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Best Coffee Shops in San Francisco

1797 coffee shops in San Francisco. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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San Francisco helped define third wave coffee in America. The Mission District alone has more specialty roasters per block than most cities have total. Blue Bottle started here, and Ritual, Sightglass, and Equator have kept the city at the forefront of American coffee culture.

Best neighborhoods: Mission, Hayes Valley, SoMa, North Beach, Inner Sunset

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About coffee in San Francisco

Caffè Trieste opened on Vallejo Street in North Beach in 1956, founded by Giovanni Giotta, known as Papa Gianni, an immigrant from the Italian fishing village of Rovereto, and was the first espresso bar on the West Coast of the United States. The room has run continuously for nearly seventy years, hosting Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, and Francis Ford Coppola, who reportedly drafted parts of The Godfather screenplay at one of the back tables. The bar is not a museum piece. It still pulls espresso every day, and the lineage from Italian immigrant North Beach through to the modern American specialty wave runs directly through this room.

The city's role in shaping global specialty coffee is hard to overstate. Trish Rothgeb, working in the Bay Area, published the essay that introduced the term third wave in 2002, describing the movement that was already forming around a small group of American roasters and bars. The framework she set down, treating coffee as an agricultural product with origin specificity equivalent to wine, became the foundational vocabulary for the global specialty industry. The format she described took its clearest physical shape in San Francisco cafés over the following decade.

The modern specialty register began with Blue Bottle Coffee, founded by James Freeman in Oakland in 2002 and expanded to the Mint Plaza location in San Francisco in 2008. Ritual Coffee Roasters opened in the Mission in 2005 under Eileen Hassi Rinaldi. Sightglass Coffee, founded by brothers Jerad and Justin Morrison, opened in SoMa in 2009. Four Barrel Coffee opened on Valencia Street in the Mission in 2008. Saint Frank Coffee opened in Russian Hill in 2013. Mr. Espresso, the family-run Oakland roaster operating since 1978, supplies many of the heritage Italian seats across the bay. The cluster is denser than in any other American city and the cafés sit within walking distance of one another in several neighborhoods.

North Beach holds the heritage register. Caffè Trieste anchors the cluster, with Caffè Roma on Columbus Avenue running a second-generation Italian bar in the same block. The Mission holds the specialty heart, with Ritual on Valencia Street and Four Barrel a few blocks south. SoMa and Hayes Valley run a denser modern register tied to the technology workforce, with Sightglass on 7th Street and Blue Bottle at Mint Plaza. The geography of the city, hilly and walkable, makes a serious café crawl possible across most of the central neighborhoods.


The broader cultural context places the city at the intersection of immigrant Italian café tradition, Pacific Rim coffee sourcing, technology-industry purchasing power, and the design language that has shaped global specialty café aesthetics for two decades. The format set down here, light roasts, single origins, manual brewing on the bar, minimal ornamentation, has been copied in cities from Berlin to Seoul. The original sits in San Francisco.

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Top Coffee Shops in San Francisco

  1. Spuntino Specialty cafe in San Francisco.
  2. The Station Specialty cafe on Pacific Avenue.
  3. Eagle Cafe Specialty cafe in San Francisco.
  4. Souvenir Coffee Specialty cafe on Divisadero Street.
  5. Kawanoya Cafe in San Francisco.
  6. Kim Huong Cafe on Leavenworth Street.
  7. Cherry Blossom Bakery Cafe in San Francisco.
  8. Provender Cafe on 18th Street.
  9. Hi-T Cafe and Deli Cafe on Mission Street.
  10. Sing Sing Cafe on Hyde Street.

