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Best Coffee Shops in New York

2749 coffee shops in New York. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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New York's coffee scene is as dense and competitive as the city itself. Every borough has developed its own café identity, from Brooklyn's artisan roasters to Manhattan's sleek espresso bars. Stumptown brought Portland's ethos to the East Coast, and the city's specialty scene has never looked back.

Best neighborhoods: Brooklyn, West Village, East Village, LIC, Williamsburg

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About coffee in New York

Joe Coffee opened on Waverly Place in Greenwich Village in 2003, founded by Jonathan Rubinstein, and is generally treated as the first specialty cafe in New York City. The opening predated the broader Brooklyn third wave by several years and trained a generation of operators who later opened their own bars across the boroughs. Joe Coffee was instrumental in establishing what became the recognizable Brooklyn-style specialty cafe, even though the founding room sat in Manhattan.

The wave that followed reshaped the city. Cafe Grumpy opened in Greenpoint in 2005, founded by Caroline Bell and Chris Timbrell, and built out a roasting program alongside its retail bars. Abraco opened in the East Village in 2007, founded by Jamie McCormick, and ran a small standing-room counter that became a reference point for espresso discipline. Stumptown Coffee Roasters opened its first New York City location inside the Ace Hotel on West 29th Street in 2009, which marked the moment the West Coast specialty wave fully crossed the country. The Ace Hotel bar still operates and remains one of the most photographed cafes in the city.

Through the 2010s the network thickened. La Colombe, founded by Todd Carmichael in Philadelphia, opened multiple New York City locations from the early 2010s onward. Variety Coffee Roasters built outward from Williamsburg. Devocion, a Colombian-owned operation, opened in Williamsburg with a focus on direct sourcing from Colombia. Sey Coffee opened in Bushwick and runs one of the most technically demanding roasting programs in the country. The result is a city where the top of the specialty market matches anything in Melbourne or Tokyo and where the working bar density across Brooklyn and Manhattan is among the highest in the world.

New York's coffee culture sits inside the broader register of the city: dense, fast, expensive, multilingual. Neighborhood bars in Park Slope or Astoria work as community rooms. Manhattan operators run on commuter and office traffic. The full network covers more than a dozen neighborhoods across four boroughs, and a serious circuit moves through Williamsburg, Greenpoint, the East Village, the West Village, Bushwick, and Long Island City within a single weekend. Prices have climbed steadily since 2015 and a flat white at a central specialty bar in 2026 lands at six to eight dollars.

Map of coffee shops in New York
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COFFEE SHOPS IN NEW YORK — PAGE 10 OF 10

Starbucks

22 Dey Street

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Round K by Sol

78 Canal Street

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The Shell

635, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Dunkin'

1351 Forest Avenue

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Dunkin'

770 Forest Avenue

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Dunkin'

4000 Hylan Boulevard

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KO Burger

1-3, Eldridge Street, New York

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Bings & Noodles

240, Sullivan Street, New York

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Butler

177 Lafayette Street

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Westville

2290 Broadway

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Haven

226, West 79th Street, New York

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Mochi Dolci & 222 Speakeasy

222 West 79th Street

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Joe's Steam Rice Roll

422, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Song'e Napule

464, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Celeste

502, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Alachi Masala

488, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Marinara

483, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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King Food Chen

489, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Madina Halal Deli

402, East 11th Street, New York

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Variety Cafe

368 Graham Avenue

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drip coffee makers

Specialty

75 Varick Street

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drip coffee makers

Specialty

32 Old Slip Plaza

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Panther Coffee

Specialty

131 Greene Street

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Délice Macarons

321, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Sarabeth's

423, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Chick-fil-A

700, 6th Avenue, New York

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Manhattan Diner

2532, Broadway, New York

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Brunch

Specialty

2210 Broadway

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Chip City

370 Columbus Avenue

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Wing Wah

2308, 1st Avenue, New York

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ONGI

109, West 37th Street, New York

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Mori

144, Sullivan Street, New York

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One Bite Omakase

411b, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Populares

51, Avenue B, New York

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L’Americana

51, Irving Place, New York

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Conwell Coffee Hall

Specialty

6 Hanover Street

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Grandma’s Home

56, West 22nd Street, New York

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Crown Fried Chicken

1867, Lexington Avenue, New York

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Congee Village

100, Allen Street, New York

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Island Grill

576, West 125th Street, New York

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Kimura

31, Saint Marks Place, New York

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Dunkin'

1939 Linden Boulevard

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Sai Cafe

6001 Fort Hamilton Parkway

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Picky Barista

667 Columbus Avenue

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My Food House

6, Eldridge Street, New York

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Rong Hang

38, Eldridge Street, New York

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NYC Cafe & Juice Bar

2327, 1st Avenue, New York

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Yue Lai Bakery

137, East Broadway, New York

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ViVi's Bubble Tea

6517 18th Avenue

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Il Cantinori

32, East 10th Street, New York

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Carol's Bun

139, East Broadway, New York

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Cassava House

2272 1st Avenue

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Teng Dragon

2260, 1st Avenue, New York

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Sapoara

2262, 1st Avenue, New York

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Native Noodles

2129, Amsterdam Avenue, New York

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Pixie Scout Canteen

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Nana's Green Tea

1250 Broadway

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Yi Fang Tea

Specialty

8413 20th Avenue

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COFFEE FACTORY

Specialty

718 Barton Avenue

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Berlin Döner

104, MacDougal Street, New York

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Showing shops 541-600 of 2,749 in New York.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in New York

Williamsburg, on the L train in north Brooklyn, holds the highest density of specialty bars in the city. Devocion runs a flagship on Grand Street with a focus on Colombian sourcing. Variety Coffee Roasters operates several locations across the neighborhood. The corridor along Bedford Avenue and Wythe pulls heavy weekend traffic from Manhattan.

