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Best Coffee Shops in Austin

880 coffee shops in Austin. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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Austin's coffee scene has exploded with the city's tech boom, attracting world-class baristas and roasters. Greater Goods, Cuvée Coffee, and Merit Coffee have put Austin on the national specialty map. The café culture thrives year-round thanks to the warm climate.

Best neighborhoods: East Austin, South Congress, North Loop, Bouldin Creek, Hyde Park

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880
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208
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About coffee in Austin

Genuine Joe Coffeehouse opened on North Loop Boulevard in 1995, eight years before the city had a recognizable specialty register and well before the tech migration that reshaped the eastern half of town. Austin's coffee history runs through that opening, through Mozart's Coffee on Lake Austin (1991), and through Caffe Medici, which Daniel Vaughn founded in West Campus in 2006 and which trained a generation of baristas who later opened their own bars. The arc is shorter than Seattle's or Portland's, but it is unusually concentrated. Most of what defines the city today was built between 2006 and 2018.

Cuvee Coffee, founded by Mike McKim in 1998, is the roaster that gave Austin a wholesale spine. The East Austin roastery on Webberville Road still supplies a meaningful share of the city's third wave bars and is the reason Austin baristas talk about origin work in the same vocabulary as their counterparts in Brooklyn. Houndstooth Coffee, opened by Sean Henry on Congress Avenue in 2011, was the first bar in town to put cup quality, water, and bar choreography on the same level as a New York or San Francisco operator. Greater Goods Coffee Roasters, started by Khanh Trang in 2015, took a quieter route and now runs one of the most consistent roasting programs in Texas.

The contemporary scene reads as a network rather than a hierarchy. Patika Coffee operates several locations across South Lamar and downtown. Wright Bros. Brew & Brew, on East Fourth, runs coffee in the morning and beer at night and treats both with equal weight. Smaller bars in East Austin and Hyde Park trade in single origin lots from the same handful of importers used in Los Angeles and Chicago. Prices have risen with the city: a flat white in 2026 lands at six to seven dollars in most central neighborhoods.

Austin is also a music city, a tech city, and a college town, and its coffee culture absorbs all three. Bars near the University of Texas keep long study hours. East Side rooms double as gallery space and venue. The Domain in the north has built a polished retail register that mirrors what happened to South Congress a decade earlier. The result is a city where the coffee belongs to several constituencies at once and where the strongest bars manage to serve all of them without flattening the cup.

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COFFEE SHOPS IN AUSTIN — PAGE 6 OF 10

Polyphonic Coffee

Specialty

Menchaca Road

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Peaches coffee

Specialty

Hamilton Pool Road

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Kitsu Nori

2310, South Lamar Boulevard, Austin

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TexaZuela

7605, Colton-Bluff Springs Road, Austin

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Hecho Amano Coffee

Specialty

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Buttercup

Sherwood Way

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7Brew

Specialty

N Bryant Blvd

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The Fool's Kava Shop

Specialty

North Mesquite Street

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Qargo Coffee

Specialty

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Get Juicy Roots

2118, South Congress Avenue, Austin

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Jester Java

Specialty

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Prufrock's

Specialty

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Aburi TORA

3500, East Parmer Lane, Austin

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Texas Krab House

11205, Aus Tex Acres Lane, Austin

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Rogue Radish

111, Congress Avenue, Austin

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Haraz Coffee House

Specialty

West Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard

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Lau Lau

Guadalupe Street

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Starbucks

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Sugar Shaker Bakery

1300, East Anderson Lane, Austin

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WhataKabob

3400, Comsouth Drive, Austin

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Mochinut Cedar Park

11301, Lakeline Bld, Austin

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Daydreamer Coffee

80, Rainey Street, Austin

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Flightpath Coffee House

Specialty

Duval Street

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Mojo Coffee

Specialty

North FM 620 Road

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Starbucks

2900 West Anderson Lane

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McDonald's

15900, North Interstate 35, Austin

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Vazquez Mexican Restaurant

915, East Braker Lane, Austin

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Keto Kitchen

5610, North Interstate Hwy 35, Austin

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Hornitos

3704, North Interstate Highway 35 Service Road, Austin

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China Family

6801, Airport Blvd, Austin

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Happy Chicks

214, East 6th Street, Austin

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Eureka

Austin

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Amy's Ice Creams

1012, West 6th Street, Austin

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Starbucks

West 5th Street

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Nomadic Outpost

6218 Brodie Lane

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Revolución Coffee + Juice

Specialty

San Jacinto Boulevard

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Le Café Crêpe

San Jacinto Boulevard

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Fete Accompli

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34th St Cafe

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Mrs. Johnson's Bakery

4909, Airport Boulevard, Austin

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Jack in the Box

8630, North Lamar Boulevard, Austin

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Mala Chili

11301, Lakeline Boulevard, Austin

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Kerbey Lane Cafe

Ste 415, 13435 Hwy 183, Austin

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Conscious Cravings

Rio Grande

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Dimassi's Mediterranean Buffet

12636, Research Blvd, Austin

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West End Cafe

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Starbucks

2505 Parmer Lane

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Pho Thaison Vietnamese Cuisine

2438, West Anderson Lane, Austin

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Starbucks

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Pho Phi Restaurant

1700, West Parmer Lane, Austin

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The Original Pancake House

1700, West Parmer Lane, Austin

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Thundercloud Subs

2500, West Parmer Lane, Austin

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Which Wich?

