Best Coffee Shops in Warszawa
3655 coffee shops in Warsaw. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.
Get PulledAbout coffee in Warsaw
Warsaw has rebuilt its coffee culture from scratch since 1989. The city was destroyed in World War II, rebuilt under communism, and emerged from the post-1989 transition with a coffee scene that had to be invented rather than restored. The result is a specialty coffee culture that is younger and faster-moving than most major European capitals, with a generation of Polish baristas and roasters building modern specialty institutions in real time.
The traditional Polish café, the kawiarnia, dates from the nineteenth century and survived in fragments through the communist period. Warsaw has a handful of preserved interwar cafés, including the Café Bristol on Krakowskie Przedmieście, opened in 1901, and Café Wedel near the Wedel chocolate factory. These operate at the heritage register and serve a Viennese-style café tradition with Polish modifications.
The third wave arrived in Warsaw around 2012 and has built quickly. Stor Coffee Roasters, founded in 2014, became the city's first major contemporary specialty roaster. Coffee Plant on Chmielna brought a more design-forward register. HAYB Specialty Coffee operates a roastery and multiple cafés across the city. By 2020 Warsaw had a serious specialty scene with several distinct generations of cafés operating alongside each other.
The neighborhoods stratify clearly. Śródmieście, the central district that includes the rebuilt Old Town and the New Town, holds the heritage Polish café tradition alongside contemporary specialty cafés. Praga, across the Vistula River, holds the densest contemporary specialty culture and has emerged as the city's creative district. Mokotów holds a mixed register with specialty cafés serving the largely residential population. Wola, the former industrial district turned business district, holds a high-volume café culture serving the corporate office crowd.
What separates Warsaw from Berlin or Prague is the absence of architectural continuity. The destruction of the city in 1944 means that most Warsaw cafés operate in postwar buildings, with a handful of exceptions in the rebuilt Old Town. The cafés have built character through interior design and curation rather than inheritance. The Warsaw specialty scene has aestheticized this absence, with many cafés operating in deliberately minimal modernist rooms.
Warsaw's contribution to global coffee is still emerging. The Polish specialty wave has not yet exported a specific form the way Italy or Australia did. What Warsaw has done is build a specialty coffee culture from a low historical baseline at unusual speed. Polish baristas are increasingly visible at international barista competitions. Polish roasters are increasingly cited in international specialty publications. The trajectory is upward.
What surprises a visitor is the international diversity. Warsaw specialty cafés frequently feature Ukrainian baristas, Belarusian roasters, and Polish-international staff. The city has become a regional specialty hub for Central and Eastern Europe, with baristas and customers from Kyiv, Minsk, and other regional capitals contributing to the local culture. The trend has accelerated since 2022 as Ukrainian refugees and professionals have moved to Warsaw.
Top Coffee Shops in Warsaw
- Green Caffè Nero (11 locations) — Worth seeking out in Warszawa. 11 locations.
- Esencja — Craft coffee in Warszawa.
- Wazaap – Matcha Bar & Specialty Coffee — The real thing. Warszawa.
- WakeCup Cafe (2 locations) — Serious coffee. Warszawa. 2 locations.
- U Krawca Cafe — Worth seeking out in Warszawa.
- Bonjour — Serious coffee. Warszawa.
- COFFEE PLANT palarnia kawy specialty — Craft coffee in Warszawa.
- Stor — Worth seeking out in Warszawa.
- Luka — Serious coffee. Warszawa.
- Foundation Coffee Roasters — Specialty coffee in Warszawa.
COFFEE SHOPS IN WARSAW
Showing 50 of 3,655 coffee shops in Warszawa. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.
Best neighborhoods for coffee in Warsaw
Śródmieście, the central district, holds the heritage Polish café tradition alongside the densest concentration of contemporary specialty cafés. Café Bristol on Krakowskie Przedmieście anchors the heritage register. Stor Coffee Roasters, Coffee Plant, and a wider network of specialty cafés operate across the central district. Most contemporary specialty cafés in Warsaw are within a fifteen-minute walk of the Palace of Culture.
Praga, across the Vistula River, holds the densest contemporary specialty coffee culture in Warsaw. The neighborhood, historically working-class and now gentrified, has emerged as the city''s creative and café district over the last decade. HAYB Specialty Coffee anchors the contemporary specialty position. Smaller cafés operate in renovated industrial buildings throughout the area.
Mokotów, the residential district south of the city center, holds a quieter neighborhood specialty register. Cafés serve a largely Polish residential population and operate at a slower pace than central Warsaw. The neighborhood has become a Polish "baby specialty" district, with cafés that emphasize design and food alongside coffee.
