Skip to content
← ALL CITIES

Best Coffee Shops in Adelaide

155 coffee shops in Adelaide. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

View specialty coffee shops in Adelaide

Get Pulled
155
Coffee shops eligible
44
Specialty shops

Map open in Adelaide. Be the first to pull here and earn cash on every check-in.

About coffee in Adelaide

Adelaide is Australia's fifth-largest city and has one of the country's quieter coffee scenes by international reputation, though the quality is consistently high. The city benefits from being in Australia: the country's third-wave culture is the template for much of the modern specialty scene globally, and Adelaide cafes operate within that lineage. The flat white is the daily drink, oat milk is the standard non-dairy, and the espresso program is taken seriously by default.

The city has roughly 1.4 million people and is geographically compact. The central business district and the inner suburbs (North Adelaide, Norwood, Glenelg, Unley) hold the bulk of the specialty cafes. Wineries from the Adelaide Hills and McLaren Vale region influence the broader food and drink culture; coffee operates alongside an established food scene.

Adelaide's coffee culture is shaped by South Australia's roaster network. Monastery Coffee, Allpress (Australian, not local but widely used), and a handful of smaller in-house roasters supply most independent shops. The default pull is shorter and darker than the Melbourne norm, in line with Adelaide's slightly more traditional bent. Cold drip is more common here in the warmer months than in many Australian cities.

