Best Coffee Shops in Bandung
5766 coffee shops in Bandung. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.
Get PulledAbout coffee in Bandung
Bandung sits at the heart of Indonesia's coffee growing region and has built a distinctive café culture that reflects this proximity. The West Java highlands surrounding the city produce some of the finest Sumatran and Indonesian Arabica beans, and Bandung cafés have direct relationships with local producers that other Indonesian cities do not have. The city's coffee landscape is layered: a colonial-era Dutch coffee tradition, a postwar Indonesian café culture, and a contemporary specialty wave that has emerged primarily since 2015.
The traditional Indonesian café (warung kopi) is widespread in Bandung. The cafés serve Indonesian filter coffee, kopi tubruk (unfiltered coffee), and various local preparations alongside Indonesian food. The institutions are everyday infrastructure across the city. The colonial-era Dutch café tradition is largely gone, but a handful of preserved Art Deco buildings near the Braga Street area host older café establishments.
The third wave arrived in Bandung around 2015 and has built rapidly. Anomali Coffee, with locations across Indonesia including Bandung, brought specialty roasting to the city. Two Hands Full, Lawangwangi Creative Space, and a wider network of contemporary cafés have built a serious scene over the last decade. The local specialty wave benefits from direct sourcing from West Java growers, often within a day's drive of the city.
The neighborhoods stratify clearly. Dago, the elevated central district, holds the densest contemporary specialty culture in Bandung. Cihampelas, the commercial corridor, holds high-volume cafés alongside specialty addresses. Dipatiukur and the Bandung Institute of Technology area hold student-driven cafés. The Braga Street area in central Bandung holds heritage cafés in colonial-era buildings. Setiabudhi and Lembang, the elevated northern districts that lead toward the coffee growing regions, hold cafés that integrate with the agritourism culture.
What separates Bandung from Jakarta is the production proximity. Bandung is roughly two hours from West Java's Arabica growing areas, including the Pangalengan and Garut highlands. Local roasters source directly from producers and often offer cuppings, farm tours, and producer relationships that Jakarta-based roasters cannot match. The integration with agriculture is fundamental to the local coffee culture.
The city's contribution to global coffee is the Indonesian specialty wave itself. Bandung roasters have helped develop the modern specialty interpretation of Indonesian coffee, moving beyond the traditional dark-roast wet-hulled Sumatran style toward lighter roasts that emphasize the bean's complexity. The model has been exported to other Indonesian cities and to specialty cafés internationally.
What surprises a visitor is the youth. Bandung has a large student and young professional population, and the cafés reflect that. Many specialty cafés operate as study spaces with reliable wifi, ample seating, and food menus that support long stays. The pace is more contemplative than Jakarta's, and the price point is more accessible.
The Bandung specialty café often integrates with broader Indonesian food culture, serving nasi goreng, mie goreng, soto, and other Indonesian dishes alongside coffee. The food-coffee integration is more native than in Western cities and produces a café experience that is full-day social infrastructure rather than morning ritual.
Top Coffee Shops in Bandung
- Warkop Sis — Worth seeking out in Bandung.
- Studio Rosid — Serious coffee. Bandung.
- Tel-U Coffee — Serious coffee. Bandung.
- PPTM NGARGOSARI — Specialty coffee in Bandung.
- Jenderal Kopi Nusantara Buwas coffee — The real thing. Bandung.
- Raindear Coffeehouse - Kantor Pos — Serious coffee. Bandung.
- Ketemu Kopi & Roastery — The real thing. Bandung.
- Anak Panah Kopi — Serious coffee. Bandung.
- Warkop GAUL — Craft coffee in Bandung.
- Coffee Phora - Kerobokan Kelod — Serious coffee. Bandung.
COFFEE SHOPS IN BANDUNG
Showing 50 of 5,766 coffee shops in Bandung. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.
Best neighborhoods for coffee in Bandung
Dago, the elevated central district, holds the densest contemporary specialty coffee culture in Bandung. Two Hands Full, Anomali Coffee''s Dago location, and a wider network of newer cafés operate within a fifteen-minute walk. The neighborhood holds the largest concentration of specialty cafés in the city and has emerged as the local creative-class district.
Cihampelas, the commercial corridor running through central Bandung, holds high-volume cafés alongside specialty addresses. Cafés here serve a higher-volume tourist and shopping demographic, with both chain establishments and specialty cafés operating in close proximity.
Dipatiukur and the Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) area hold student-driven cafés serving the large university population. The cafés operate at slower pace, with student-friendly pricing and study-friendly atmospheres.
Braga Street, the historic central commercial district that contains Art Deco buildings from the colonial era, holds heritage cafés alongside emerging specialty addresses. The neighborhood retains some of the city''s most preserved early-twentieth-century architecture.
