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Best Coffee Shops in Chicago

2955 coffee shops in Chicago. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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Chicago's coffee scene has quietly become one of America's best, anchored by Intelligentsia's flagship in Wicker Park. The city's neighborhood character gives each café a distinct identity. Pilot Coffee, Metric Coffee, and Halfwit have expanded the city's specialty reputation.

Best neighborhoods: Wicker Park, Logan Square, Andersonville, River North, Pilsen

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About coffee in Chicago

Intelligentsia Coffee opened its first café on Broadway in Lakeview in 1995, founded by Doug Zell and Emily Mange, and stands alongside Stumptown in Portland and Counter Culture in Durham as one of the three roasters that defined the American third-wave era. The city's role in the modern specialty wave is foundational: Intelligentsia's direct trade work, its training programs, and the bars it operated in Chicago through the 2000s set down much of the technical vocabulary that the rest of the country adopted. The roaster still operates from its original Broadway location nearly thirty years later.

The modern register is denser than the heritage cluster suggests. Metropolis Coffee Company opened in Edgewater in 2003, working a quieter neighborhood register and roasting from the same building. Dollop Coffee Co. operates a small chain across the north side, with the original location in Buena Park dating to 2005. Sawada Coffee opened in the West Loop, founded by Hiroshi Sawada, the World Latte Art Champion, and is the most-cited reference for Japanese-influenced espresso work in the city. Big Shoulders Coffee anchors the West Town register. The cluster is spread across multiple neighborhoods rather than concentrated in a single district, reflecting the city's grid geography and the train system that connects the north side, the west side, and the Loop.

The heritage register predates the specialty wave and runs through the city's old hotel café tradition. The Drake Hotel on East Walton Place, opened in 1920, anchors the historic register, with the Cape Cod Room and the Palm Court running a coffee-and-pastry format that connects to the early-twentieth-century Loop. The format reads as Atlantic-American rather than Italian-immigrant and sits closer to a New York hotel café than to a North Beach espresso bar.

The city's coffee culture is shaped by the climate. Chicago winters are long and cold, with temperatures dropping below freezing from November through March. The result is a café register that runs primarily indoor, with longer sittings, larger rooms, and a stronger focus on seating capacity than in the warm-climate American cities. Intelligentsia's bars are larger than the Mission or Brooklyn equivalents, and the format accommodates the winter rhythm of long mornings inside rather than quick orders at a sidewalk window.


The broader cultural context places the city inside the American Midwest, with a coffee culture that runs distinct from the coastal centers. The third-wave register is fully developed, but the city retains a working-class diner and donut-shop tradition that runs alongside it, and the specialty bars sit inside a broader register that includes the neighborhood coffee shop, the donut counter, and the late-night diner. Wicker Park, Logan Square, and the West Loop have been the engines of the city's specialty growth since the 2010s.

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Top Coffee Shops in Chicago

  1. MeLatte Coffee Shop Specialty cafe on West Fullerton Avenue.
  2. Glass & Cup Coffee And Wine Bar Specialty cafe on East Grand Avenue.
  3. Engine Coffee Specialty cafe on North Ashland Avenue.
  4. Olor Coffee Specialty cafe in Chicago.
  5. Stewarts Private Blend Coffee Specialty cafe on West Wrightwood Avenue.
  6. Happy Monday Specialty cafe on East Adams Street.
  7. Pick Me Up Cafe Specialty cafe on North Clark Street.
  8. Hexe Coffee Co. Specialty cafe on W Diversey Pkwy.
  9. Necessary & Sufficient Coffee Specialty cafe on West Wrightwood Avenue.
  10. La Capannina Coffee Specialty cafe on West Addison Street.

COFFEE SHOPS IN CHICAGO

Happy Monday

Specialty

30 East Adams Street

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Glass & Cup Coffee And Wine Bar

Specialty

255 East Grand Avenue

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Hexe Coffee Co.

