Best Coffee Shops in ISTANBUL
11868 coffee shops in ISTANBUL. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.
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About coffee in ISTANBUL
İstanbul straddles two coffee cultures. The traditional Turkish coffee tradition is one of the oldest in continuous practice (UNESCO-listed as an intangible cultural heritage), centered on finely ground beans boiled in a cezve, served unfiltered in small cups, often with a glass of water and a piece of Turkish delight. The third-wave specialty scene grew in the 2010s, concentrated in Karaköy, Cihangir, and parts of Beyoğlu on the European side, and Kadıköy on the Asian side. The two cultures share the city without much overlap.
The city has more than 15 million people and a coffee culture that operates across class, geography, and generation. Turkish coffee houses (kıraathane) have been social and political gathering places for centuries. The third-wave shops serve a younger, more affluent demographic with global tastes. In between are countless commercial cafes (some chains, some independents) serving the daily coffee for Turkish lira at a third or fourth of the specialty price.
For visitors, Turkish coffee is the cultural anchor and the third-wave shops are the recognizable third place. Both are worth time.
COFFEE SHOPS IN ISTANBUL — PAGE 6 OF 10
Showing shops 301-360 of 11,868 in Istanbul.
Best neighborhoods for coffee in ISTANBUL
Karaköy and Galata
The waterfront district below Beyoğlu has become İstanbul's strongest specialty cluster over the past decade. Kronotrop's Karaköy location, Petra Roasting Co, and a handful of smaller operators anchor the area. The neighborhood is walkable, has design-conscious cafes, and serves a mix of locals and visitors.
Cihangir
The expat-heavy hill neighborhood between Beyoğlu and the Bosphorus has a long tradition of cafe culture and has absorbed the third-wave scene fluidly. Smaller rooms, neighborhood pace, mixed clientele of Turkish residents and foreign expats.
Beyoğlu and İstiklal
The main pedestrian boulevard (İstiklal Caddesi) and the surrounding neighborhood host both historic kıraathane and modern cafes. Çukurcuma, the antique district adjacent, has small specialty operators worth seeking out.
Kadıköy (Asian side)
The Asian side neighborhood across the Bosphorus has built one of the city's most vibrant cafe scenes over the past 10 years. Federal Coffee, Coffee Department, and many smaller operators serve a young, locally-oriented crowd. Pricing is slightly lower than the European-side specialty shops. The neighborhood is walkable and dense with cafes.
Beşiktaş and Ortaköy
The Bosphorus-front neighborhoods have a mixed coffee scene: tourist cafes near the waterfront mosques, locals-only spots a few blocks inland, and a growing specialty presence in the residential streets.
Eminönü and the old city
The historic peninsula around Sultanahmet, Eminönü, and the Grand Bazaar is heavy on tourist cafes and historic kıraathane like Mandabatmaz (a famous traditional Turkish coffee house in the spice market area). Specialty is rare in this area; the traditional culture dominates.
What to expect in ISTANBUL
İstanbul coffee opens early in the working districts (by 7 in the morning) and stays open late (often past 10 in the evening). The pace is slower than European specialty scenes and faster than Italian bars. Conversation is normal volume; the cafe is a place for talking.
Turkish coffee
Turkish coffee is finely ground (finer than espresso grind), boiled in a small copper or brass cezve with water and sugar, poured unfiltered into a small cup. The grounds settle at the bottom. It is served with a glass of water (to clear the palate) and often a piece of Turkish delight or a small biscuit. Sugar is added during brewing in three standard levels: sade (no sugar), orta (medium), şekerli (sweet). The coffee is sipped slowly. Fortune-telling from the grounds (kahve falı) is a common social ritual after.
Third-wave specialty
The specialty wave is anchored by Kronotrop (with multiple locations across the city), Petra Roasting Co, Coffee Department, Federal Coffee, and a growing number of smaller operators. The bean program rotates Ethiopian, Kenyan, Colombian, and Brazilian single origins. Espresso is lighter than the traditional Turkish style. Pour-over is offered in most shops. Oat milk is widely available.
Pricing
A Turkish coffee at a traditional kıraathane runs ₺25 to ₺60 (roughly $0.75 to $2 USD at current exchange). A specialty espresso is ₺50 to ₺90, a pour-over ₺80 to ₺140. Pastries are ₺40 to ₺80. The Turkish lira has been volatile, so all prices are approximate and trend upward.
Practicalities
Card is accepted at most modern cafes; cash is safer at traditional kıraathane. Tipping is appreciated at specialty cafes (5 to 10% on table service). The pace allows for long sitting; an hour over a single coffee is unremarkable. Smoking is permitted at most outdoor tables and at some indoor cafes despite the formal ban.
How earning works in ISTANBUL
Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in ISTANBUL. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 11,868 coffee shops in ISTANBUL 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. ISTANBUL’s 1,929 specialty shops make even the top milestone challenges achievable for a serious coffee drinker.
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Get Pulled for Business →Frequently asked questions
Where can I find specialty coffee in Istanbul?
The densest specialty cluster is Karaköy, with Kronotrop, Petra Roasting Co, and several smaller operators within walking distance. Cihangir, Beyoğlu, and the Çukurcuma antique district round out the European side. Kadıköy on the Asian side has Federal Coffee, Coffee Department, and many neighborhood shops. Most specialty cafes open by 8 or 9 in the morning and close by 7 in the evening.
What is the coffee culture like in Istanbul?
Two parallel cultures. Turkish coffee is the cultural anchor: finely ground, boiled in a cezve, served unfiltered with a glass of water and Turkish delight. The third-wave specialty scene grew in the 2010s and is now well-established in Karaköy, Kadıköy, and parts of Beyoğlu. Both are worth visiting. The pace is unhurried, conversation is normal-volume, and cafes function as long-form social spaces.
When do Istanbul coffee shops typically open?
Most cafes open by 7 or 8 in the morning. Closing varies widely: many cafes stay open into the late evening (10 or 11 PM), particularly in Karaköy, Kadıköy, and the bar-adjacent neighborhoods. Specialty cafes tend toward European hours (closed by 7 or 8). Sundays see slightly shorter hours at some operators. Ramadan affects daytime hours at traditional cafes.
What is the typical price for coffee in Istanbul?
A Turkish coffee at a traditional kıraathane runs ₺25 to ₺60 (roughly $0.75 to $2 USD). A specialty espresso is ₺50 to ₺90, a pour-over ₺80 to ₺140. Pastries are ₺40 to ₺80. The Turkish lira has been volatile, so all prices are approximate and trend upward over time. Card is accepted at most modern cafes; cash is safer at traditional kıraathane.
What is the difference between Turkish coffee and espresso?
Turkish coffee is finely ground (finer than espresso), boiled in a cezve with water and sugar, served unfiltered with grounds settling at the bottom. Espresso is medium-coarse-ground, pressure-extracted through a portafilter, served filtered with a crema. The two are different traditions with different histories. Turkish coffee is UNESCO-listed as an intangible cultural heritage; espresso is the Italian tradition that spread globally via the third-wave specialty scene.
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