Best Coffee Shops in Edinburgh
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About coffee in Edinburgh
Edinburgh's coffee scene has matured quietly. The city is small enough that you can walk between three or four serious cafes in a single afternoon, and dense enough that the third-wave shops actually have neighbors. Brew Lab, Artisan Roast, Cult Espresso, Wellington Coffee, Project Coffee, Mr Eion, Lowdown, Williams & Johnson: the names that come up repeatedly do so because they have been operating for years and refining their craft. The city's coffee culture borrows from London (where many baristas trained), Glasgow (where some of the roasters are based), and Melbourne (which left a clear influence on the espresso-and-flat-white emphasis in many shops).
For a city of 500,000, Edinburgh punches above its weight. The student population from the university and the year-round tourist trade together support a wider specialty scene than the size of the city would suggest. The result is a network of small rooms scattered across the New Town, Old Town, Stockbridge, Leith, Marchmont, and the West End, with denser clusters near the universities and along the main commercial streets.
The drink culture follows the Australian-influenced pattern: flat whites are the default order, oat milk is available in every specialty shop, and a long black is more common than an Americano. Pour-over is offered alongside espresso in the better shops, with the bean program rotating seasonal single origins from Scottish (Glen Lyon, Steampunk in St Andrews) and English (Workshop, Origin, Square Mile) roasters. Prices sit just below London for comparable cups. The pace is calmer.
COFFEE SHOPS IN EDINBURGH — PAGE 2 OF 10
Showing shops 61-120 of 1,678 in Edinburgh.
Best neighborhoods for coffee in Edinburgh
Old Town and the Royal Mile
The tourist-heavy district has fewer serious specialty shops than the New Town, but Lowdown on St Mary's Street and Cult Espresso on Buccleuch Street (just south of the university) bookend the area. Cult Espresso has been a fixture of the Edinburgh scene for over a decade, with its narrow basement room and strong Square Mile-based bean program.
New Town and the West End
This is the densest specialty cluster in the city. Williams & Johnson on Eyre Place, Project Coffee on Broughton Street, Brew Lab's New Town outpost, and Lowdown on Thistle Street all sit within a 15-minute walk. The Georgian-era streets give the neighborhood an architectural calm that the cafes lean into. Mornings here are mixed locals and visitors. Afternoons skew local.
Leith
The waterfront neighborhood north of the city center has developed a strong food and drink scene over the past 15 years, and the coffee follows. Mary's Milk Bar (the gelato-and-coffee shop that has become a Leith institution), Mimi's Bakehouse, and Söderberg's Leith location anchor the area. The walking distance from central Edinburgh is about 30 minutes; many residents now consider Leith the most interesting eating-and-drinking neighborhood in the city.
Stockbridge
A village within the city, Stockbridge has a Sunday market, independent shops, and a coffee scene that matches the neighborhood's pace. Artisan Roast's original Stockbridge location is the anchor. Mr Eion (a roaster with a tasting room) operates a few streets away. The energy is residential and the cafes serve as community hubs rather than tourist stops.
Marchmont and the Meadows
The southern student neighborhoods have a softer coffee scene than the New Town, with more casual cafes and bakeries serving the university crowd. Söderberg's Meadows location and a handful of independent operators feed the daily student trade. Pricing here is at the lower end of the Edinburgh specialty bracket.
Tollcross and the West End extension
A narrow strip of cafes connects the West End to Tollcross, with Brew Lab's South College Street location (the original) sitting just south of the Old Town. This area sees daily commuter traffic and a steady mix of students and office workers.
What to expect in Edinburgh
Expect a specialty scene that is small but serious. The good cafes in Edinburgh open early (often by 7:30 or 8 in the morning) and close by 4 or 5 in the afternoon. Many do not stay open into the evening; the city's coffee scene is not a nightlife scene. Sundays are quieter than other days, with some shops opening late or closing early.
Drink culture
The default espresso is shorter and stronger than the American pull, in keeping with the broader UK preference. Milk drinks come in two sizes (small and regular) rather than the American three-tier model. The flat white is the most ordered drink in the city by some distance. Oat milk is the default non-dairy option, with soy and almond available in most shops. Iced drinks are a smaller program than in warmer cities, with cold brew offered in the summer months and iced lattes year-round but not as the focus.