1701, West Parmer Lane, Austin

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Starbucks

West Parmer Lane

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Masala Wok

1100, Center Ridge Drive, Austin

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Freebirds

1100, Center Ridge Drive, Austin

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New Sitara Indian Cuisine

1779, Wells Branch Parkway, Austin

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Torchy's Tacos

5900, West Slaughter Lane, Austin

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El Chilito Cafe y Cantina

Manor Road

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Star of India

2900, West Anderson Lane, Austin

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Showing shops 301-360 of 880 in Austin.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Austin

East Austin, east of Interstate 35, holds the highest density of independent bars in the city. Cuvee Coffee's roastery anchors the area. Patika and Wright Bros. Brew & Brew sit within a short walk, and the broader East Sixth corridor reads as the working core of the city's specialty register.

South Congress, known locally as SoCo, runs from the river down toward Oltorf. The strip carries the highest tourist volume in the city. Bars here trade in pastries and serve a steady stream of out-of-town visitors during music festival weeks. Expect lines through most of the morning.

Downtown, centered on Congress Avenue, is where Houndstooth Coffee opened in 2011 and where the city's office and hotel coffee converges. Several bars run inside lobbies and shared workspaces. Mornings are heavy, afternoons quieter than the East Side.

North Loop and Hyde Park, north of the University of Texas, hold the longest-running independent rooms in town including Genuine Joe Coffeehouse on North Loop Boulevard. The register here is unhurried, with study traffic from UT students and a larger share of laptop work than the East Side.


The Domain Northside, a planned retail district in north Austin, has the polished end of the local market. Greater Goods Coffee Roasters operates a flagship in this part of the city. Expect higher price points, structured seating, and tech-adjacent foot traffic.

What to expect in Austin

Order a flat white, a cortado, or filter at most specialty bars and expect prices between five and seven dollars. Drip coffee at a neighborhood operator runs three to four dollars. Austin baristas are direct and trained, and most bars will tell you the origin and process without being asked. Tipping is standard, with most regulars adding one to two dollars per drink at the counter. Card readers default to suggested tips of fifteen, twenty, and twenty-five percent.

Most specialty bars open at seven, with the busiest hours running from eight to ten on weekdays and nine to noon on weekends. Sunday brunch traffic is heavy along South Congress and East Sixth. Many bars close by four in the afternoon, though Houndstooth and a handful of East Side rooms run later.

Summer in Austin is the practical constraint. Temperatures hold above ninety-five degrees Fahrenheit from late May through September, and iced drinks dominate the order mix. Cold brew is offered everywhere, often nitrogenated. Patios are unusable from eleven to four most summer days, so interior seating fills first. Winters are mild and patios stay active through January. South by Southwest in March pushes downtown bars past capacity for ten days; locals avoid Congress Avenue during the festival and drift north to Hyde Park or east of Interstate 35.

How earning works in Austin

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Austin. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 880 coffee shops in Austin 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 880 shops in Austin, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.

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NEARBY CITIES

San AntonioHoustonDallasRound RockGeorgetown

FURTHER READING

Our guide to the best coffee shops in AustinThe 10 Best Coffee Cities in AmericaHow to Find Great Coffee Anywhere You Travel

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Frequently asked questions

Where should I drink in Austin?

Start with Houndstooth Coffee on Congress for the bar discipline that set the modern standard, then move east to Cuvee Coffee's roastery and Patika for the working core of the city. Greater Goods Coffee Roasters at the Domain is the cleanest example of Austin's polished register. For longer hours and a quieter room, North Loop and Hyde Park hold Genuine Joe Coffeehouse and several smaller bars that have been running since the nineties.

How does Austin coffee differ from Portland coffee?

Portland's specialty wave runs back to the late nineties through Stumptown and built on a regional roasting culture. Austin's wave compressed twenty years of development into a decade between 2006 and 2016, and it grew alongside tech migration rather than ahead of it. Bars are newer, prices are higher in central neighborhoods, and patios drive a larger share of seating because of the climate. The cup quality at the top of the market is comparable. The room culture is faster and louder.

Why does Austin have so many roasters in East Austin?

East Austin had affordable warehouse space when the specialty wave started building roasting capacity around 2010. Cuvee Coffee anchored the area early and others followed because the zoning allowed industrial use, the rents were workable, and the customer base downtown was a short drive away. The neighborhood has gentrified since then and rents have climbed, but the roasting infrastructure was already in place. The result is a corridor of warehouses east of Interstate 35 that handles a meaningful share of the state's specialty supply.

When did specialty coffee arrive in Austin?

Caffe Medici opened in West Campus in 2006 and is generally treated as the start of the modern register. Cuvee Coffee was already roasting from 1998 but operated mostly wholesale until the late 2000s. Houndstooth Coffee in 2011 codified the bar style. By 2015 the city had a recognizable third wave that mirrored what New York and Los Angeles were doing, and Greater Goods Coffee Roasters opened that same year. The full network of bars and roasters was in place by 2018.

Is Austin coffee expensive?

Yes, by Texas standards and increasingly by national standards. Specialty drinks in central neighborhoods run five to seven dollars in 2026. Drip coffee is three to four. The price point has climbed with the cost of living, and the city is now broadly aligned with Brooklyn and the Mission in San Francisco rather than with Houston or San Antonio. Tipping adds another dollar or two per drink. A weekday morning visit at a downtown bar with a pastry typically lands above ten dollars.

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Chicago

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24 shops

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21 shops

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Milpitas

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