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A man makes a latte behind the counter at a coffee shop.
Ethiopian beans roasted in Seattle await at Cafe Avole.
Cafe Avole

The Best Seattle Coffee Shops

Vietnamese brews topped with salted cream, old-school espresso, and innovative iced drinks

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Ethiopian beans roasted in Seattle await at Cafe Avole.
| Cafe Avole

A while back we were chatting with someone in the coffee world who told us how dumb and bad this map is. You can’t really make a single list of Seattle’s best or most important coffee shops because “coffee shop” can mean so many different things. Do you want someplace to chill on a laptop? Do you want drip or pour-over, or high-quality espresso? Dark roast or light roast? Do you want the Italian-influenced coffee popularized by places like Capitol Hill’s Espresso Vivace, or Vietnamese-style coffee, or Turkish coffee, or...

At some point you have to just throw up your hands. So this isn’t a definitive list. It’s more of a way to celebrate the variety of coffee experiences you can have all over the Seattle area, and this means more than just the quality of the espresso. Places like the Station in Beacon Hill have carved out neighborhood spaces for art, mutual aid, and activism. No matter what corner of Seattle you’re in, you’re usually just a short walk away from delicious coffee in a welcoming space.

We are going to make one final qualifying note: We’re more focused on shops rather than roasters here, though some of the places here do roast their own beans. If you’re interested, we also have a list of standout small-batch roasters (with or without cafes attached). As usual, this list is organized geographically, not ranked.

Know of a spot that should be on our radar? Send us a tip by emailing seattle@eater.com.

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Eater maps are curated by editors and aim to reflect a diversity of neighborhoods, cuisines, and prices. Learn more about our editorial process.

Cardoon

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One of the newest entrants on this list is also one of the most unique. Cardoon serves a mixture of German and Chinese cuisine, a reflection of its owners’ heritages. The highlight treat is streuselkuchen, a German cake that here is topped with white miso streusel and seasonal fruit. If you want savory food instead, check out the gluten-free, vegan “egg” rice, which features silky beancurd skin and tomatoes over a bed of rice. As for coffee you can’t go wrong with the Seaweed Latte — don’t let the name fool you, the star ingredient is soy sauce caramel, which has an elegant umami finish. It’s also developing an nonalcoholic beverage program, reflecting the growing connection between coffee and NA drinks.

A rice dish next to coffee.
The tomato “egg” rice at Cardoon.
Harry Cheadle

This Ballard plant shop does exceptional stuff with espresso — Root is coffee for the proud coffee snobs. They use beans from well-regarded but far-flung roasters like Sey (in Brooklyn) and Manhattan (in the Netherlands, confusingly), and though they do excellent seasonal flavored drinks, the flavors you get from the unadulterated espresso are powerful enough — often floral and fruity, a glimpse of what the cutting edge of coffee tastes like.

A Muddy Cup

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A Muddy Cup’s atmosphere is a throwback to the days of the more literal style of “coffeehouse,” when espresso was often served in a creaky-floored Craftsmen outfitted with homey thrifted furniture, vintage rugs, and bookshelves stacked with novels and board games. It’s the coffee world’s version of a dive bar, cozy and timeless. Accordingly, A Muddy Cup seems like it’s been here since the very outset of Seattle coffee culture, but its 2010 origin means that it has a more 21st-century coffee approach: Beans are roasted in-house and sourced with an emphasis on ethical trade via the women-owned organization Café Femenino

Inside a coffee shop in a house, shelves hold books and boardgames next to a cozy, small lamp. Mark DeJoy

Cafe Allegro

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As Seattle’s oldest continually operating coffee shop (circa 1975), Cafe Allegro offers a historical local coffee experience far more accurate than standing in a line to crowd into a cafe at Pike Place Market. Allegro is generally serene, with a main seating area consisting of warm-toned wooden tables and chairs, local art set against exposed brick, and an overall collegiate bookstore-adjacent atmosphere that’s equal parts people studying and chatting. True to its historical origins, the coffee style here is more Italian-leaning/2nd wave, emphasizing blends (rather than single-origin) and a deep roast well-calibrated by the in-house roasting facility the cafe converted to in 2014.

