The Handy Guide to Seattle Coffee Shops
The best coffee generally comes from the shop that’s closest to your location at any given moment. But people want different things out of their coffee shops—be it community, education, or giant drinks full of syrup and sprinkles. So we broke our guide to great coffee shops into a few categories (credit to Watson’s Counter owner James Lim for the original idea). Consider this a representative sampling. Because, in this town, great coffee is everywhere.
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Yes, every coffee shop is focused on coffee, but these places take the art and science of brewing to new levels.
Analog
Capitol Hill
Since 2011, Analog Coffee has pulled and poured espresso and coffee with steadfast consistency in a quaint pocket of Summit Avenue East. Its mission statement is posted, in a way, in the space itself: a handsomely worn wooden sandwich board sign, newspapers and arts publications lining the walls, and a vinyl rotation that might include deep cut soul one day and Taylor Swift the next. Amid all this ease exists one of the town's most dialed-in coffee programs, equally appealing for single-origin espresso or a brewed-to-order cup of joe. The adjoining B-Side Foods offers breakfast sandwich perfection and colorful grain bowls.
Phin
Little Saigon/International District
Bao Nguyen’s Little Saigon coffee shop has no espresso machine. Every drink gets brewed via phin, the four-piece metal filter ubiquitous in Vietnam. The technique resembles a French press crossed with a pour over, so it makes sense the result is slow and strong. Nguyen serves drinks with various ratios of housemade condensed milk, or iced with a fantastic, tangy yogurt that’s also his creation.
Milstead and Co.
Fremont
Aficionados consider this the gold standard of Seattle multi-roasters (shops that serve a rotating selection of specialty coffees from various roasters). The expert staff has been making brewed-to-order coffee via Aeropress before the plunge-and-drink contraption became the staple of every coffee connoisseur's cabinet. The process conjures distinct notes in the mug that will make even the most coffee illiterate say, “Ah, hints of stone fruit.” If that sounds intimidating, perhaps their secret to longevity is an air of Fremont friendliness. You don’t have to be a coffee nerd to enjoy the Milstead and Co. experience. But if you are, or aspire to be, there’s no better place to visit.
Cafe Avole
Central District
In 2012, founder Solomon Dubie turned a Rainier Valley mini-mart into a haven for Ethiopian coffee traditions, which center on the clay pot known as a jebena. Today, the cafe occupies a trim little cafe in the Central District’s Liberty Bank Building and serves single-origin Ethiopian beans from its sibling roaster. Here, Avole pours shots from a jebena, not unlike a pull of espresso. Customers can take them to go, but visitors who choose to linger with their jebena shot get a refill for free.
Ghost Note
Capitol Hill
Order a drink and the barista might reach for some spiced chocolate bitters or a cocktail shaker. This unassuming shop on Pike/Pine approaches specialty coffee drinks with the precise flavor calibration of an early-aughts cocktail bar—and none of the pretense. House concoctions like the Lush Life (espresso, almond milk, orange blossom honey, grapefruit aromatics) are about balance rather than a sugar rush. And a range of housemade syrups and bitters layer unexpected notes into traditional espresso drinks. If the options overwhelm, the patient staff is ready with suggestions.
Community Hubs
The pandemic quashed many coffee shops' third-place status; these cafes push back with cool seating, ample power outlets, or just a deep-rooted sense of community.
Pilgrim Coffee
Northgate
In a somewhat unlikely location off Aurora Ave, the car commuter–friendly Pilgrim Coffee manages to fit snugly in the Venn diagram between specialty coffee shop and cozy neighborhood hangout. You’re likely to find banquets and lengthy tables filled with families enjoying the robust sandwich menu, young professionals busy at their laptops, and older regulars chatting away with the barista as they pull a pristine americano. Enjoy the best of both worlds and leave with a bag of Pilgrim’s own coffee blends or single-origin offerings.
The Station
Beacon Hill
Few coffee shops illustrate that whole “third place” thing better than this slim spot on Plaza Roberto Maestas. The Station hosts a neighborhood-wide block party every year, lets popups like ice cream sensation Kryse set up shop, and remains unfailingly vocal in support of artists and activists. What’s more, the Mexican mocha is one of the city’s finest.
Mr. West
Denny Regrade, Madrona, University Village
This trio of coffee houses encapsulates Seattle’s all-day cafe movement of yore: sharp interiors full of plants, its own roasting program, a menu of fancy toasts, grain salads, wine, and happy hour snacks by evening. On top of all this, Mr. West displays a particular knack for smart specialty coffee drinks, from cardamom rose cold brew to matcha lattes.
Moonshot Coffee
White Center
Planted like a specialty coffee flag in the middle of the neighborhood’s commercial corridor, Moonshot Coffee exists—like its sister cafe Burien Press to the south—as both pop-in stop for a mid-stroll cortado, and popup market filled with craft beer, natural wines, nonalcoholic bottles, and giftable condiments. You may find yourself walking through the doors with caffeine on the mind, then walking out with fancy tinned fish and a phony negroni to go with your oat milk latte (beans roasted by Olympia Coffee). And who is mad about that?
Cafe Allegro
University District
Participate in the decades-long tradition of academic caffeinating under the tall ceilings of the self-proclaimed oldest continually running espresso bar in Seattle. This UW-adjacent hub, accessible through an old alleyway—a real old-cafe-in-Cambridge sort of situation—has strong coffee, tons of tables, and overflow seating upstairs for finals week.
Coffee can be intimidating. Thank goodness for places that break it down for non-geeks.
