Best Coffee Shops in Ljubljana
742 coffee shops in Ljubljana. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.
Get PulledAbout coffee in Ljubljana
Slovenia declared independence on June 25, 1991, and Ljubljana became the capital of a country whose coffee culture had already been formed by two centuries inside the Habsburg orbit. Vienna's Kaffeehaus tradition reached the city through Trieste, eighty kilometers to the west, and the result is a café register that reads as Central European rather than Mediterranean. Espresso runs through the day, but it sits next to long sittings, newspapers on wooden rods, and a slow pace that predates the specialty wave by several generations.
The oldest seats in the city carry that lineage directly. Kavarna Zvezda has operated near Tivoli Park since 1965 and remains the reference point for a traditional Ljubljana morning, with cream cakes and small ceramic cups served by waiters in white shirts. Slaščičarna Pri Vodnjaku and Cafetino sit in a similar register, closer to a Viennese pastry shop than an Italian bar, with sweet pastries built into the ordering ritual rather than treated as an afterthought.
The specialty wave arrived in the 2010s and grew quickly inside a small geography. Stow Café Roastery anchors the modern roasting register. Black Dog Coffee operates in the same orbit. Cabinet Café focuses on a tight rotation of single origins. The most cited operator is Cokl, founded by Tina Cokl, the first Q-grader in Slovenia, whose work in the city's center sits at the intersection of green sourcing, training, and a public-facing bar. The cluster is small enough that a serious drinker can move through the entire roster on foot in a single day.
The Triple Bridge designed by Joze Plecnik connects the medieval old town on the right bank of the Ljubljanica river to the Presernov trg square on the left. The structure is the spine of the central café district, and most of the Habsburg-era seats sit within five minutes of it. Plecnik's interventions across the city, from the river embankments to the Central Market, give the café streets a clear architectural register that distinguishes Ljubljana from other former Yugoslav capitals.
The scene is shaped by its size. The city has roughly 290,000 residents, the country has two million, and the specialty cluster sits inside a center small enough to walk across in twenty minutes. Italian and Austrian influence is constant: many cafés serve Lavazza or Illy alongside their own roasts, and the ordering language switches between Slovenian, Italian, and German without friction. The result is a coffee culture with two layers running in parallel, the Habsburg sit-down tradition and a younger specialty register, both healthy.
Top Coffee Shops in Ljubljana
- Valentinin Kotiček — Serious coffee. Ljubljana.
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- Cafe Byron — The real thing. Ljubljana.
- Osare Caffè — The real thing. Ljubljana.
- Grajski vrt ART&DECO CAFE — Craft coffee in Ljubljana.
- Caffe — Serious coffee. Ljubljana.
- Lipa — Craft coffee in Ljubljana.
- Barjan — Craft coffee in Ljubljana.
- Airside coffee shop — Specialty coffee in Ljubljana.
- Bar (2 locations) — Craft coffee in Ljubljana. 2 locations.
COFFEE SHOPS IN LJUBLJANA
Showing 50 of 742 coffee shops in Ljubljana. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.
Best neighborhoods for coffee in Ljubljana
Center covers the medieval old town along both banks of the Ljubljanica river and holds the densest concentration of cafés in the country. Cokl, Cabinet, and most of the heritage kavarnas sit within five minutes of the Triple Bridge. The streets are pedestrianized and the river embankments serve as outdoor seating from May through October.
Trnovo sits south of the center across the Gradascica creek and reads as a quieter residential pocket with a steady café register. The neighborhood is anchored by the Trnovo Bridge and the church of Saint John the Baptist. Cafés here lean local rather than tourist-facing, with longer sittings and a stronger weekday morning crowd.
Siska runs northwest of the center and is the largest residential district in the city. The specialty register thins out but Stow Café Roastery operates here, drawing serious drinkers from across the city. The neighborhood mixes apartment blocks, smaller bars, and a more domestic café rhythm.