The interior of a coffee shop with wooden tables and a back wall lined with posters. Mark DeJoy 

Aroom Coffee

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There are more places than ever to get Vietnamese coffee, and this Fremont spot does it right. They also do it traditional, with phin-brewed coffee paired with condensed milk, the combo that makes Vietnamese-style coffee so powerful and sweet. The drinks here mostly lean into that sweetness, like the sesame latte or the salty vegan peanut butter latte; drinking one of these is like inhaling a candy bar, in the best possible way. Drinks are on the pricier side at around $6, but honestly you don’t need more than one.

A cup of iced coffee topped with cream
Salty coffee from Aroom
Harry Cheadle

Milstead and Co.

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This coffee shop is decidedly New Fremont, in the ground floor of a mixed-used building on the waterfront down the hill from the Fremont Troll (the mascot of Old Fremont). But we dare you to find a place that serves better beans — Milstead sources from renowned roasters like Heart and Kuma, and whether you get a pour-over or a quick Americano to go, you’re in good hands here, As a bonus, this is one of the few places in the city where you can get baked goods from Temple Pastries.

Three people work behind the counter in a coffee shop. Milstead and Co.

Espresso Vivace

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Going to Vivace is a pilgrimage. This is the coffee shop owned by David Schomer, an espresso innovator whose book Espresso Coffee: Professional Techniques had a profound impact on the industry. Vivace was one of the first shops in the country to do latte art, and while these days you can get espresso drinks topped with foam flowers all over the city, there’s something special about coming here. Vivace lost its old beloved sidewalk espresso bar last year, but the cafe inside the Brix building on Broadway is still going strong.

Cafe Vita at KEXP

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This place is arguably too Seattle-y — a Cafe Vita where you can watch the KEXP DJs work? Within sight of the Space Needle? Hang out here too long and vintage Sonics gear will just appear on your body. But you will want to hang out here, because it’s a beautiful space, there’s always a couch to sprawl on or a table to sit at, and you can sometimes get seats at in-studio performances. Since it’s a Vita the beans are reliably good, and the cafe partners with other roasters for events and residencies. And don’t tell anyone but this place has the best deal in town: Drip coffee is $1 before 8 a.m. on weekdays.

A bartender pours an espresso shot into a cup with tonic and lemon peel. Cafe Vita

Fulcrum Café

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Fulcrum is mostly known as one of the best roasters in the city — as well as one of the few roasting companies with a coffee farmer, Blas Alfaro, in a leadership role — but its small new-build cafe in Belltown is well worth checking out. Sure the coffee here is good, but the seasonal drinks are next-level: Fall offerings this year include a cardamom cookie latte and an Oktoberfest latte featuring Jonboy caramel sauce, vanilla, orange, and cinnamon.

A bag of coffee beans sits on a table next to a mug with a fish on it and an open book. Fulcrum Coffee Roasters

Ghost Note Coffee

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Most flavored espresso drinks add something sweet to balance out (or mask altogether) the bitter coffee taste. But Capitol Hill’s Ghost Note takes it up several notches of sophistication with concoctions like the Lush Life, a cold drink that features almond milk and orange blossom honey to smooth out the espresso, and then — Emeril-style BAM — throws in some grapefruit aromatics to add an edge of tart citrus. It’s an incredible summer beverage, and all of the drinks here have that same level of elevated flavor alchemy. (They look good in photos too.)

Monorail Espresso

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Groundbreaking Monorail Espresso should be on the radar for any coffee devotee. While Monorail Espresso has since transitioned to a walk-up window at Fifth Avenue and Pike Street (plus several other locations nearby), its original incarnation is credited with being the world’s first espresso cart. How’s this for a backstory? Kent Bakke and John Blackwell, of La Marzocco fame, built it with parts from a Boeing surplus shuttle cart for a guy called Cappuccino Craig; Chuck and Susie Beek bought the cart and parked it by the monorail entrance in 1980. The cart is gone, but the espresso is still top-notch.