Watson's Counter
Ballard
It’s easy to get distracted by the cafe’s superb brunch menu, but owner James Lim has a background in coffee and a gift for helping neophytes understand the difference between cold brew and iced coffee, or what a tricolate even is. Watson’s also offers a series of classes, in case your at-the-counter conversations leave you with more questions than answers.
Boon Boona Coffee
Central District, Renton, University District
The espresso drink usually known as an americano goes by the name “Africano” here, a subtle clue that Eritrea-born owner Efrem Fesaha wants Africa’s vast and varied coffee culture to get the recognition it deserves. Boon Boona sources coffee from small farmers across Africa, and roasts their beans at Fesaha’s Renton facility. A location near Seattle University offers the same coffee lineup and a small patio, while the third outpost is tucked inside University Book Store.
Hello Em
Little Saigon/International District
Yenvy Pham, who runs all things Phở Bắc with her family, is also behind this coffee counter inside the Little Saigon Creative community space. She and her business partner, Nghia Bui, tapped into family connections to source high-quality robusta beans from Vietnam. This variety contains a face-punching amount of caffeine, and usually only leaves the country as commodity-grade filler for blends. Hello Em runs its own tiny roastery and garnishes the resulting coffee with condensed milk, plus lots of salty, pudding-like egg cream.
Anchorhead Coffee
Capitol Hill, Downtown, Pike Place Market
Matte black locations have more “Berlin basement nightclub vibes” than the bright, wood-and-marble decor of many Seattle specialty coffee shops, but the boldness is the point. Roasting with an emphasis on full-bodied natural process coffee, and bites you won’t find in other shops’ pastry cases (like the seasonal pistachio matcha croissant) make Anchorhead a distinct and confident presence in our coffee landscape. Not every space can pull off the onyx coffee cave aesthetic while also maintaining a welcoming atmosphere worth cozying into, but Anchorhead makes it look easy.
Uptown Espresso
Various
If you could distill the city’s early-'90s coffee culture down to one cafe, it might be that original Uptown Espresso in Lower Queen Anne, where some of the soon-to-be big names in Seattle’s cafe scene pulled shots for the early adopters of terms like “double tall.” The original location closed in 2021, but five other outposts still serve breakfast burritos and a proprietary espresso by Fonté Coffee Roasters, which bought Uptown in 2019.
Caffe Vita
Various
Once an upstart second-wave coffee shop that catered to musicians, Vita grew into one of the nation’s largest independently owned coffee roasters. In 2020, Deming Maclise (a longtime coffee guy before he became a restaurant guy) bought Vita and kicked off an accessible new chapter. The original cafe has closed and the business has grown, but service is consistently warm and coffee director Samantha Spillman, a 2019 US Barista Champion, takes quality to even higher levels. Sibling Caffe Fiore distills all these charms into a small-scale setting.
Caffe Ladro
Various
The name translates to “coffee thief,” a nod to the days when the original location on Queen Anne dared to open next to the mighty Starbucks, intending to steal its customers. Ladro arrived in 1994, when Seattle was riding a flannel-wearing, Frasier-watching wave that crested with its burgeoning coffee culture. Today, 17 understated locations offer a reliable network of exacting coffee. (Owner Jack Kelly makes a mean burger, too.)
Espresso Vivace
Capitol Hill, South Lake Union
Forget Howard Schultz. David Schomer is the guy who shaped Seattle’s coffee scene. Vivace’s co-owner set up his Broadway espresso cart in 1988 and trained a generation of future baristas and roasters on the finer points of Italian-caliber extraction. Today Vivace has two locations—RIP the longtime Broadway sidewalk bar—serving textbook-perfect espresso. (Schomer even helped make latte art a thing in America.)
Zoka Coffee
Kirkland, South Lake Union, University District, Wallingford
Founder Jeff Babcock roasted his first beans in 1996; Zoka’s Tangletown cafe opened the following year. Babcock was an influential figure in Seattle’s early specialty scene, especially in training baristas, and still runs the show today. Four cafes pour Zoka’s broad but impeccable range of single-origins and blends.
Individualists
Delightful outliers in a cafe world of white marble counters and brass fixtures.
Cafe Bambino
Ballard
A quiet walk-up spot with not-so-quiet neon signage, crowned with the namesake toddler statue, which is in turn crowned with a giant mug on its zen-like head, Bambino keeps it bold and Italian. Berardo espresso from Rome makes for pitch-black drinks with just the right amount of bitter, to be enjoyed streetside either in an espresso cup like in the old country, or folded into a frothy cappuccino. Or you can always get a cold foam cold brew and a breakfast sandwich. This is still Seattle, after all.
Coffeeholic House
Bellevue, Columbia City, Greenwood
Vietnam’s robusta beans (from Brooklyn’s Nguyen Coffee Supply) and plenty of condensed milk power a drink menu with enough sweetness and flair to rival a cupcake shop. Phin coffees and lattes might come bedecked with pandan foam, egg cream, ube sauce, white chocolate, or sea salt. The clientele crossover between here and places like Milstead might be minimal, but in the universe of festive coffee drinks, Coffeeholic’s aren't messing around.
Monorail Espresso
Downtown
Seattle’s original circa-1980 espresso cart clearly has coffee pioneer cred. But in its current iteration behind a glassed-in counter, Monorail has built a new persona: snarky arbiter of Seattle zeitgeist. A special "directions" menu charges a reasonable price for answering the sort of questions that pop up frequently here in the tourist zone. Asking the whereabouts of Pike Place Market costs a dollar; call it Pike’s Place Market and you’ll pay double. It’s all in good fun, but even if you have no queries about the gum wall or where to find weed, the espresso is on point.