Map of coffee shops in Adelaide
Explore on the interactive map →

COFFEE SHOPS IN ADELAIDE — PAGE 2 OF 3

room 19

256 Rundle St, Adelaide SA 5000, Australia

View shop →

Pogo Coffee Roasters

Specialty

107a King William St, Kent Town SA 5067, Australia

View shop →

Mad.Good Cafe

3/435 Fullarton Rd, Highgate SA 5063, Australia

View shop →

Shanghai Tea House -Burnside-

447 Portrush Rd, Glenside SA 5066, Australia

View shop →

Chunky Obba Gogi

29, Angas Street

View shop →

Snowwwww Skewers Bar

39, Grenfell Street

View shop →

UNCLE Authentic Hainanese Chicken Rice

Waymouth Street

View shop →

Oriental Dumpling King

165, Rundle Street

View shop →

Luigi Delicatessen

43, Franklin Street

View shop →

Nonna and I

54, Pulteney Street

View shop →

Tutto Cucina + Bar

55, Waymouth Street

View shop →

Fry Club

36, Franklin Street

View shop →

BO RARN

46, Exchange Place

View shop →

Maison Clement

18, Currie Street

View shop →

Simon Taste Chinese Restaurant

14, Market Street

View shop →

Saudade

45, Grote Street

View shop →

Cumbia

Grote Street

View shop →

Mr Cheese

Gouger Street

View shop →

Est Ouvest

111, Angas Street

View shop →

Cafe Ritz

172-180, Gawler Place

View shop →

Me2U

185, Victoria Square

View shop →

Sit Lo

Waymouth Street

View shop →

Hello Sarnie

11, Waymouth Street

View shop →

Roma

11, Waymouth Street

View shop →

Le Souk

Gouger Street

View shop →

Market Bread Bar

View shop →

Skala

View shop →

Mascavado

Hutt Street

View shop →

PINCO italo

Exchange Place

View shop →

Hello Sarnie

Gawler Place

View shop →

Lantern by Nu

10, Selby Street

View shop →

Hungry Jack's

Rundle Street

View shop →

Delicatessen Kitchen and Bar

Waymouth Street

View shop →

SOI 38

Pirie Street

View shop →

Bollywood

Pirie Street

View shop →

Daily Planet

Waymouth Street

View shop →

Fish Head

270, Morphett Street

View shop →

McDonald's

147, Rundle Mall

View shop →

Umai Kitchen

8-10, Union Street

View shop →

Krispy Kreme

28, Grenfell Street

View shop →

Krispy Kreme

76, Gouger Street

View shop →

Miss Malay

358, King William Street

View shop →

Hungry Jack's

35, Hindley Street

View shop →

Waffles and Coffee

Leigh Street

View shop →

Corromandel Snack Bar

7, Coromandel Place

View shop →

Soonta

Waymouth Street

View shop →

Guzman y Gomez

33, King William Street

View shop →

Soonta

Rundle Place

View shop →

Bread & Bone Wood Grill

15, Peel Street

View shop →

La Rambla Tapas Bar

28, Peel Street

View shop →

St Louis house of Fine Ice Cream & Dessert

19, Gouger Street

View shop →

Plus 82 GoGi

12, Eliza Street

View shop →

Sean's Kitchen

Station Road

View shop →

Madame Hanoi

North Terrace

View shop →

Hanoi Alley

View shop →

Hey Jupiter

11, Ebenezer Place

View shop →

Etica

125, Gilles Street

View shop →

Nano Cafe

23, Ebenezer Place

View shop →

Sunflower

29, Angas Street

View shop →

Mr Bulgogi Korean Restaurant

128, Wakefield Street

View shop →

Showing shops 61-120 of 155 in Adelaide.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Adelaide

Adelaide CBD

The central business district has a steady weekday coffee culture, with cafes catering to office workers and Saturday shoppers. Bar 9, Exchange Specialty Coffee, and a handful of smaller operators anchor the area. Mornings are busy, midday lunches fill the brunch-leaning rooms, and afternoons quiet down quickly. Weekends are calmer in the CBD than in the inner suburbs.

North Adelaide

A 10-minute walk north of the CBD, this Victorian-era neighborhood has a small but solid specialty cluster. Bracegirdle's, Belgian Beer Cafe (yes, with a coffee program), and the cafes along O'Connell Street serve the residential and university population. The neighborhood is more relaxed than the CBD and the rooms have a calmer pace.

Norwood and Kent Town

The eastern suburbs are Adelaide's strongest specialty district. Norwood Hotel's cafe, Whistle and Flute, and Treadly Bike Shop and Cafe lead a tight cluster of well-regarded shops along the Parade. The neighborhood is walkable, with cafes within a few minutes of each other. Saturday mornings are the high-energy moments; weekday afternoons are calm.

Unley and Hyde Park

The southern inner suburbs have a residential coffee culture: smaller cafes serving local families and walk-up trade. Argo on the Parade is the standout. The pace is slower than Norwood and the cafes operate more as neighborhood hubs than as destination shops.

Glenelg and the beach

The coastal suburb has a different rhythm: cafes that serve weekend visitors and tourists alongside locals. Coffee quality is generally good but the area is more food-and-view-focused than specialty-focused. Pricing is slightly higher than the inner suburbs due to the beach premium.

What to expect in Adelaide

Expect a flat white as the default order, made on a commercial espresso machine by a barista who has trained in the Australian tradition. Cup sizes are small (typically 6 oz / 175ml for a flat white) and the milk is steamed with attention to microfoam. Iced drinks are a significant program in summer, particularly cold drip and iced lattes. Filter coffee (pour-over or batch brew) is offered alongside espresso in the more specialty-leaning shops.

Food program

The food program is integrated. Many Adelaide cafes operate as brunch destinations with full kitchens, particularly the inner-suburb shops. Avocado toast, eggs benedict, and the broader Australian brunch canon are standard. The cafes that operate more strictly as coffee shops (specialty-focused, smaller rooms) tend to have a smaller food offering: pastries, simple toasts, granola.

Pricing and hours

Pricing sits in the Australian standard range: A$4.50 to A$5.50 for a flat white at most specialty cafes. Pour-over runs A$5 to A$7. Brunch dishes are A$15 to A$25. Card is universal; cash is uncommon. Many cafes accept BYO reusable cup with a small discount.