COFFEE SHOPS IN SAN FRANCISCO

Souvenir Coffee

Specialty

262 Divisadero Street

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The Station

Specialty

596 Pacific Avenue

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Eagle Cafe

Specialty

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Spuntino

Specialty

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Kim Huong

325 Leavenworth Street

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Baklava Story

1830 Harrison Street

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Little Chihuahua

581, Valencia Street, San Francisco

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Crepes A GoGo

Columbus Avenue, San Francisco

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V & J Cafe

670 Broadway

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V Cafe

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Farm:Table

754 Post Street

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Sightglass

301 Divisadero Street

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Mara's Italian Pastry

503, Columbus Avenue, San Francisco

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Foundation Cafe

335 Kearny Street

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Glaze Donuts

4499, Mission Street, San Francisco

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Damansara

1781, Church Street, San Francisco

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Z & Y Restaurant

655, Jackson Street, San Francisco

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Homegrown

222 Battery Street

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Red House Bakery and Cafe

2818, San Bruno Avenue, San Francisco

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Dandelion Chocolate Factory & Café

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Le Marché Cezanne

1426 18th Street

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New Pacific Court Cafe

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Yank Sing

101, Spear Street, San Francisco

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Sing Sing

309 Hyde Street

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Great Eastern Restaurant

649, Jackson Street, San Francisco

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Opa Cafe

2401 Post Street

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One65 Patisserie & Boutique

165, O'Farrell Street, San Francisco

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Cafe De Casa

2701 Columbus Avenue

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Esperpento

3295, 22nd Street, San Francisco

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Steep Brew

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Garage Cafe

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Provender

1415 18th Street

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Chai Bar by David Rio

1019 Market Street

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Boba Guys Potrero

1002 16th Street

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Cherry Blossom Bakery

844, Clement Street, San Francisco

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Caffe Pazzo

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Mel's Drive-In

3355, Geary Boulevard, San Francisco

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Sophie's Crepes

1581, Webster Street, San Francisco

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Cafe Réveille

201 Steiner Street

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Mom's Soul Groove

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Fresh Bay Cafe

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Punjab Kabab House

101, Eddy Street, San Francisco

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Cafe La Noisette

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Hilda's Mart & Bake Shop

145, Persia Avenue, San Francisco

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Ashley's Cafe

4454 California Street

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Cafe Enchante

6157 Geary Boulevard

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Hi-T Cafe and Deli

6012 Mission Street

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Cafe Venue

215 Fremont Street

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Pearl's Deluxe Burgers

708, Post Street, San Francisco

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Kawanoya

1689, Church Street, San Francisco

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Showing 50 of 1,797 coffee shops in San Francisco. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in San Francisco

The Mission holds the densest specialty cluster in the city, with Ritual Coffee Roasters on Valencia Street, Four Barrel a few blocks south, and a tight rotation of independent bars across 16th, 18th, and 24th Streets. The neighborhood mixes the original Latino character with the tech-era influx, and the cafés here run a younger register with longer hours.

North Beach holds the Italian heritage register, anchored by Caffè Trieste on Vallejo Street, the first espresso bar on the West Coast, and Caffè Roma on Columbus Avenue. The cluster is small but the lineage runs continuously to 1956 and the format remains closer to a Roman bar than a modern specialty seat.

Hayes Valley runs a denser modern register with Blue Bottle and several smaller specialty bars within walking distance of the symphony and opera house. The neighborhood reads as upmarket and the café format accommodates pre-performance sittings and weekend brunch crowds.

SoMa, south of Market Street, holds Sightglass Coffee on 7th Street and a cluster of cafés tied to the technology workforce. The format runs efficient and laptop-friendly, with weekday morning rushes that thin out by mid-afternoon. The neighborhood reads as commercial rather than residential.


Russian Hill holds Saint Frank Coffee on Polk Street and a quieter residential register, with cafés serving the morning and weekend crowds rather than the all-day workforce that defines SoMa and the Mission.

