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Best Coffee Shops in Melbourne

5827 coffee shops in Melbourne. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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Melbourne is the undisputed capital of coffee in the Southern Hemisphere. The flat white was born here, and the city's obsession with quality has never let up. Fitzroy, Collingwood, and the CBD have the world's highest density of exceptional cafes.

Best neighborhoods: Fitzroy, Collingwood, CBD, South Yarra, Brunswick

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1,746
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About coffee in Melbourne

Melbourne is the city that taught the world how to drink coffee in the twenty-first century. The flat white, the small specialty café, the Australian-style barista, the latte art arms race, and the post-Italian inflection of espresso-with-milk culture all originated or were perfected here. The city now hosts more specialty cafés per capita than any other on the planet, and walking three blocks in Fitzroy or Brunswick produces five credible options.

The story starts with post-war Italian migration. Pellegrini's Espresso Bar, opened in 1954 on Bourke Street, was one of the first commercial espresso bars in Australia. The Italian model, the standing bar, the small cup, the after-dinner espresso, all came over with the migration wave. The Melbourne café culture grew from that foundation but moved past it within a few decades.

The third wave proper started in the late 1990s and accelerated through the 2000s. Mark Dundon and St. Ali in South Melbourne, the Brother Baba Budan project in the CBD, the Seven Seeds family of cafés, and a wave of small roasters in Brunswick and Collingwood built the modern Melbourne specialty model. Single-origin sourcing, light roasting, milk technique, latte art, all developed in Melbourne to a degree that became the global benchmark by 2010.

The flat white is the city's default order. The drink is small, six to eight ounces, with thick microfoam and a tighter espresso-to-milk ratio than the cappuccino. Melbourne baristas pour flat whites with a discipline that has been exported to London, New York, and beyond. The drink has become so identified with the city that ordering one in Melbourne is somewhat unnecessary, since it is the assumed default.


The neighborhoods stratify cleanly. Fitzroy holds the densest specialty culture in inner Melbourne. Brunswick and Collingwood run as specialty culture extensions to the north. South Melbourne and Richmond hold serious specialty alongside more residential café culture. The CBD has its own register, with high-volume cafés serving morning commuters at speed. Carlton, the Italian heritage district, still holds older Italian-style espresso bars alongside specialty newcomers.

What separates Melbourne from London, Berlin, or Tokyo is density. The city has more specialty cafés in absolute terms and per capita than any other major specialty market. A walking radius of fifteen minutes from any inner-Melbourne residential building contains at least ten specialty cafés. The competition keeps quality high and prices reasonable, though Melbourne specialty cafés have moved upmarket in the last five years.

The contribution to global coffee is several things at once. The flat white. The small specialty café. The barista as a respected craft profession. The latte art movement. Most of these were not invented in Melbourne but were professionalized here in a way that made them exportable to the rest of the world. London's flat white culture is essentially Melbourne, transplanted. Brooklyn's specialty culture borrowed heavily from Melbourne in its early years. Wellington and Auckland have their own claims, but Melbourne is the city most identified with the modern small specialty café model.

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COFFEE SHOPS IN MELBOURNE — PAGE 5 OF 10

harris.miller cafe

Pyrmont Bridge Road

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Carhole Cafe

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Eliette

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Batch Espresso

Specialty

320, Carlisle Street

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Jardin

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Sugar Salt Espresso

Specialty

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Nick's Food Corner

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Barham Bakery Cafe

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95 Espresso Bar

Specialty

95, Acland Street

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Who's Harry

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Counterweight Vinyl & Espresso

Specialty

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Lime Sandwich and Espresso Bar

Specialty

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Wall Foods Kitchen

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Gloria Jean's

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Harvest Cafe

Specialty

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Lux Foundry Cafe

21, Hope Street

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Mrs. Fields

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Pulp + Grind

Specialty

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Liv Eat

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Pete's Pies

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Blu Point

336-338, Russell Street

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Borghetti

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Frank's

97, Cavanagh Street

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Bendemeer General Store and Cafe

109-111, Caroline Street

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Glen's Bakery Cafe

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Oaks Cafe

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The Oaks Pantry

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Short Black Espresso Bar

Specialty

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All Round Coffee

Specialty

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Chatime

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The Coffee Club

Specialty

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Soul Origin

Specialty

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Boost Juice

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Godiva

Specialty

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Tier One Cafe

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St Ivy Cafe

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Sweet Espresso Bar

Specialty

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Lakeside Cafe

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Queens Cafe

138, Queensberry Street

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Woodside Green

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Thirtyfold Cafe

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Zest

Specialty

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Wish Upon a Cupcake

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Gundog Espresso

Specialty

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Milk Flower

Specialty

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Three Beans

Specialty

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The Pier Café

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Bethy's Café

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Zarb & Ru

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Peninsula Baker Boys Café

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Caffé Central

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Teej Cafe

760, Bourke Street

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Fuumi Fuumi

113, Rosslyn Street

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Recovery Cafe

3A, Carlton Street

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Three beens

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La Frasca

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Hunter Belle Cheese Room

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Chocolate soldier

Specialty

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Cafe ONE 88

188, Bayswater Road

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gram cafe & pancakes

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Showing shops 241-300 of 5,827 in Melbourne.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Melbourne

Fitzroy holds the densest specialty café culture in Melbourne. Industry Beans on Rose Street operates as a roastery and café and supplies many of the city''s restaurants. Proud Mary on Oxford Street is a longtime fixture. Atomica Caffe and a wider network of newer cafés operate within a ten-minute walk of any Fitzroy intersection. The neighborhood was the early Melbourne specialty heart and remains its center of gravity.