Greenpoint, north of Williamsburg, is where Cafe Grumpy opened in 2005 and built out the early Brooklyn specialty register. The neighborhood retains a quieter, residential register than Williamsburg, with several smaller operators along Manhattan Avenue and Franklin Street.

Bushwick, southeast of Williamsburg, holds the technical end of the modern wave. Sey Coffee operates from the neighborhood and runs one of the country's most demanding roasting programs. The corridor along Wyckoff and Jefferson concentrates several smaller bars and roasters working in the same register.

The East Village and West Village in Manhattan hold the founding rooms of the modern wave. Joe Coffee opened on Waverly Place in 2003. Abraco opened in the East Village in 2007. The Stumptown bar inside the Ace Hotel on West 29th Street, opened in 2009, sits a short distance away and remains a reference point. The corridor through Soho and Tribeca continues the Manhattan register.


Long Island City, Astoria, and Harlem each hold smaller but distinct cafe networks that have built through the late 2010s and early 2020s. The register in these neighborhoods runs slower than Williamsburg or the East Village, with a higher share of community room operators and longer seating times.

What to expect in New York

Order a flat white, a cortado, or filter at most specialty bars. Prices run six to eight dollars for milk drinks at central operators, four to six for filter. Drip coffee at neighborhood rooms is three to four dollars. The city is one of the most expensive specialty markets in the United States and has aligned with San Francisco and London on price points.

Tipping is standard. Most counter readers prompt for fifteen, twenty, or twenty-five percent. Cash tipping is still common at smaller bars. Counter staff at the top operators are trained and direct, and most bars will discuss origin and process if asked.

Most specialty bars open at seven, with peak hours from eight to ten on weekdays. Weekend brunch traffic in Williamsburg, the East Village, and the West Village runs from nine to one. Most rooms close by five or six, though several Brooklyn operators run later. Lower Manhattan and Soho bars cluster around office hours and quiet on weekends.

The practical constraint is volume. The most photogenic bars including the Stumptown room at the Ace Hotel run lines of fifteen or twenty deep through peak hours. Smaller operators in Bushwick or Crown Heights stay walkable. Subway access is the planning variable: most circuits run through the L train into Brooklyn or the F into Park Slope and Carroll Gardens. Winter weather closes most outdoor seating from December through March.

How earning works in New York

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in New York. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 2,749 coffee shops in New York 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 2,749 shops in New York, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.

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NEARBY CITIES

BrooklynHobokenJersey CityPhiladelphiaBoston

FURTHER READING

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

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Frequently asked questions

Where should I drink in New York?

Start at Joe Coffee on Waverly Place for the founding room of the city's modern register, opened in 2003. Walk to the Stumptown bar inside the Ace Hotel on West 29th Street for the West Coast crossover moment from 2009. Cross into Brooklyn for Cafe Grumpy in Greenpoint, Devocion and Variety in Williamsburg, and Sey Coffee in Bushwick. Abraco in the East Village covers the small standing-counter end. The full circuit takes two or three days across Manhattan and Brooklyn.

How does New York coffee differ from Los Angeles coffee?

Los Angeles built its specialty wave outward from a roasting culture, with operators like Intelligentsia and G&B anchoring the market through the early 2010s. New York built outward from retail bars, with Joe Coffee in 2003 and Cafe Grumpy in 2005 establishing the cafe register before the wholesale roasting bench thickened. Los Angeles cafes are larger, more car-oriented, and more outdoor. New York rooms are smaller, denser, and built for foot traffic. Cup quality at the top of both markets is comparable in 2026.

Why does so much New York coffee come from Brooklyn?

Brooklyn had affordable warehouse and retail space when the specialty wave started building roasting capacity in the mid 2000s. Cafe Grumpy in Greenpoint anchored early. Stumptown's Ace Hotel opening in Manhattan in 2009 catalyzed the broader market, but Brooklyn rents and zoning supported the buildout of working roasteries that Manhattan could not match. Williamsburg, Greenpoint, and Bushwick now hold the densest cluster of bars and roasters in the city. The pattern mirrors what happened with East Austin and East London in the same period.

When did specialty coffee arrive in New York?

Joe Coffee opened on Waverly Place in 2003 and is the founding room. Cafe Grumpy followed in Greenpoint in 2005, and Abraco opened in the East Village in 2007. Stumptown's Ace Hotel location in 2009 marked the West Coast crossover. The full Brooklyn buildout ran through 2010 to 2015 with Devocion, Sey Coffee, and several others. By 2015 New York had a recognizable third wave matching anything in San Francisco or Portland, and the network has thickened through the late 2010s and early 2020s.

Is New York coffee worth the price?

At the top of the market, yes. Sey Coffee, Devocion, the Stumptown Ace Hotel bar, Joe Coffee, and Cafe Grumpy all run cup quality that matches anything in the world, and the bar discipline at the leading operators is consistent. Prices run six to eight dollars for milk drinks at central bars in 2026, which aligns with London and San Francisco. The neighborhood register at smaller rooms in Bushwick, Crown Heights, or Astoria offers comparable quality at slightly lower price points and shorter lines.

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Other coffee cities in US

Seattle

124 shops

Denver

28 shops

San Francisco

15 shops

San Diego

13 shops

San Jose

12 shops

Berkeley

11 shops

Boulder

10 shops