Hours are concentrated around breakfast and lunch. Most specialty cafes open by 7 in the morning and close by 3 in the afternoon, with some staying open until 4 or 5. Evening coffee is not a strong cultural pattern in Adelaide; the city's coffee scene is primarily a daytime affair. Saturday and Sunday brunches fill the rooms; weekday mornings are quieter but still steady.

Wi-fi is provided at most cafes. Laptop sessions are tolerated outside peak brunch hours. The pace is calmer than Melbourne or Sydney, and the rooms tend to be larger with more seating per shop than in the bigger cities.

How earning works in Adelaide

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Adelaide. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 155 coffee shops in Adelaide on the platform, even a casual coffee habit can complete the entry challenges in a few weeks.

The First 15 challenge pays ten dollars for fifteen check-ins at any cafe in thirty days. Explorer 30 pays up to fifty dollars for thirty check-ins across ninety days. The Daily 50 challenge pays up to three hundred fifty dollars at the Origin tier for fifty check-ins in ninety days. With 155 shops in Adelaide, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.

Get Pulled

Make your first pull in Adelaide.

Download Pulled. Check in at any cafe in Adelaide. Earn real PayPal cash on every visit.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
Open Adelaide in Pulled

FURTHER READING

The 10 Best Coffee Cities in AmericaHow to Find Great Coffee Anywhere You TravelSpecialty Coffee vs. Chain Coffee: What You Are Actually Paying For

Own a coffee shop in Adelaide?

List on Pulled, run sponsored challenges, reach every coffee drinker in Adelaide.

Get Pulled for Business →

Frequently asked questions

Where can I find specialty coffee in Adelaide?

The strongest cluster is Norwood and Kent Town along the Parade: Whistle and Flute, Treadly Bike Shop and Cafe, and Bar 9's locations. North Adelaide has Bracegirdle's and other O'Connell Street shops. The CBD has Exchange Specialty Coffee. Argo in Unley anchors the southern suburbs. Most specialty cafes open by 7 and close by 3 or 4. Walking between two or three is feasible in the inner-suburb neighborhoods.

What is the coffee culture like in Adelaide?

The Australian specialty tradition translates directly to Adelaide: flat whites as the daily drink, oat milk as standard non-dairy, attentive baristas, small cups, attention to microfoam. The pace is slower than Melbourne or Sydney and the rooms are larger. Cold drip is a meaningful summer program. Brunch is integrated into many cafes. Hours skew morning-and-early-afternoon; evening coffee is rare.

When do Adelaide coffee shops typically open?

Most specialty cafes open between 6:30 and 7:30 in the morning on weekdays and 7:30 to 8 on weekends. Closing is typically 3 to 4 in the afternoon, with brunch-leaning cafes staying open until 4 or 5. Sundays often see shorter hours. The CBD cafes are most affected by weekend schedules, with several closing Saturday afternoons and all day Sunday.

What is the typical price for coffee in Adelaide?

A flat white at a specialty cafe runs A$4.50 to A$5.50. Pour-over costs A$5 to A$7. Brunch dishes are A$15 to A$25, with smaller toasts or pastries at A$5 to A$8. Card is accepted everywhere; cash is uncommon. Bringing a reusable cup typically saves 50c. Tipping is not expected on coffee, though tip jars are common.

Are there good coffee shops for remote work in Adelaide?

Yes. The CBD cafes (particularly Exchange Specialty Coffee) and several Norwood and North Adelaide shops have reliable wi-fi, table seating, and a tolerant attitude toward laptop sessions outside peak brunch hours. Argo in Unley is another good option. Smaller specialty rooms (the destination cafes with limited seating) are less suited to long work sessions. The general etiquette is to order every 90 minutes or so.

Get Pulled.

Pulled Coffee is the rewards layer. Visit any shop in Adelaide, log a pull, get paid.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Other coffee cities in AU

Melbourne

777 shops

Parramatta

14 shops