Bezigrad sits north of the railway station and holds a working-class register with academic edges thanks to the proximity of the university campus. Cafés here serve students and office workers in roughly equal measure. Prices run slightly below the center.
Metelkova, just east of the train station, is a former military barracks turned cultural center, with cafés that sit closer to a bar than a kavarna and stay open later than the rest of the city.
What to expect in Ljubljana
Order at the bar or sit down and wait for table service, both are normal. A standard espresso runs around 1.50 to 2.00 euros at a traditional kavarna and 2.00 to 2.80 euros at a specialty bar. Cappuccino sits between 2.20 and 3.50 euros. A bela kava, the local milk coffee, is the default for older drinkers and arrives in a larger cup with foamed milk. Filter and pour-over are available at Stow, Cokl, Cabinet, and Black Dog, typically priced between 3.50 and 5.00 euros depending on the origin. Cake is part of the ritual at heritage seats: kremsnita, potica, and apple strudel all sit on the menu next to the espresso list. Tipping is not expected but rounding up is common. Most cafés open between 7 and 8 in the morning and close by 8 or 9 in the evening, with traditional kavarnas running longer hours on weekends. Sunday closures are unusual in the center but common outside it. Outdoor seating along the Ljubljanica river runs from late spring into October and is the default in warm months. Card payment is accepted almost everywhere. Smoking is banned indoors and tolerated on terraces. Most baristas in specialty seats speak fluent English; older waiters in heritage cafés default to Slovenian, Italian, or German.
How earning works in Ljubljana
Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Ljubljana. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 742 coffee shops in Ljubljana 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. Ljubljana’s shop density makes these challenges achievable for an active coffee drinker.
FURTHER READING
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Get Pulled for Business →Frequently asked questions
How much does a coffee cost in Ljubljana?
An espresso runs 1.50 to 2.00 euros at a traditional kavarna and 2.00 to 2.80 euros at a specialty bar. Cappuccino is 2.20 to 3.50 euros. Filter and pour-over at the specialty roasters, including Stow, Cokl, Cabinet, and Black Dog, sit between 3.50 and 5.00 euros depending on the origin. Heritage seats like Kavarna Zvezda price slightly above the average given the table service and the cake program. Card payment is accepted almost everywhere in the center.
What is the best specialty coffee in Ljubljana?
Cokl, founded by Tina Cokl, the first Q-grader in Slovenia, is the reference point and pairs a public bar with green sourcing and training work. Stow Café Roastery is the most cited modern roaster in the city and runs a full filter program. Black Dog Coffee and Cabinet Café round out the core specialty cluster. All four sit in or close to the center and can be visited on foot in a single morning.
Are there traditional Habsburg-style cafés in Ljubljana?
Yes. Kavarna Zvezda has operated near Tivoli Park since 1965 and remains the clearest expression of the Viennese-influenced Slovenian kavarna tradition, with white-shirted waiters, table service, and a serious cake program. Slascicarna Pri Vodnjaku and Cafetino sit in the same register. The format reflects two centuries of Habsburg rule before Slovenian independence in 1991, and the influence runs through Trieste rather than directly from Vienna.
When did specialty coffee arrive in Ljubljana?
The wave grew through the 2010s, roughly twenty years after Slovenia gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. The cluster developed in tight geography, with most specialty bars opening within walking distance of the Triple Bridge. Italian and Austrian influence remained strong throughout, and many specialty seats serve Lavazza or Illy alongside their own roasts. Cokl, Stow, Black Dog, and Cabinet Café anchor the modern register today.
What time do cafés open and close in Ljubljana?
Most cafés open between 7 and 8 in the morning. Specialty roasters tend to close by 6 or 7 in the evening, while traditional kavarnas run until 9 or 10, and on weekends sometimes later. Sunday hours are reduced outside the center but the cafés along the Ljubljanica river typically open every day. Outdoor terraces along the embankments run from late April through October and shape the rhythm of café-going in warm months.
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