A walk-up cafe window. Behind the glass is an espresso machine. A menu and various other flyers are posted on the windows.
Monorail Espresso’s walk-up window at Fifth Avenue and Pike Street downtown.
Monorail Espresso

URL Coffee

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This small cafe on First Hill is a designer’s dream. The tables and shelves and sleek and contemporary, the stools made from skateboard decks add a note of punkish whimsy, and the light-filled space feels bigger than it really is. URL doesn’t do a lot of custom drinks but makes its own sweet cream, and whether that cream is lathered on an iced coffee or dropped into a shot of espresso, it transforms an already good coffee into a day-defining highlight. Speaking of day-defining, if you can find an open seat here, get the tomato ricotta toast — fancy toast may be why millennials can’t afford homes, but who wants a home, anyway?

Elm Coffee Roasters

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Elm Coffee Roasters is a perfect place for stellar coffee, geeky yet approachable in a way that invites you to learn more about the finer points of brewing as well as harvesting and processing. With a rotation of seasonal coffees sourced from countries like Peru and Columbia and a solid, streamlined menu of coffee drinks, this is a haven in Pioneer Square.

The Station

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Beacon Hill’s coffee shop by the light rail station has long been vocal and active about social justice causes. In addition to excellent coffee drinks, the Station hosts pop-ups and food drives, and is a hub for community organizing. The shop is a lively and welcoming neighborhood gathering place where you can sip on a Mexican Mocha or hot chocolate and enjoy some chorizo gravy over biscuits.

Voi Cà Phê

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This Georgetown takeout counter is dedicated to sourcing single-origin beans from Vietnam that follow Specialty Coffee Association standards. While highlighting both arabica and robusta varieties, Voi Cà Phê combats the maligned reputation Vietnamese coffee varieties (especially robusta) had attained due to a past as a commodity harvest produced for the instant coffee market of the 20th century (today, robusta is considered a viable specialty-grade product). Coffee drinks here are made with Vietnamese phin methods or via espresso machine; there are classics like Cà Phê Sữa Đá (iced phin coffee with condensed milk) and cortado, and also intriguing flavored drinks with house-made ingredients. The miso caramel latte is a hit, and the pho spice latte (think star anise, coriander seed, etc) is a more interesting kind of PSL.

Cafe Avole

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On the ground floor of Ethiopian Village, an affordable senior living facility, is Avole’s new flagship cafe, a sleek space that is a great showcase for Avole’s Ethopian coffee. This is a homecoming of sorts — Avole started out on Rainier Avenue but moved up to a (fairly small) space in the Central District in 2022, which is still open. Many of its offerings come from Yirgacheffe, Ethiopia, known for rich, chocolatey flavor with explosive berry notes. Co-founder Solomon Dubie observed the Ethiopian coffee ceremony from an early age, and has an instinctive feel for taste.

A man makes a latte behind the counter at a coffee shop. Cafe Avole

The Scene in South Park

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When South Park’s Resistencia Coffee closed down in 2023, it left a void in South Park that was quickly filled by the Scene, owned by Michelle Lang-Raymond and Jay Raymond. It’s a neighborhood cafe that makes you feel like you’re part of the neighborhood as soon as you walk in — there’s local artists on the walls, often R&B on the soundtrack, and Backyard Bagels behind the counter.

Cardoon

One of the newest entrants on this list is also one of the most unique. Cardoon serves a mixture of German and Chinese cuisine, a reflection of its owners’ heritages. The highlight treat is streuselkuchen, a German cake that here is topped with white miso streusel and seasonal fruit. If you want savory food instead, check out the gluten-free, vegan “egg” rice, which features silky beancurd skin and tomatoes over a bed of rice. As for coffee you can’t go wrong with the Seaweed Latte — don’t let the name fool you, the star ingredient is soy sauce caramel, which has an elegant umami finish. It’s also developing an nonalcoholic beverage program, reflecting the growing connection between coffee and NA drinks.

A rice dish next to coffee.
The tomato “egg” rice at Cardoon.
Harry Cheadle

ROOT

This Ballard plant shop does exceptional stuff with espresso — Root is coffee for the proud coffee snobs. They use beans from well-regarded but far-flung roasters like Sey (in Brooklyn) and Manhattan (in the Netherlands, confusingly), and though they do excellent seasonal flavored drinks, the flavors you get from the unadulterated espresso are powerful enough — often floral and fruity, a glimpse of what the cutting edge of coffee tastes like.