Brunswick, just north of Fitzroy along Sydney Road, holds the contemporary specialty extension. Padre Coffee, ST. ALi''s Brunswick branch, and a wave of newer cafés serve the residential neighborhood. The cafés are slightly more relaxed than Fitzroy, with more outdoor seating and slower turnover.

Collingwood and Abbotsford, east of the CBD, hold a mixed register of specialty cafés and food-and-coffee venues that operate as the city''s creative-industry hub. Proud Mary''s Collingwood branch, Auction Rooms, and a wide network of newer cafés support a neighborhood that has been the de facto creative industry base of Melbourne for two decades.

South Melbourne holds ST. ALi as the major specialty anchor. The neighborhood, mixing residential blocks and food markets, supports a more upmarket café register. Coffees here are typically more carefully sourced and slightly more expensive than in Fitzroy or Brunswick.


The CBD holds high-volume specialty cafés serving morning commuters. Patricia Coffee Brewers, Brother Baba Budan, and Krimper occupy the main CBD positions. The cafés operate at speed and are often standing-room only during the morning rush.

Carlton, the heritage Italian district north of the CBD, holds older Italian-style espresso bars alongside specialty newcomers. Pellegrini''s remains the canonical heritage anchor, opened in 1954.

What to expect in Melbourne

Order at the counter. Most Melbourne specialty cafés operate on a fast counter-service model. You walk up, order at the till, pay, and either sit or wait at the counter for the drink. Cash is increasingly rare, and most cafés are card-only or PayWave-only.

The flat white is the default. Asking for "a coffee" in Melbourne typically gets you a flat white unless the barista has reason to ask. Cappuccinos exist but are less common. Lattes are common but considered a slightly less serious order in specialty cafés. Magic, a Melbourne local term, refers to a specific small flat white made with a double ristretto and silky milk, served in a smaller cup. Asking for one outside the inner suburbs may produce confusion.

Filter coffee is widely available at specialty cafés. Single-origin pour-overs and batch brews have gained ground since 2015. Many cafés will offer a daily filter alongside the espresso menu.

Prices are higher than they were a decade ago. Flat whites run four-fifty to five-fifty in inner-city specialty cafés, and seven-plus at the higher end of single-origin pour-overs. The high-street chains in the CBD charge slightly less. Suburban and outer-urban specialty cafés run lower prices.


Hours are dominated by mornings. Most specialty cafés open by seven for the breakfast and morning rush. Closing times are typically four to five in the afternoon, earlier than European cafés. Sundays may have shorter hours but most cafés open.

Tipping is uncommon. Rounding up the change is appreciated but not required. Tipping jars exist in some cafés but are not heavily used.

How earning works in Melbourne

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Melbourne. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 5,827 coffee shops in Melbourne 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. Melbourne’s 1,746 specialty shops make even the top milestone challenges achievable for a serious coffee drinker.

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NEARBY CITIES

SydneyBrisbaneAdelaideGeelongBallarat

FURTHER READING

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

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Frequently asked questions

Where was the flat white invented?

The flat white was developed in Sydney and Auckland in the 1980s. The exact attribution is debated between Australia and New Zealand, with both countries holding plausible claims to specific cafés that served the drink first. It became internationally known in the 2010s when Australian-style cafés opened in London, New York, and other global cities. Melbourne was not the first city to serve the flat white but became the most identified with the drink globally.

Why does Melbourne have so much specialty coffee?

Melbourne's specialty coffee density grew from post-war Italian migration, a preserved walkable urban center, and a 2000s wave of independent roasters who built the modern third-wave model. The city now hosts more specialty cafés per capita than any other. The combination of a coffee-aware population, accessible commercial real estate in the inner suburbs, and a strong barista training pipeline produced a density that took thirty years to build and is unlikely to be replicated elsewhere.

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

A flat white uses a smaller volume, typically six to eight ounces versus ten to twelve, and has thinner microfoam, producing a more pronounced espresso flavor. A latte has more steamed milk, more foam, and a milder coffee character. The proportions vary by city, but the smaller, espresso-forward profile of the flat white is consistent. The Melbourne flat white tends to use a slightly stronger espresso ratio than the same drink served in London.

What is a magic coffee?

A magic is a Melbourne local term for a small flat white made with a double ristretto and silky milk, served in a smaller cup than a standard flat white, typically five ounces. The drink originated in Melbourne specialty cafés in the 2000s and remains primarily a local order. Asking for a magic in Sydney, Auckland, or anywhere else in the English-speaking specialty world may produce confusion. Within inner Melbourne it is a common order.

Where is the best coffee in Melbourne?

ST. ALi in South Melbourne, Industry Beans in Fitzroy, Proud Mary in Collingwood, and Patricia Coffee Brewers in the CBD are each defensible answers. The honest reply is that Melbourne has more credible specialty cafés than any other city on earth, and any reasonable selection of cafés in Fitzroy, Brunswick, or the CBD will produce coffee at the global standard. The single best café is contested annually and the contest has no winner.

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