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Best Coffee Shops in London

18247 coffee shops in London. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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London's specialty coffee scene exploded in the 2010s and now rivals Melbourne and Tokyo. The density of quality in Shoreditch, Bermondsey, and Soho is extraordinary. London roasters consistently medal at world competitions.

Best neighborhoods: Shoreditch, Bermondsey, Soho, King's Cross, Hackney

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About coffee in London

London drinks coffee differently than it drinks tea. Tea is private. It happens at home, with milk and sugar, with a kettle and a mug and someone you know. Coffee is public. It happens out, in a café, with a flat white, between meetings or before them. The British took to specialty coffee with the convert's enthusiasm and built a scene that rivaled Melbourne's by 2015 and arguably exceeded it by 2020.

The story starts in Monmouth Coffee, established in 1978 in Covent Garden, which sourced and roasted in a way that is now standard but was not at the time. Square Mile Coffee Roasters, founded in 2008 by James Hoffmann and Anette Moldvaer, became the city's most influential specialty roaster. Workshop Coffee, opened in 2010 on Wigmore Street, set the Tokyo-influenced precision benchmark that newer cafés worked from. Allpress, an Australian import that opened in Shoreditch in 2010, reframed how a roastery could function as a public café.

By 2015, London had specialty cafés in every zone of the city. Clerkenwell, Shoreditch, Soho, Borough Market, and Notting Hill held the densest concentration. The flat white, originally an Australian and New Zealand drink, became the de facto London ordering default in a way it never quite did in Melbourne or Wellington. The drink fits the city's pace: small, punchy, drinkable in five minutes.

The neighborhoods do their work. Clerkenwell is the design and architecture register, with cafés that operate with the precision of small architectural firms. Shoreditch and Dalston run the contemporary craft register, with multiple roasters and multiple respected addresses on every block. Soho holds the highest density of older establishments. Borough Market and Bermondsey, just south of the Thames, have a food and beverage culture that the cafés feed off. Notting Hill is more residential, with a quieter specialty scene that locals know and tourists rarely find.


What separates London from Paris is the speed. A Parisian flat white is a leisurely transaction. A London flat white is a punctuation mark. People drink coffee on the way to work, on the way to a meeting, on the way home. The cafés are designed for this: counters, takeaway cups, fast turnover. A few cafés, particularly in Marylebone and Notting Hill, offer the slower seated experience, but the city's center of gravity is the takeaway.

Within the larger café ecosystem, the high-street chains hold a distinct market. Pret a Manger, Costa, and Caffè Nero all serve coffee that ranges from acceptable to good. They do not compete with the specialty scene. They coexist with it. The post-2015 specialty wave produced enough independent cafés that even within a hundred meters of any chain, you can usually find a credible alternative.

The British specialty scene's contribution to global coffee is perhaps the milk technique. London baristas are trained on milk to a degree that you do not see consistently in any other major specialty city, and the flat white done well, with thick microfoam and tight pouring, is a London signature.

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Top Coffee Shops in London

  1. Clissold Spice Cafe in London.
  2. Friddles Cakes Cafe in London.
  3. Yauatcha Cafe in London.
  4. Gaya’s Cafe in London.
  5. Grand Chai Cafe in London.
  6. La Gelatiera Cafe in London.
  7. Tenshi Cafe in London.
  8. Oriental Star Cafe in London.
  9. Digby's Cafe on Saint John's Hill.
  10. Café de Nata Cafe on 25b.

