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Best Coffee Shops in Hamburg

2691 coffee shops in Hamburg. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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About coffee in Hamburg

Coffee imports through Hamburg date to the 1670s, when the city's Hanseatic trading networks first connected the port to the Yemeni mocha trade through Amsterdam and London. By the 19th century Hamburg had established itself as the dominant coffee port of continental Europe, and through 1900 the Speicherstadt warehouse district held the bulk of European green coffee inventory. Sacks moved through the brick-and-iron warehouses on the Elbe in volumes that shaped global pricing. The city's coffee history is the most layered in Germany, running through Hanseatic trade, the rise of industrial-scale roasting, the founding of major German chains, and the contemporary specialty wave that has reshaped the city's cafe culture over the past two decades.

Tchibo, founded in Hamburg in 1949 by Max Herz and Carl Tchilinghiryan, grew from a coffee mail-order business into one of the largest German coffee chains, with thousands of locations across Germany and Europe. The company's flagship operations remain in Hamburg, and its trajectory shaped the country's middle-market coffee culture through the second half of the 20th century. Schmidtchen Cafe and a layer of older Hamburg cafes hold the heritage register from the prewar and postwar periods.

The specialty wave in Hamburg is anchored by Elbgold, founded in 2008 by Andreas Stechl in Eppendorf and now operating multiple Hamburg locations as one of Germany's leading specialty roasters. Public Coffee Roasters in St. Pauli runs a smaller but serious specialty program. Stockwerk Kaffee operates in a similar register. Speicherstadt Kaffeerosterei sits in the historic warehouse district and runs as a working roastery in a building that historically held green coffee for the European market. The Coffee Museum Burg, also in the Speicherstadt, combines a roastery with a museum of Hamburg's coffee history.

The traditional German cafe vocabulary runs through the espresso, cappuccino, latte macchiato, and Milchkaffee set, with filter coffee a continuing default in older cafes and home consumption. Specialty bars run the international third-wave menu of pour-over, espresso flights, and single-origin beans. Both registers coexist, with Hamburg's specialty scene running denser per capita than most German cities of comparable size.


The broader cultural context is a city of 665 indexed shops with a coffee history that physically built the German coffee industry. Hamburg roasts more coffee than any other German city. The Speicherstadt is a UNESCO World Heritage site as of 2015, recognized in part for its role in global trade. Walking through the warehouses now means moving past cafes, museums, and roasteries layered on top of three centuries of coffee infrastructure. The port still handles a significant share of Germany's green coffee imports, with the trade running through HafenCity and the older docks downstream.

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Top Coffee Shops in Hamburg

  1. Juwelier Espressobar Specialty cafe on Weidenallee.
  2. Coffee Fellows Specialty cafe on Ottenser Hauptstraße.
  3. L'Espresso Bar Specialty cafe on Grindelhof.
  4. Becking Kaffee Specialty cafe on Leverkusenstraße.
  5. Espresso House Specialty cafe on Gustav-Mahler-Platz.
  6. Das weisse Haus Cafe in Hamburg.
  7. Mc Queen Cafe on Grandweg.
  8. STYLE YOUR CAKE Cafe in Hamburg.
  9. LiZ Libertäres Zentrum Cafe on Karolinenstraße.
  10. Public Cafe Cafe on Wilstorfer Straße.