Specialty

2000 W Diversey Pkwy, Chicago, IL 60614, USA

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Loba Pastry + Coffee

Specialty

1800 West Addison Street

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Infuse Coffee and Tea Bar

Specialty

350 North Orleans Street

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Necessary & Sufficient Coffee

Specialty

3624 West Wrightwood Avenue

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Olor Coffee

Specialty

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Engine Coffee

Specialty

1109 North Ashland Avenue

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La Capannina Coffee

Specialty

7547 West Addison Street

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The Stockyard Coffeehouse

Specialty

558 West 37th Street

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MeLatte Coffee Shop

Specialty

3304 West Fullerton Avenue

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Robust Coffee Lounge

Specialty

6300 South Woodlawn Avenue

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Stewarts Private Blend Coffee

Specialty

4110 West Wrightwood Avenue

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Pick Me Up Cafe

Specialty

4882 North Clark Street

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La Colonial

57, East Oak Street, Chicago

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Nighthawk Chicago

4744 North Kimball Avenue

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Cookies by Design

1238, West Belmont Avenue, Chicago

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Señoritas Cantina

610, South Dearborn Street, Chicago

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Nothing Bundt Cakes

1953, North Clybourn Avenue, Chicago

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Loaf Lounge

2934 North Milwaukee Avenue

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Tacos Villa

3139, West 63rd Street, Chicago

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BARDAVID

1201, East 60th Street, Chicago

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Pittsfield Cafe

55 East Washington Street

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Fountain Cafe

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Strugglebeard Bakery

5221, South Harper Court, Chicago

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Marshall’s Landing

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Fresco Delicioso

131, North Clinton Street, Chicago

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Café Más

2310 West Foster Avenue

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The Spoke & Bird

205 East 18th Street

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Cafe Mustache

2313 North Milwaukee Avenue

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Italian Fiesta

1919, East 71st Street, Chicago

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Goddess and the Baker

181 West Madison Street

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Cafe L'Appetito

30 East Huron Street

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The Purple Pig

444, North Michigan Avenue, Chicago

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Roeser's Bakery

3216, West North Avenue, Chicago

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Mrs. Fields

500, West Madison Street, Chicago

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Dash of Salt and Pepper

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San Juan Bakery

3335, West North Avenue, Chicago

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Letizia's Natural Bakery

2144 West Division Street

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Broune Desserts

3721, North Southport Avenue, Chicago

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Speedway

2303 South Western Avenue

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Philz Coffee

2323 North Lincoln Avenue

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Dunkin'

3801 West Belmont Avenue

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Intelligentsia

2642 North Milwaukee Avenue

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Speedway

3354 North Damen Avenue

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Starbucks

200 North Michigan Avenue

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Showing 50 of 2,955 coffee shops in Chicago. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Chicago

Wicker Park sits on the near northwest side and holds one of the densest specialty clusters in the city, with cafés running along Milwaukee Avenue and Damen Avenue. The neighborhood mixes the post-industrial register of the 1990s arts scene with the more recent specialty wave. Café formats here run smaller and more design-driven than in the Loop or the West Loop.

Logan Square sits west of Wicker Park along the Blue Line and holds a similar register with slightly cheaper prices and a more residential rhythm. The boulevard system designed in the late nineteenth century gives the neighborhood its physical character, and the cafés along Milwaukee, Logan, and Kedzie anchor the cluster.

The West Loop runs immediately west of the Loop along Randolph Street and Fulton Market, the former meatpacking district turned restaurant corridor. Sawada Coffee operates here, alongside a dense cluster of specialty bars tied to the West Loop's restaurant and office workforce. The format runs upmarket and the prices sit at the top of the city's range.

Lakeview, on the north side along the lakefront, holds Intelligentsia's original Broadway café, opened in 1995, alongside a steady residential café register. The neighborhood reads as a transitional zone between the lakefront high-rises and the more interior neighborhoods, and the café format accommodates both.


Edgewater, further north along the lakefront, holds Metropolis Coffee Company, opened in 2003, and a quieter neighborhood register tied to the residential pocket along Bryn Mawr Avenue.