COFFEE SHOPS IN LONDON

Cake De La Cookies

184, Hoxton Street, London

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Gaya’s

253, Putney Bridge Road, London

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Sakurado

66, Shaftesbury Avenue, London

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Ladurée

London

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The Royal

Boston Road, London

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Lola's Cupcakes

Horner Square, London

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DYCE

27, James Street, London

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Cataleya Cakes

129, High Street South, London

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Millwall Cafe

3, Bolina Road, London

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Delight Wedlinka

290;292, Hoe Street, London

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Laduree

5, London

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Maître Choux

57,59, King’s Road, London

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Unit 3

London

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Café de Nata

25b, Broadway Shopping Centre, London

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Monocle

34, Chiltern Street, London

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Hummingbird Bakery

39, St John's Wood High Street, London

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Friddles Cakes

16, Highbridge Wharf, London

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Vivian Food & Cakes

21, Rowan Road, London

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WA

32, Haven Green, London

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Heavenly Desserts

29, New Broadway, London

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La Gelatiera

27, New Row, London

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Maset

40-42, Chiltern Street, London

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Oporto

280, Portobello Road, London

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Hummingbird Bakery

11, Frying Pan Alley, London

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Adali Cake Patisserie

8, Grand Parade, London

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Daydreamer

64, Honor Oak Park, London

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Kings Mediterranean

308, Earl's Court Road, London

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Buns From Home

47, The Broadway, London

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Patiserie Rayan Bakeries

57, Minerva Road, London

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Kova Patisserie

20A, Newport Court, London

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Oriental Star

134, Finchley Road, London

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Lanka

9, Goldhurst Terrace, London

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Grand Chai

192, Mile End Road, London

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Parkway Patisserie

355, Regent's Park Road, London

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Clissold Spice

150, Green Lanes, London

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Yauatcha

32, Broadgate Circle, London

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Kimos

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Granger & Co. Chelsea

237, Pavilion Road, London

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The Still Room

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Casa Desserts

273, Portobello Road, London

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Cake Box

334, Holloway Road, London

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Mr. G's Cafe

222, Mile End Road, London

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Chango

31, Royal Exchange Buildings, London

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Balans Soho Society Cafe

34, Old Compton Street, London

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Tenshi

61, Upper Street, London

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Chai Bites

162A, Mile End Road, London

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Aux Merveilleux de Fred

Unit 49, London

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Patty & Bun

23-27, The Arcade, London

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Digby's

Saint John's Hill, London

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Costa

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Showing 50 of 18,247 coffee shops in London. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in London

Clerkenwell, the small neighborhood between the City and Farringdon, holds Prufrock Coffee on Leather Lane as the canonical address. The area surrounding St. John Street holds enough credible cafés that you cannot walk three minutes without passing one.

Shoreditch and the surrounding area, including Hoxton and Dalston, hold the densest specialty coffee culture in London. Allpress on Redchurch Street, Ozone on Old Street, and Climpson and Sons in Hackney are anchors. Newer additions include Climpson''s Arch and a wave of roasteries-turned-cafés. The neighborhood''s identity is half coffee, half creative industry.

Soho, the central entertainment district, holds older establishments that have weathered changes in the city. Bar Italia on Frith Street, opened in 1949, remains a working-class Italian espresso bar in the heart of the West End. Specialty cafés including Flat White and several newer addresses operate alongside.

Borough Market, just south of the Thames, and the broader Bermondsey area form a food and beverage culture that supports several specialty roasteries. Monmouth Coffee''s Borough Market location, opened in 2001, is one of the most respected specialty cafés in the city. The Bermondsey Roastery District includes Square Mile, Climpson, and others within a short walk.


Notting Hill and West London hold a quieter, more residential specialty scene. Allpress on Westbourne Grove and a network of smaller cafés serve the neighborhood without the foot traffic of Soho or Shoreditch.

Marylebone holds Workshop Coffee''s Marylebone branch and a small concentration of newer cafés. The neighborhood pace is slower than Soho, and the cafés tend to operate in the seated register.

What to expect in London

Order at the counter, then sit or take away. Most London specialty cafés operate on the takeaway model: order at the till, pay, receive the drink in a paper cup, leave. Sit-down customers receive ceramic. The split is roughly seventy-thirty toward takeaway in central London, more even in residential neighborhoods.