COFFEE SHOPS IN HAMBURG

Becking Kaffee

Specialty

31 Leverkusenstraße

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Juwelier Espressobar

Specialty

29 Weidenallee

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Coffee Fellows

Specialty

7 Ottenser Hauptstraße

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Espresso House

Specialty

1 Gustav-Mahler-Platz

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L'Espresso Bar

Specialty

45 Grindelhof

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Trattoria 500

19, Paul-Roosen-Straße, Hamburg

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Nissis Kunstkantine

6, Am Dalmannkai, Hamburg

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Cafe Schmidt

10 Beselerplatz

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Cafe Gnosa

93 Lange Reihe

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Schanzenbäcker

2 Sachsenfeld

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Nord Coast

171 Eppendorfer Weg

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Pâtisserie Madeleine

36, Keplerstraße, Hamburg

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Taverna Jota & Jorgos

30, Gustav-Falke-Straße, Hamburg

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My Cake

13, Schwarzer Weg, Hamburg

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Henssler at Home

70, Waldweg, Hamburg

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Café May

2 Von-Axen-Straße

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HATARI Pfälzer Stube

1, Eidelstedter Weg, Hamburg

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Confiserie NIKO

41, Lehmweg, Hamburg

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Pâtisserie Chouette

45, Hofweg, Hamburg

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STYLE YOUR CAKE

40, Lehmweg, Hamburg

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Eisliebe

10 Wohldorfer Damm

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LiZ Libertäres Zentrum

21 Karolinenstraße

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Public Cafe

84 Wilstorfer Straße

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Catch of the Day

1, Koreastraße, Hamburg

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Cafe Westwind

1 Spadenteich

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Café CampusBlick

8 Von-Melle-Park

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ănici

22-24, Emilienstraße, Hamburg

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Patisserie l'artisan

254, Eppendorfer Weg, Hamburg

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Café Nr. 28

28 Schlüterstraße

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Strelow Teeladen

48, Wedeler Landstraße, Hamburg

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Schmidtchen Cafehaus

68 Rahlstedter Straße

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Éclair au café

4 Lattenstieg

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Das weisse Haus

50, Neumühlen, Hamburg

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Cafe Chrysander

61 Chrysanderstraße

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Hong Kong Wok

63a, Kielmannseggstraße, Hamburg

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Café & Bar Amarillo

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Mc Queen

66 Grandweg

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Enjoy Cafe & Cocktails

78 Wilstorfer Straße

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Cafe Sol Portugal

56 Washingtonallee

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waterkant

97, Bernhard-Nocht-Straße, Hamburg

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övelgönner fährhaus

53, Neumühlen, Hamburg

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Aura Designtorten

531, Elbchaussee, Hamburg

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Burgerlich

1, Speersort, Hamburg

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Milch

22 Ditmar-Koel-Straße

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Teehandlung Ernst Zwanck

1, Kattrepelsbrücke, Hamburg

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Pâtisserie Johanna

24, Am Sandtorkai, Hamburg

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geen Ottensen

15 Große Rainstraße

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Schanzenbäckerei

89 Hammerbrookstraße

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Junge

29-31 Eppendorfer Landstraße

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Chez Nathalie

88 Lutterothstraße

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Showing 50 of 2,691 coffee shops in Hamburg. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Hamburg

Eppendorf sits north of the central city and runs as the residential specialty corridor of Hamburg's coffee scene. Elbgold's flagship operates here, alongside a network of smaller specialty cafes, bakeries, and food shops. The streets around Eppendorfer Landstrasse hold most of the action, with a measured, residential pace.

St. Pauli sits west of the central city and runs as the post-Reeperbahn creative district, mixing the city's nightlife history with a strong cafe and food scene. Public Coffee Roasters anchors the specialty register here. The streets between Reeperbahn and Schulterblatt hold most of the cafe density.

Sternschanze, often shortened to Schanze, sits north of St. Pauli and runs as a younger creative neighborhood of independent shops, bars, and cafes. The Schanzenstrasse and surrounding blocks hold a layer of specialty operations.

Speicherstadt and HafenCity occupy the post-industrial port redevelopment south of the central city. Speicherstadt Kaffeerosterei runs in the historic warehouse district. HafenCity, the newer redevelopment, holds modern cafes layered into the redeveloped infrastructure. This is where Hamburg's coffee history is most visible.


Altona sits west of St. Pauli and was historically a separate city annexed in 1938. The neighborhood holds a layer of cafes running across the heritage and specialty registers, with the Schanzenstrasse-to-Altona axis emerging as one of the city's strongest cafe corridors.