Wola, the former industrial district turned business district, holds a high-volume café culture serving the corporate office crowd. Cafés here operate in office building lobbies and adjacent retail spaces. Specialty exists but operates in a faster register than the residential neighborhoods.
Żoliborz, the residential district north of the central area, holds a smaller specialty pocket alongside older Polish cafés that have served the neighborhood for decades. The pace is slower and the cafés tend toward the seated model.
Saska Kępa, the residential district across the river south of Praga, holds a mixed register with specialty cafés operating alongside older Polish café traditions. The neighborhood was historically diplomatic and intellectual and retains a quieter café culture.
What to expect in Warsaw
Order at the counter. Warsaw 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. Most cafés are card-friendly. Cash is still common at older establishments.
Espresso and flat white are the default specialty orders. Asking for "kawa" in a specialty café typically gets a follow-up question. Cappuccinos and lattes are widely available. Single-origin pour-overs are standard at any contemporary café. Filter coffee, in the form of daily batch brews, has gained ground since 2018.
The kawa po polsku, or Polish coffee, is the traditional preparation: hot water poured over coarsely ground coffee in a cup, allowed to settle, drunk through the grounds. The drink is rare in contemporary cafés but is sometimes served at heritage establishments. The drink shares roots with Turkish coffee but uses a coarser grind.
Specialty cafés operate in the international register. Light roast pour-overs, espresso-based drinks, and cold brew are widely available.
Prices are favorable for a major European specialty city. Espresso at a contemporary café runs ten to fifteen złoty. Flat whites are typically eighteen to twenty-five złoty. Specialty pour-overs cost fifteen to twenty-five złoty. 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 around eight or nine in the evening. Sunday hours are slightly reduced.
Tipping is appreciated but not required. Rounding up the bill is conventional, particularly at table-service establishments.
How earning works in Warsaw
Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Warsaw. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 3,655 coffee shops in Warsaw 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. Warsaw’s shop density makes these challenges achievable for an active coffee drinker.
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Get Pulled for Business →Frequently asked questions
When did specialty coffee arrive in Warsaw?
Specialty coffee in Warsaw developed primarily after 2012, anchored by Stor Coffee Roasters, founded in 2014, and HAYB Specialty Coffee. The wave has built rapidly since 2015 and now includes dozens of credible specialty cafés across Śródmieście, Praga, and the surrounding districts. The post-1989 reconstruction of Polish café culture had to be invented rather than restored, and the result is a specialty scene that is younger and faster-moving than most major European capitals.
What is kawa po polsku?
Kawa po polsku, or Polish coffee, is a traditional preparation made by pouring hot water over coarsely ground coffee in a cup, allowed to settle, then drunk through the grounds. The drink shares roots with Turkish coffee but uses a coarser grind and is generally not consumed with the grounds. The preparation is rare in contemporary specialty cafés but is sometimes served at heritage establishments. The drink represents the prewar Polish coffee tradition that survived in fragments through the communist era.
Why is coffee in Warsaw cheaper than in Berlin?
Warsaw specialty coffee prices reflect lower operating costs, lower wages, and a generally lower cost of living than Berlin. A flat white at a Warsaw specialty café typically costs eighteen to twenty-five złoty, approximately four to six euros. The same drink at a Berlin specialty café typically costs four-fifty to five-fifty euros. The price difference is significant and consistent across most specialty drinks. The favorable prices have helped Warsaw build a specialty café culture accessible to a broader range of customers than Berlin.
Where is the best café in Warsaw?
Several Warsaw cafés are defensible answers. Stor Coffee Roasters and HAYB Specialty Coffee are the most respected contemporary specialty addresses. Coffee Plant in central Warsaw operates at international specialty standards. For the heritage register, Café Bristol on Krakowskie Przedmieście, opened in 1901, holds the canonical preserved Polish café experience. The right answer depends on whether you want contemporary specialty or heritage Polish café. Both registers operate at high quality.
How is Warsaw different from Prague for coffee?
Warsaw has a younger specialty coffee scene than Prague, with most contemporary cafés founded after 2012. Prague has more preserved Habsburg-era cafés due to the city's relative architectural continuity. Warsaw was destroyed in 1944 and most cafés operate in postwar buildings. Both cities offer specialty coffee at significantly lower prices than Vienna or Berlin. Warsaw has a faster trajectory of growth and a more international specialty staff, while Prague has more heritage continuity.
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