The flat white is the default. London baristas pour flat whites with thick microfoam, tight latte art, and a slightly stronger ratio of espresso to milk than the cappuccino. Cappuccinos exist but are less common. Lattes are common but considered a slightly less serious order. Filter coffee, in the form of a daily batch brew or a single-origin pour-over, has gained ground since 2018 and is now standard at any specialty café.

Prices are relatively consistent across central London. A flat white runs three-fifty to four-fifty depending on the neighborhood. Filter coffee is typically two-fifty to three-fifty. Specialty pour-overs at the higher end can reach five or six pounds. High-street chains charge three to three-fifty for the equivalent drink.

Hours run early to evening. Most cafés open by seven for the breakfast rush and close around four or five, with longer hours in shopping districts and tourist areas. Sunday opening hours are reduced.


Tipping is uncommon for takeaway and modest for sit-down. Rounding up the change is conventional. Tipping jars exist but are not heavily used.

The takeaway cup is universal. Most cafés will fill a personal reusable cup and offer a small discount for doing so. The sustainability conversation has been internal to London's specialty culture for over a decade.

How earning works in London

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in London. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 18,247 coffee shops in London 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. London’s 3,879 specialty shops make even the top milestone challenges achievable for a serious coffee drinker.

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NEARBY CITIES

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FURTHER READING

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

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Frequently asked questions

Where is the best coffee in London?

Several London neighborhoods host high specialty coffee density. Workshop Coffee in Marylebone, Allpress in Shoreditch, Monmouth Coffee at Borough Market, Prufrock in Clerkenwell, and Ozone on Old Street are each defensible answers. The honest reply is that London no longer has a single best café and that any reasonable specialty café in central London will produce coffee comparable to the best Northern European cities.

What is the difference between a flat white and a cappuccino?

A flat white is smaller, typically six to eight ounces, with thick microfoam and a strong ratio of espresso to milk. A cappuccino is larger, around eight to ten ounces, with more steamed milk and a thicker layer of dry foam on top. Flat whites are an Australian and New Zealand invention that became standard in London after 2010. Cappuccinos are an Italian preparation that retains its tradition more loyally in Italy than in the UK.

Why did London develop specialty coffee so quickly?

London's specialty coffee scene developed primarily between 2008 and 2015, anchored by Monmouth Coffee, Workshop Coffee, Square Mile Coffee Roasters, and Allpress. The rapid scaling reflected several factors: a tea-dominant culture that left room for a coffee revolution, an internationally networked creative class, the influence of Australian and New Zealand baristas working in London, and a city center concentrated enough to support dense specialty café traffic. By the mid-2010s the city had achieved continental European specialty density.

Are the high-street chains the same as specialty coffee?

No. Pret a Manger, Costa, and Caffè Nero are quality high-volume chains that serve coffee at a different register than the specialty scene. The chains source beans more economically, train baristas in standardized methods, and prioritize speed over precision. Specialty cafés source from independent roasters, train more deeply on extraction and milk technique, and serve a smaller volume per location. Both registers exist comfortably in London, often within fifty meters of each other.

Where can I find filter coffee in London?

Filter coffee, in the form of batch brew or single-origin pour-over, is now standard at any London specialty café. Workshop, Allpress, Monmouth, Square Mile's pour-over bars, and Climpson and Sons all serve filter as part of the daily menu. The trend toward filter coffee gained ground in London after 2018 and now occupies roughly thirty percent of specialty café orders. The drink is more contemplative and produces a different flavor profile than espresso-based drinks.

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Other coffee cities in GB

Glasgow

39 shops

Grimsby

31 shops

Brighton

26 shops

Cardiff

24 shops

Blackwood

24 shops

Oldham

23 shops

Aberdeen

23 shops

Manchester

22 shops

Monmouth

19 shops

Cleethorpes

18 shops

Hove

18 shops

Rugby

18 shops

Sheffield

16 shops

Newport

15 shops

Edinburgh

14 shops

Chester

13 shops

Hartlepool

13 shops

Kirkintilloch

13 shops

Oxford

12 shops

York

12 shops