Pricing
Pricing sits in a range from £3.20 to £4.50 for a flat white in a specialty shop. A pour-over or batch brew is typically £3.50 to £5. A drip filter at a less specialty-focused cafe might be £2.80. Visit-and-sit pricing is the same as takeaway; Edinburgh has not adopted the surcharge model some other UK cities use.
Food and seating
The food program varies. The serious specialty shops often have a small pastry case (croissants, banana bread, sometimes scones) but do not run a kitchen. The cafes that double as brunch spots (Mary's Milk Bar, Hideout, Söderberg) have full menus. The Söderberg group in particular is worth noting; the Swedish-style bakeries in Edinburgh have a significant coffee program and supply many cafes with their pastries.
Seating is generally available but not abundant. The new generation of shops (Williams & Johnson, Mr Eion, Lowdown) tends toward smaller rooms with limited table seating, optimized for the daily takeaway trade. The older shops (Brew Lab, Artisan Roast) have more sit-down capacity. Wi-fi is provided everywhere but not always advertised, and many shops politely discourage long laptop sessions during peak hours.
Tipping is not expected on coffee, though tip jars are common and a 10% tip on food is appreciated. Card is accepted everywhere; cash is rare. Bring a reusable cup for a small discount at most shops.
How earning works in Edinburgh
Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Edinburgh. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 1,678 coffee shops in Edinburgh 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 1,678 shops in Edinburgh, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.
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Get Pulled for Business →Frequently asked questions
Where can I find specialty coffee in Edinburgh?
The densest cluster is in the New Town: Williams & Johnson on Eyre Place, Lowdown on Thistle Street, Project Coffee on Broughton Street, and Brew Lab's New Town shop. Stockbridge has Artisan Roast and Mr Eion. The Old Town has Lowdown and Cult Espresso. Leith has Söderberg, Mimi's, and Mary's Milk Bar. Most specialty shops open by 8 in the morning and close around 4 or 5 in the afternoon. Walking between three or four cafes in a single afternoon is common, given the city's compact size.
What is the coffee culture like in Edinburgh?
The default order is a flat white. The drink culture is Australian-influenced via London, with oat milk as the standard non-dairy option and the long black common in place of the Americano. Pour-over is offered alongside espresso in the serious shops, with seasonal single-origin rotations from Scottish, English, and occasional European roasters. Prices sit just below London for comparable drinks. Edinburgh's coffee scene leans calm and small-room rather than high-energy and large-space, in keeping with the city's broader character.
When do Edinburgh coffee shops typically open?
Most specialty cafes open between 7:30 and 8 in the morning on weekdays. Sundays often see later opens (9 or 9:30). Closing is typically 4 or 5 in the afternoon; Edinburgh is not a city with a late coffee scene. The casual brunch-and-coffee spots (Söderberg, Mimi's Bakehouse, Hideout) keep slightly longer hours and may close at 5:30 or 6. Some cafes are closed Mondays. Check before traveling specifically for a shop, particularly outside the New Town.
What is the typical price for coffee in Edinburgh?
A flat white at a specialty cafe costs between £3.20 and £4.50. A pour-over or batch brew is typically £3.50 to £5. Filter coffee at a less specialty-focused cafe runs £2.50 to £3. Pastries are £3 to £4.50. There is no sit-down surcharge; eat-in pricing matches takeaway. Many shops offer a 25p to 50p discount for bringing a reusable cup. Card is accepted everywhere; cash is rare. Tipping on coffee is not expected, though tip jars are common and 10% on food is appreciated.
Are there good coffee shops for remote work in Edinburgh?
Yes, with caveats. Brew Lab, Artisan Roast (the larger Bruntsfield location), Söderberg, and some of the Stockbridge cafes have enough seating and wi-fi to support a few hours of work. The smaller specialty shops (Williams & Johnson, Lowdown, Cult Espresso) are not designed for laptop sessions and the staff may quietly discourage them during peak hours. The university libraries and the National Library of Scotland are alternatives for serious work, with cafes nearby for breaks. The general etiquette is to order something every 90 minutes if you are camping at a table.
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