What to expect in Hamburg

Order at the counter at specialty bars and many neighborhood cafes, and from the table at sit-down cafes and the heritage Konditorei format. The default vocabulary is the international espresso, cappuccino, latte macchiato, and flat white set, with Milchkaffee as the German-language equivalent of a cafe au lait. Filter coffee remains common at older cafes and at specialty operations doing pour-over or batch brew.

An espresso runs around 1.80 to 3.20 euros at neighborhood cafes, 2.50 to 4.00 at specialty bars. A cappuccino sits between 3.20 and 5.00 euros. A latte macchiato runs 3.80 to 5.50. Pour-over at the specialty end runs 4.50 to 7.50 euros. Prices in Hamburg run slightly above the German national average and below Berlin or Munich for specialty.

Tap water is not free by default in German cafes; if you want water, ask for it as a paid order. Tipping is expected, typically rounding up or adding five to ten percent at sit-down cafes, smaller rounded amounts at counters. Most cafes open between 8 and 9 in the morning and close between 6 and 8 in the evening. Sundays see most cafes open with reduced hours, often 10 to 6. Cards including international Visa and Mastercard are accepted at most specialty operations and chains, while smaller neighborhood cafes sometimes remain cash-only or cards-with-minimum.

How earning works in Hamburg

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Hamburg. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 2,691 coffee shops in Hamburg 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 2,691 shops in Hamburg, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.

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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

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Frequently asked questions

Why is Hamburg called the German coffee port?

Hamburg has been the dominant coffee port of continental Europe since the 19th century, with imports running through the Hanseatic trading networks that connected the city to Yemen, the Caribbean, Brazil, and East Africa. Through 1900 the Speicherstadt warehouse district held the bulk of European green coffee inventory. Hamburg still roasts more coffee than any other German city, with major operations including Tchibo, Speicherstadt Kaffeerosterei, and Elbgold continuing the city's coffee infrastructure into the present. The history is physically visible across the port and warehouse district.

What is the Speicherstadt Kaffeerosterei?

Speicherstadt Kaffeerosterei is a working roastery and cafe in the historic Speicherstadt warehouse district, the brick-and-iron complex that held European green coffee inventory from the 1880s through 1900 and beyond. The roastery operates inside a building that physically housed coffee through the city's commercial peak. The cafe serves a range of single-origin and blended coffees roasted on-site, and the operation runs as one of the most direct connections between Hamburg's coffee history and its present-day specialty scene. The Coffee Museum Burg sits nearby.

Who founded Elbgold?

Elbgold was founded in 2008 by Andreas Stechl in the Eppendorf neighborhood of Hamburg. The roastery has grown into one of Germany's leading specialty operations, with multiple cafes across Hamburg and a wholesale program supplying restaurants, hotels, and offices. Stechl built the roastery around direct-trade sourcing and a precise espresso program, with the Eppendorf flagship serving as both cafe and roastery anchor. Elbgold runs alongside operations like Public Coffee Roasters and Stockwerk Kaffee in the contemporary Hamburg specialty register.

Are Hamburg cafes open on Sundays?

Most cafes in Hamburg run open on Sundays with reduced hours, typically opening around 10 in the morning and closing between 5 and 7 in the evening. This reflects Sunday opening rules across Germany, which permit cafes and restaurants while limiting most retail. Specialty bars in Eppendorf, St. Pauli, Sternschanze, and HafenCity generally open on Sundays. The Speicherstadt operations and Coffee Museum Burg keep weekend hours that draw both locals and visitors. Smaller neighborhood cafes in residential districts sometimes close fully on Sundays.

What is the difference between a Milchkaffee and a latte macchiato in Hamburg?

A Milchkaffee is the German-language equivalent of a French cafe au lait: roughly equal parts brewed coffee or filter coffee and steamed milk, served in a large cup or bowl. A latte macchiato is the Italian-derived layered drink with milk on the bottom, espresso poured through to create a darker middle layer, and foam on top, served in a tall glass. Both are common on Hamburg cafe menus. The Milchkaffee is the older, more traditionally German format. The latte macchiato is the espresso-bar standard.

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