A Muddy Cup

A Muddy Cup’s atmosphere is a throwback to the days of the more literal style of “coffeehouse,” when espresso was often served in a creaky-floored Craftsmen outfitted with homey thrifted furniture, vintage rugs, and bookshelves stacked with novels and board games. It’s the coffee world’s version of a dive bar, cozy and timeless. Accordingly, A Muddy Cup seems like it’s been here since the very outset of Seattle coffee culture, but its 2010 origin means that it has a more 21st-century coffee approach: Beans are roasted in-house and sourced with an emphasis on ethical trade via the women-owned organization Café Femenino

Inside a coffee shop in a house, shelves hold books and boardgames next to a cozy, small lamp. Mark DeJoy

Cafe Allegro

As Seattle’s oldest continually operating coffee shop (circa 1975), Cafe Allegro offers a historical local coffee experience far more accurate than standing in a line to crowd into a cafe at Pike Place Market. Allegro is generally serene, with a main seating area consisting of warm-toned wooden tables and chairs, local art set against exposed brick, and an overall collegiate bookstore-adjacent atmosphere that’s equal parts people studying and chatting. True to its historical origins, the coffee style here is more Italian-leaning/2nd wave, emphasizing blends (rather than single-origin) and a deep roast well-calibrated by the in-house roasting facility the cafe converted to in 2014.

The interior of a coffee shop with wooden tables and a back wall lined with posters. Mark DeJoy 

Aroom Coffee

There are more places than ever to get Vietnamese coffee, and this Fremont spot does it right. They also do it traditional, with phin-brewed coffee paired with condensed milk, the combo that makes Vietnamese-style coffee so powerful and sweet. The drinks here mostly lean into that sweetness, like the sesame latte or the salty vegan peanut butter latte; drinking one of these is like inhaling a candy bar, in the best possible way. Drinks are on the pricier side at around $6, but honestly you don’t need more than one.

A cup of iced coffee topped with cream
Salty coffee from Aroom
Harry Cheadle

Milstead and Co.

This coffee shop is decidedly New Fremont, in the ground floor of a mixed-used building on the waterfront down the hill from the Fremont Troll (the mascot of Old Fremont). But we dare you to find a place that serves better beans — Milstead sources from renowned roasters like Heart and Kuma, and whether you get a pour-over or a quick Americano to go, you’re in good hands here, As a bonus, this is one of the few places in the city where you can get baked goods from Temple Pastries.

Three people work behind the counter in a coffee shop. Milstead and Co.

Espresso Vivace

Going to Vivace is a pilgrimage. This is the coffee shop owned by David Schomer, an espresso innovator whose book Espresso Coffee: Professional Techniques had a profound impact on the industry. Vivace was one of the first shops in the country to do latte art, and while these days you can get espresso drinks topped with foam flowers all over the city, there’s something special about coming here. Vivace lost its old beloved sidewalk espresso bar last year, but the cafe inside the Brix building on Broadway is still going strong.

Cafe Vita at KEXP

This place is arguably too Seattle-y — a Cafe Vita where you can watch the KEXP DJs work? Within sight of the Space Needle? Hang out here too long and vintage Sonics gear will just appear on your body. But you will want to hang out here, because it’s a beautiful space, there’s always a couch to sprawl on or a table to sit at, and you can sometimes get seats at in-studio performances. Since it’s a Vita the beans are reliably good, and the cafe partners with other roasters for events and residencies. And don’t tell anyone but this place has the best deal in town: Drip coffee is $1 before 8 a.m. on weekdays.

A bartender pours an espresso shot into a cup with tonic and lemon peel. Cafe Vita

Fulcrum Café

Fulcrum is mostly known as one of the best roasters in the city — as well as one of the few roasting companies with a coffee farmer, Blas Alfaro, in a leadership role — but its small new-build cafe in Belltown is well worth checking out. Sure the coffee here is good, but the seasonal drinks are next-level: Fall offerings this year include a cardamom cookie latte and an Oktoberfest latte featuring Jonboy caramel sauce, vanilla, orange, and cinnamon.