Setiabudhi, the elevated northern district that runs toward the Lembang highland, holds cafés that integrate with the agritourism culture. The road to the coffee growing regions starts here, and several cafés operate as agritourism gateways with direct producer relationships.
Lembang, the highland resort area north of the city center, holds cafés that operate at the integration point between Bandung''s urban specialty culture and the West Java coffee growing region. The cafés serve weekend visitors and tourists alongside locals.
Sukajadi and the surrounding residential districts hold quieter neighborhood specialty registers serving the largely Indonesian residential population.
What to expect in Bandung
Order at the counter. Bandung specialty cafés operate on a fast counter-service model. Cash, card, and Indonesian mobile payment apps (GoPay, OVO, DANA, ShopeePay) are all widely accepted.
Iced coffee is the default in most contexts. The Indonesian heat means iced lattes, iced flat whites, and various iced specialty preparations dominate orders. Hot specialty drinks are present but represent a smaller share than in temperate-climate cities.
Kopi tubruk, the traditional Indonesian unfiltered coffee, is widely available at warung kopi (traditional cafés) and at older specialty establishments. The drink is brewed by pouring hot water over coarsely ground coffee in a glass, allowed to settle, drunk through the grounds. The drink is dark, sweet, and inexpensive.
Es kopi susu, iced coffee with condensed milk, is the Indonesian street coffee classic. The drink is widely available at chain coffee shops, warung kopi, and some specialty cafés in iced form.
Specialty cafés operate in the international register. Single-origin pour-overs, espressos, flat whites, and lattes are all widely available. Cold brew is increasingly common, particularly during the warmer months.
Prices are favorable for an Asian specialty city. Kopi tubruk at a warung kopi costs fifteen to thirty thousand rupiah. Specialty pour-overs at contemporary cafés run forty to seventy thousand rupiah. The Indonesian rupiah''s exchange rate makes prices quite low in US dollar or euro terms.
Hours run early to late. Most cafés open by eight and close late, often midnight. Some specialty cafés operate as study spaces with twenty-four-hour weekend hours.
How earning works in Bandung
Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Bandung. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 5,766 coffee shops in Bandung 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. The Daily 50 challenge pays up to three hundred fifty dollars at the Origin tier for fifty check-ins in ninety days. The Pulled 300 challenge, the highest annual reward, pays up to ten thousand dollars at the Origin tier for three hundred unique specialty shops in eighteen months. Bandung’s shop density makes these challenges achievable for an active coffee drinker.
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Get Pulled for Business →Frequently asked questions
Where does Indonesian coffee come from?
Indonesian coffee is produced across the archipelago, with major Arabica growing regions in Sumatra (Aceh, Mandailing, Lintong, Sidikalang), Java (West Java highlands, Pangalengan, Garut), Sulawesi (Toraja), Bali (Kintamani), Flores, and Papua. Robusta is grown widely as well. Bandung is in the heart of West Java's Arabica growing region, and local specialty roasters often source directly from producers in the surrounding highlands. The country has been a major coffee producer since the seventeenth-century Dutch colonial period.
What is kopi tubruk?
Kopi tubruk is the traditional Indonesian unfiltered coffee, made by pouring hot water over coarsely ground coffee in a glass, allowed to settle, then drunk through the grounds. The drink is dark, sweet, and inexpensive, widely available at warung kopi (traditional cafés) across Bandung and Indonesia. The drink shares roots with Turkish coffee in form but uses Indonesian-grown beans and a different brewing rhythm. The drink remains everyday Indonesian coffee infrastructure.
Where is the best specialty coffee in Bandung?
Several Bandung cafés are defensible answers. Anomali Coffee in Dago, Two Hands Full, and a wider network of contemporary specialty cafés serve coffee at international quality. The honest reply is that Bandung has built a serious specialty scene since 2015, with direct access to West Java's coffee growing regions. Any reasonable selection of cafés in Dago or the surrounding central districts will produce coffee at the international specialty standard.
How is Bandung coffee different from Jakarta coffee?
Bandung has direct production proximity to West Java's coffee growing regions, which gives local roasters access to fresh single-origin beans that Jakarta roasters cannot match. Bandung coffee culture is also slower and more student-driven than Jakarta's, reflecting the city's smaller size and large university population. Both cities have built serious specialty scenes since 2015, but Bandung's has a more direct integration with Indonesian coffee agriculture.
Is Bandung coffee expensive?
Coffee in Bandung is favorably priced compared to most international specialty cities. A specialty pour-over at a contemporary café typically runs forty to seventy thousand rupiah, approximately three to five US dollars. Kopi tubruk at a warung kopi costs fifteen to thirty thousand rupiah, less than two dollars. The Indonesian rupiah's exchange rate makes Bandung one of the most accessible specialty coffee cities in the world for international visitors.
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