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Best Coffee Shops in Prague

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About coffee in Prague

Prague has been a coffee city since the Habsburg era. The Kaffeehaus tradition arrived from Vienna in the late nineteenth century and took root in the same cultural register: marble tables, long stays, literary associations, the smell of cigarettes for most of the institution's history. Café Slavia, opened in 1881 across from the National Theatre, anchored the canonical Czech literary café for a century. Café Louvre, opened in 1902, hosted Albert Einstein and Franz Kafka and now hosts an unending stream of tourists.

The Czech version of the Kaffeehaus tradition was always slightly more democratic than the Viennese. Czech literature was largely written by working-class authors, journalists, and intellectuals operating outside the formal academy, and the cafés served as their offices and meeting rooms. Kafka wrote at the Café Continental and the Café Arco. Jaroslav Hašek wrote The Good Soldier Švejk in cafés across the city. The pattern has continued in postwar Czech literature.

The third wave arrived in Prague after 2010 and built rapidly. Můj šálek kávy in the Karlín district, founded in 2011, is the city's first major contemporary specialty café. doubleshot in Žižkov brought a more design-forward register and now operates a roastery and multiple cafés. EMA Espresso Bar in the New Town anchors the central specialty position. Onesip Coffee in Vinohrady serves a quieter neighborhood specialty register.

The neighborhoods stratify clearly. The Old Town and New Town hold the classical Kaffeehaus tradition almost intact, alongside more central specialty cafés. Karlín, east of the Old Town, holds the densest contemporary specialty culture, with Můj šálek kávy as the anchor. Žižkov and Vinohrady, both former working-class districts now gentrified, hold a mixed register. Smíchov, across the river, holds a smaller specialty pocket. Holešovice in the north has emerged as the most contemporary district in the last five years.


What separates Prague from Vienna is the price. A Mélange-equivalent at a Czech Kaffeehaus is half the price of the same drink at Café Central in Vienna. A specialty pour-over at Můj šálek kávy is two-thirds the price of an equivalent at Berlin's Bonanza. The favorable price has produced a café culture that operates comfortably below the income threshold required to participate in Western European specialty culture.

The city's contribution to global coffee is harder to identify. Prague has not exported a specific coffee form the way Italy exported espresso or Australia exported the flat white. What Prague has done is preserve the Habsburg Kaffeehaus alongside a contemporary specialty wave with unusual integration. A Prague café day can include a Café Slavia visit at noon and a Můj šálek kávy visit at four, and both transactions feel native.

What surprises a visitor is the literacy. Prague café culture is fundamentally connected to reading and writing. The newspapers are still on the wall at Café Slavia. The tables at Můj šálek kávy fill with people working on novels and essays. The institution remains, in 2025, what it was in 1925: a place to think on paper.

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COFFEE SHOPS IN PRAGUE — PAGE 8 OF 10

Klanicovo pekařství

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M’Roll

8, Dittrichova, Praha

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Crêpe

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Čajovna a kavárna Legenda Draka a Fenixe

Specialty

500, Smilova

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Edward Cafe

Specialty

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U Doroty

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VotrubaKafe

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Národní kavárna

14, Olomoucká

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Kvalitka

Specialty

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Mansson's Bakery

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Cukrárna Hukvaldy

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Kofi Kofi

Specialty

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Cecilie

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Zrnko zrnko

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DTG Restaurant

530/26, Evropská, Praha

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Nádražka Róza

Specialty

89, Nádražní

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Cafe Doubek

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DéKáčko

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Mámechuť organic

Specialty

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Smékalovo pekařství

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WAKE UP CAFÉ

511 Pasecká

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Mňam Mňam

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Nejen Čajenka

Specialty

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Tali's Cafe

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U Dvou rohlíků

934/2, Barvitiova

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Dammann Freres

Specialty

2015/4, Masarykovo nábřeží

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Vivo

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Paul

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Zámecká kavárna

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Perla

Specialty

37

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Kavárna Fidla

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Kafe na kašně

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Kavárna Pepe

Specialty

1349/2a, Makovského

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Kynutá buchta

15, Náměstí

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Kafe Vajb

52, Fortna

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Café Loggie

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Shi-Sha II

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COOP café

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Kavárna na zámku

Specialty

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Farmářský Dům

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Tchibo

Specialty

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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CAFE LEVEL

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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Starbucks

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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OXO Tea

Specialty

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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Oxalis

Specialty

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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Costa

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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PANORAMA

Specialty

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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Royaltea

Specialty

2799, Masarykovo náměstí

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Kávotěka Korunní

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Hong Yuan

1185/45, Korunní, Praha

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Bistro na cestě

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Něco sladkého

Specialty

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Chelsea

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Pražírna Nová Strast

Specialty

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Boardgame Cafe

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Spell Coffee

Specialty

20, Jindřišská

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Café Gusto

Specialty

83/7, Náměstí

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kulturní dům Echo

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Maison Cafe

Specialty

585, Žitomírská

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Cafe Reunion

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Showing shops 421-480 of 4,508 in Prague.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Prague

The Old Town and New Town, including Wenceslas Square and the streets around the Astronomical Clock, hold the classical Kaffeehaus tradition. Café Slavia near the National Theatre is the canonical literary café. Café Louvre on Národní opens early and stays late. Café Imperial, opened in 1914, holds an Art Nouveau room that has been preserved with care. The cafés serve both tourists and working Czech residents.