What to expect in Chicago

Order at the counter at most specialty bars, with espresso priced between 3.50 and 4.50 dollars and cappuccino between 4.50 and 6.00 dollars. Pour-over and filter sit between 5.00 and 8.00 dollars depending on the origin. Heritage neighborhood cafés and donut-shop registers run cheaper, with drip coffee at 2.50 to 3.50 dollars. Tipping is standard at 15 to 20 percent on the total or 1 to 2 dollars per drink at the counter. Most specialty bars open between 6 and 7 in the morning and close by 5 or 6 in the afternoon. Some neighborhood seats in Lakeview, Logan Square, and Wicker Park run later. The Drake Hotel and the heritage hotel cafés in the Loop run on hotel hours and stay open into the evening. Card payment is the default and Apple Pay is accepted almost everywhere. Cash remains common at neighborhood diners and donut shops. Wi-Fi is available at most specialty seats and laptop-friendliness is generally higher than in coastal cities, reflecting the long-sitting register that the climate produces. Outdoor seating runs from May through October at most cafés but the winter months from November through March push the entire register indoors. Reservations are not standard at cafés but recommended at the heritage hotel rooms.

How earning works in Chicago

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Chicago. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 2,955 coffee shops in Chicago 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 2,955 shops in Chicago, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.

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FURTHER READING

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

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Frequently asked questions

Why is Chicago important for American specialty coffee?

Intelligentsia Coffee opened in Lakeview in 1995, founded by Doug Zell and Emily Mange, and stands alongside Stumptown in Portland and Counter Culture in Durham as one of the three roasters that defined the American third-wave era. Intelligentsia's direct trade work and training programs set down much of the technical vocabulary that the rest of the country adopted. The city's specialty wave is foundational rather than derivative, and the original Broadway café still operates nearly thirty years later.

Which neighborhoods have the best coffee in Chicago?

Wicker Park, Logan Square, and the West Loop hold the densest specialty clusters. Sawada Coffee operates in the West Loop, founded by Hiroshi Sawada, the World Latte Art Champion. Lakeview holds Intelligentsia's original 1995 location on Broadway. Edgewater holds Metropolis Coffee Company. The clusters are spread across multiple neighborhoods rather than concentrated in a single district, reflecting the city's grid geography. The Blue Line connects Wicker Park and Logan Square directly to the Loop.

How does Chicago weather affect café culture?

Winters are long and cold, with temperatures dropping below freezing from November through March. The result is a café register that runs primarily indoor, with longer sittings, larger rooms, and a stronger focus on seating capacity than in warm-climate American cities. Outdoor seating runs from May through October at most cafés. The winter rhythm pushes the entire format indoors and the city's bars are generally larger and more laptop-friendly than the Mission or Brooklyn equivalents.

How much does coffee cost in Chicago?

Espresso runs 3.50 to 4.50 dollars at most specialty bars, with cappuccino between 4.50 and 6.00 dollars. Pour-over and filter sit between 5.00 and 8.00 dollars depending on the origin. The city runs cheaper than San Francisco and New York but more expensive than most Midwestern markets. Heritage neighborhood cafés and donut-shop registers run cheaper, with drip coffee at 2.50 to 3.50 dollars. Tipping is standard at 15 to 20 percent or 1 to 2 dollars per drink at the counter.

What is the oldest café register in Chicago?

The heritage register predates the specialty wave and runs through the city's old hotel café tradition. The Drake Hotel on East Walton Place, opened in 1920, anchors the historic register, with the Cape Cod Room and the Palm Court running a coffee-and-pastry format that connects to the early-twentieth-century Loop. The format reads as Atlantic-American rather than Italian-immigrant and sits closer to a New York hotel café than to a North Beach espresso bar. The hotel café tradition runs through several Loop and Gold Coast properties.

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Other coffee cities in US

Seattle

37 shops

San Francisco

36 shops

Redwood City

31 shops

Orlando

26 shops

San Diego

16 shops

Denver

16 shops

Clearwater

15 shops

New York

12 shops

Philadelphia

12 shops

Austin

12 shops

Saint Petersburg

11 shops

Los Angeles

10 shops

Chicago coffee: 238 specialty cafes among 2955 shops | Pulled