an ok nespresso machine), milk and tea. I don't think that this cost is entirely unreasonable given the cost of those Nespresso pods and you can always just bring your own coffee/tea/milk if you prefer.
In the last office in which I worked (same company), there were no tea making facilities but an onsite canteen and a costa coffee who would charge 10p for people with their own tea bags who just wanted a cup of hot water and milk.
Employees obviously have no "right" to free beverages. If it's important to you, check with your potential employer what they provide before you sign a contract with them.