What to expect in San Francisco

Order at the counter at most specialty bars, with espresso typically priced between 4.00 and 5.50 dollars and cappuccinos between 5.50 and 7.00 dollars. Pour-over and filter run from 5.50 to 9.00 dollars depending on the origin. Heritage Italian seats in North Beach run cheaper, with espresso at Caffè Trieste and Caffè Roma sitting around 3.50 to 4.50 dollars. The Italian register defaults to espresso and cappuccino consumed quickly at the bar, while the modern specialty register accommodates longer sittings, laptops, and meetings. Tipping is standard, with 15 to 20 percent expected on the total or 1 to 2 dollars per drink at the counter. Most specialty bars open between 6 and 7 in the morning and close by 4 or 5 in the afternoon, reflecting the morning and lunch register that dominates the American café day. Caffè Trieste runs longer hours and stays open into the evening. Card payment is the default, cash is increasingly rare, and Apple Pay is accepted almost everywhere. Wi-Fi is available at most modern seats but the laptop-friendliness varies widely: Sightglass and Blue Bottle accommodate it, while Four Barrel famously banned laptops at its original location. Outdoor seating exists but the city's microclimates and summer fog make it less reliable than in Los Angeles.

How earning works in San Francisco

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in San Francisco. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 1,797 coffee shops in San Francisco 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 1,797 shops in San Francisco, these challenges are reachable for an active coffee drinker.

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NEARBY CITIES

OaklandBerkeleySan JoseMarinPalo Alto

FURTHER READING

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

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Frequently asked questions

What is the oldest café in San Francisco?

Caffè Trieste opened on Vallejo Street in North Beach in 1956, founded by Giovanni Giotta, an Italian immigrant from Rovereto, and was the first espresso bar on the West Coast of the United States. The room has operated continuously for nearly seventy years and remains an active café rather than a museum piece. The lineage from Italian immigrant North Beach through to the modern American specialty wave runs directly through the room, and the bar still pulls espresso every day.

Why is San Francisco important for specialty coffee?

Trish Rothgeb published the essay introducing the term third wave in 2002, working in the Bay Area, and the framework she set down became the foundational vocabulary for the global specialty industry. Blue Bottle, Ritual, Sightglass, and Four Barrel opened in the city in the years immediately after, setting the format for the modern American specialty bar. The aesthetic, light roasts, single origins, manual brewing on the bar, has been copied in cities worldwide for two decades.

Which neighborhoods have the best coffee in San Francisco?

The Mission holds the densest specialty cluster, with Ritual on Valencia and Four Barrel a few blocks south. North Beach holds the Italian heritage register at Caffè Trieste and Caffè Roma. Hayes Valley and SoMa run modern bars tied to the central business district, including Blue Bottle at Mint Plaza and Sightglass on 7th Street. Russian Hill holds Saint Frank Coffee. The city's hills are walkable enough that a serious café crawl can cover three or four neighborhoods in a day.

How much does coffee cost in San Francisco?

Espresso runs 4.00 to 5.50 dollars at most specialty bars, with cappuccino between 5.50 and 7.00 dollars. Pour-over and filter sit between 5.50 and 9.00 dollars depending on the origin and the brew method. Heritage Italian seats in North Beach run slightly cheaper. Tipping is standard at 15 to 20 percent on the total or 1 to 2 dollars per drink at the counter. The city sits among the most expensive American café markets, alongside New York and Los Angeles.

When did the specialty coffee wave start in San Francisco?

Blue Bottle Coffee was founded by James Freeman in Oakland in 2002 and opened its San Francisco location at Mint Plaza in 2008. Ritual Coffee Roasters opened in the Mission in 2005, Four Barrel in 2008, Sightglass in 2009, and Saint Frank Coffee in 2013. The cluster developed in roughly a decade and remains the densest in any American city. The format set down in this period has shaped specialty café design globally for the twenty years since.

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Other coffee cities in US

Fresno

45 shops

Simi Valley

36 shops

New York

32 shops

Dallas

27 shops

Chicago

19 shops

Salt Lake City

15 shops

Washington

14 shops

Albuquerque

11 shops

Long Beach

11 shops

Brooklyn

11 shops

Yorktown

10 shops

Coffee in San Francisco: 1797 Shops, 188 Specialty | Pulled