Karlín, east of the Old Town, holds the densest contemporary specialty coffee culture in Prague. Můj šálek kávy on Kollárova is the canonical specialty address. The neighborhood has gentrified rapidly in the last decade and now holds a serious café culture serving a young, design-aware demographic. The pace is slower than the Old Town and the rooms are larger.

Žižkov, the historic working-class district north of the New Town, holds a mixed register. Doubleshot operates here as the anchor specialty establishment. Older Czech cafés serve traditional drinks alongside the contemporary wave. The neighborhood has a strong literary and bohemian culture, and the cafés reflect that.

Vinohrady, the residential district east of the New Town, holds a quieter neighborhood register. Onesip Coffee anchors the contemporary specialty position. The cafés serve the resident population and operate at a slower pace than the Old Town.


Holešovice, the former industrial district in the north, has emerged as the most contemporary café district in the last five years. The DOX Centre for Contemporary Art has helped anchor the neighborhood, and a wave of newer cafés serves the creative class that has moved here.

Smíchov, across the river, holds a smaller specialty pocket alongside the older Czech café culture that has long operated in this working-class district.

What to expect in Prague

Order at the table or at the counter, depending on the café. Czech Kaffeehauses operate on the European sit-down service model. You find a table, the waiter comes, you order, you eat or drink, and you ask for the bill when you are ready to leave. Specialty cafés operate on counter service: order, pay, sit or take away.

Káva is the Czech word for coffee. Espresso, the same drink as elsewhere, is widely available. Vídeňská káva is the Viennese coffee, espresso topped with whipped cream, similar to the Einspänner but served in a cup rather than a glass. Bílá káva is the white coffee, similar to a French café au lait, served at breakfast with bread.

Specialty cafés operate in the international register. Single-origin pour-overs, espressos, flat whites, and lattes are all widely available. Filter coffee, in the form of daily batch brews, has become standard at most contemporary cafés.

Prices are favorable for a major European specialty city. Espresso at a neighborhood café runs forty to seventy Czech crowns. Specialty pour-overs at contemporary cafés run eighty to one hundred fifty crowns. The same drinks at Vienna or Berlin specialty cafés cost two to three times more.


Hours run early to evening. Most cafés open by eight and close by nine or ten in the evening, with longer hours at central tourist establishments. Sunday hours are slightly reduced.

Tipping is standard at five to ten percent. Rounding up to a whole number is conventional. The Czech round-up tipping convention is similar to the Austrian tradition.

How earning works in Prague

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Prague. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 4,508 coffee shops in Prague 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. Prague’s 735 specialty shops make even the top milestone challenges achievable for a serious coffee drinker.

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FURTHER READING

The 10 Best Coffee Cities in AmericaHow to Find Great Coffee Anywhere You TravelSpecialty Coffee vs. Chain Coffee: What You Are Actually Paying For

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Frequently asked questions

Where is the best café in Prague?

Several Prague cafés are defensible answers. Café Slavia near the National Theatre holds the canonical literary register, opened in 1881. Můj šálek kávy in Karlín is the city's most respected contemporary specialty address. Doubleshot in Žižkov runs a roastery and multiple cafés at international specialty standards. The right answer depends on whether you want a heritage Kaffeehaus or a contemporary specialty café. Both registers operate at high quality.

How is Prague coffee different from Vienna coffee?

Prague and Vienna share the Habsburg Kaffeehaus tradition. The Czech version is generally less ornate, slightly more democratic in social register, and significantly cheaper. Both cities preserve the long-stay culture, the marble tables, and the literary associations. Vienna's specialty wave has built more slowly than Prague's. The price difference is the most significant practical distinction: a Prague Kaffeehaus costs roughly half what an equivalent Vienna Kaffeehaus charges.

What is bílá káva?

Bílá káva is Czech for white coffee, a breakfast drink similar to a French café au lait. The drink is made with brewed coffee or espresso and steamed or warm milk, served in a larger cup at breakfast alongside bread or a Czech pastry. The drink is part of the traditional Czech morning ritual and is widely available at neighborhood cafés.

Where is specialty coffee in Prague?

Specialty coffee in Prague is concentrated in Karlín, Žižkov, and Vinohrady. Můj šálek kávy, doubleshot, EMA Espresso Bar, and Onesip Coffee are the most respected addresses. The total specialty café count in Prague has grown rapidly since 2015 and now includes serious roasters across most central neighborhoods. The classical Kaffeehaus tradition continues to operate alongside the specialty wave at high quality and significantly lower prices than equivalent Western European cities.

Did Kafka write in Prague cafés?

Yes. Franz Kafka wrote at Café Continental, Café Arco, and several other Prague cafés through the early twentieth century. The Café Arco, in particular, hosted a circle of German-speaking Jewish Prague writers including Kafka, Max Brod, and Franz Werfel. The literary association between Prague cafés and Kafka's work continues to drive tourist traffic to specific addresses, although Kafka himself worked at multiple cafés throughout the city.

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