A bag of coffee beans sits on a table next to a mug with a fish on it and an open book. Fulcrum Coffee Roasters

Ghost Note Coffee

Most flavored espresso drinks add something sweet to balance out (or mask altogether) the bitter coffee taste. But Capitol Hill’s Ghost Note takes it up several notches of sophistication with concoctions like the Lush Life, a cold drink that features almond milk and orange blossom honey to smooth out the espresso, and then — Emeril-style BAM — throws in some grapefruit aromatics to add an edge of tart citrus. It’s an incredible summer beverage, and all of the drinks here have that same level of elevated flavor alchemy. (They look good in photos too.)

Monorail Espresso

Groundbreaking Monorail Espresso should be on the radar for any coffee devotee. While Monorail Espresso has since transitioned to a walk-up window at Fifth Avenue and Pike Street (plus several other locations nearby), its original incarnation is credited with being the world’s first espresso cart. How’s this for a backstory? Kent Bakke and John Blackwell, of La Marzocco fame, built it with parts from a Boeing surplus shuttle cart for a guy called Cappuccino Craig; Chuck and Susie Beek bought the cart and parked it by the monorail entrance in 1980. The cart is gone, but the espresso is still top-notch.

A walk-up cafe window. Behind the glass is an espresso machine. A menu and various other flyers are posted on the windows.
Monorail Espresso’s walk-up window at Fifth Avenue and Pike Street downtown.
Monorail Espresso

URL Coffee

This small cafe on First Hill is a designer’s dream. The tables and shelves and sleek and contemporary, the stools made from skateboard decks add a note of punkish whimsy, and the light-filled space feels bigger than it really is. URL doesn’t do a lot of custom drinks but makes its own sweet cream, and whether that cream is lathered on an iced coffee or dropped into a shot of espresso, it transforms an already good coffee into a day-defining highlight. Speaking of day-defining, if you can find an open seat here, get the tomato ricotta toast — fancy toast may be why millennials can’t afford homes, but who wants a home, anyway?

Elm Coffee Roasters

Elm Coffee Roasters is a perfect place for stellar coffee, geeky yet approachable in a way that invites you to learn more about the finer points of brewing as well as harvesting and processing. With a rotation of seasonal coffees sourced from countries like Peru and Columbia and a solid, streamlined menu of coffee drinks, this is a haven in Pioneer Square.

The Station

Beacon Hill’s coffee shop by the light rail station has long been vocal and active about social justice causes. In addition to excellent coffee drinks, the Station hosts pop-ups and food drives, and is a hub for community organizing. The shop is a lively and welcoming neighborhood gathering place where you can sip on a Mexican Mocha or hot chocolate and enjoy some chorizo gravy over biscuits.

Voi Cà Phê

This Georgetown takeout counter is dedicated to sourcing single-origin beans from Vietnam that follow Specialty Coffee Association standards. While highlighting both arabica and robusta varieties, Voi Cà Phê combats the maligned reputation Vietnamese coffee varieties (especially robusta) had attained due to a past as a commodity harvest produced for the instant coffee market of the 20th century (today, robusta is considered a viable specialty-grade product). Coffee drinks here are made with Vietnamese phin methods or via espresso machine; there are classics like Cà Phê Sữa Đá (iced phin coffee with condensed milk) and cortado, and also intriguing flavored drinks with house-made ingredients. The miso caramel latte is a hit, and the pho spice latte (think star anise, coriander seed, etc) is a more interesting kind of PSL.

Related Maps

Cafe Avole

On the ground floor of Ethiopian Village, an affordable senior living facility, is Avole’s new flagship cafe, a sleek space that is a great showcase for Avole’s Ethopian coffee. This is a homecoming of sorts — Avole started out on Rainier Avenue but moved up to a (fairly small) space in the Central District in 2022, which is still open. Many of its offerings come from Yirgacheffe, Ethiopia, known for rich, chocolatey flavor with explosive berry notes. Co-founder Solomon Dubie observed the Ethiopian coffee ceremony from an early age, and has an instinctive feel for taste.

A man makes a latte behind the counter at a coffee shop. Cafe Avole

The Scene in South Park

When South Park’s Resistencia Coffee closed down in 2023, it left a void in South Park that was quickly filled by the Scene, owned by Michelle Lang-Raymond and Jay Raymond. It’s a neighborhood cafe that makes you feel like you’re part of the neighborhood as soon as you walk in — there’s local artists on the walls, often R&B on the soundtrack, and Backyard Bagels behind the counter.

Related Maps