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Best Coffee Shops in Paris

20375 coffee shops in Paris. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

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Paris has quietly built one of the world's best third wave coffee scenes alongside its historic café culture. The 10th and 11th arrondissements are ground zero for specialty roasters. Belleville Brûlerie helped put the city on the global specialty map.

Best neighborhoods: 10th arrondissement, 11th arrondissement, Marais, Pigalle, Saint-Germain

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About coffee in Paris

For a long time, Paris had a reputation among traveling coffee drinkers: the cafés are beautiful, the coffee is bad. The brasserie espresso, served from a high-volume Pavoni machine and ground from beans that had been sitting open for a week, was the punchline. Cafés were for sitting on the terrace with a glass of wine, or with a Pernod, or with a friend you hadn't seen in five years. Coffee was the byproduct.

Around 2010, that began to change. Belleville Brûlerie opened in the 19th arrondissement in 2013 and started supplying restaurants and cafés with light-roasted, single-origin coffee. Coutume Café opened on Rue de Babylone in 2011 and brought a Tokyo-quiet brewing pace to the Left Bank. Telescope, on Rue Villedo, became the Right Bank's first serious specialty café. Within five years, Paris had a full specialty scene, and within ten, the city's third-wave landscape rivaled London's.

The classical Parisian café persists. Café de Flore on Saint-Germain-des-Prés, opened in 1887, still pours an espresso the way an espresso has always been poured at Café de Flore: dark, fast, served on a white saucer, six and a half euros. Les Deux Magots two doors down does the same. The coffee is not the point. The room is. Tourists pay for the chair and the shadow of every Surrealist who once sat in it.

The third wave occupies a different real estate. Belleville Brûlerie roasts in the 19th and 20th arrondissements. Coutume on the Left Bank. Telescope and Honor near the Palais Royal. Lomi in the 18th. Fragments in the Marais. Each operates with the kind of discipline that would have read as foreign in Paris in 1995 and reads as native now. The baristas know the bean. The bean has a story. The story is not annotated on the wall in calligraphy. You ask if you want to know.


The neighborhoods stratify cleanly. The Marais, occupying the 3rd and 4th arrondissements, holds the densest specialty per square meter. The 11th arrondissement, Oberkampf, has the contemporary craft register. The Left Bank, Saint-Germain through Odéon, holds the classical café tradition almost intact. Belleville and Ménilmontant in the east hold the working-class Parisian café-tabac, with smoke spilling from the door at six in the morning and the cheapest espresso in the city at one euro forty.

What changed is that Paris stopped apologizing for coffee. The brasserie espresso still exists and probably always will, because it is part of the city's social fabric. But it now sits alongside a serious specialty scene, and a Parisian who wants a single-origin Ethiopian Yirgacheffe brewed by hand can have one in any arrondissement before noon. Twenty years ago, that sentence would have read as fiction. Now it reads as Tuesday.

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Top Coffee Shops in Paris

  1. Coeur coffee Roasters (2 locations) Serious coffee. Paris. 2 locations.
  2. Terres de Café Specialty coffee in Paris.
  3. Le Maung Coffee Roaster by OMG Serious coffee. Paris.
  4. Minicafé Île Saint-Louis - coffeeshop, matcha and cookies Serious coffee. Paris.
  5. Bel Horizon Coffee Roasters Specialty coffee in Paris.
  6. Coffee Specialty Coffee - Torréfaction artisanale Serious coffee. Paris.
  7. Shukery coffee & matcha Serious coffee. Paris.
  8. ARTESANO specialty coffee roaster Worth seeking out in Paris.
  9. TYPICA SPECIALTY COFFEE Craft coffee in Paris.
  10. Barista Gallery The real thing. Paris.

COFFEE SHOPS IN PARIS

Terres de Café

Specialty

150 Rue Saint-Honoré, 75001 Paris, France

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Coeur coffee Roasters

Specialty

16 Rue Daunou, 75002 Paris, France

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Big Shot coffee

Specialty

64 Rue Saint-Honoré, 75001 Paris, France

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Barista Gallery

Specialty

15 R. Quincampoix, 75004 Paris, France

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KB Coffee Roasters

Specialty

53 Av. Trudaine, 75009 Paris, France

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Malongo

Specialty

50 Rue Saint-André des Arts, 75006 Paris, France

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Parallel Coffee

Specialty

3 Rue de la Renaissance, 75008 Paris, France

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Coeur Coffee Roasters

Specialty

6 Rue Ravignan, 75018 Paris, France

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Liperli Coffee - Torréfacteur de café

Specialty

33 Rue de Douai, 75009 Paris, France

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Matamata Coffee

Specialty

58 Rue d'Argout, 75002 Paris, France

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Bel Horizon Coffee Roasters

Specialty

26 Bd Garibaldi, 75015 Paris, France

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Coffee Specialty Coffee - Torréfaction artisanale

Specialty

40 Rue Chapon, 75003 Paris, France

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Shukery coffee & matcha

Specialty

18 Av. de l'Opéra, 75001 Paris, France

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Coffee Roasting Workshop

Specialty

12, place de la Bastille - cour Damoye, 75011 Paris, France

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Minicafé Île Saint-Louis - coffeeshop, matcha and cookies

Specialty

1 Rue des Deux Ponts, 75004 Paris, France

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Bacha Coffee

Specialty

26 Av. des Champs-Élysées, 75008 Paris, France

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Early Bird - Artisanal Coffee Roasters

Specialty

marché Beauvau, Pl. d'Aligre, 75012 Paris, France

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Café de Paris

Specialty

10 Rue de Buci, 75006 Paris, France

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Brouillon Coffee

Specialty

42 Bd de Magenta, 75010 Paris, France

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Sipp Coffee Paris

Specialty

8 Rue Bréa, 75006 Paris, France

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République of Coffee

Specialty

2 Bd Saint-Martin, 75010 Paris, France

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Costadoro Social Coffee

Specialty

91 Rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris, France

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Saint Barista Coffee

Specialty

41 Rue Popincourt, 75011 Paris, France

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Coffee Ya

Specialty

25 Bd Voltaire, 75011 Paris, France

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ARTESANO specialty coffee roaster

Specialty

3 Rue Saint-Paul, 75004 Paris, France

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TYPICA SPECIALTY COFFEE

Specialty

8 Rue des Filles du Calvaire, 75003 Paris, France

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Le Maung Coffee Roaster by OMG

Specialty

51 Rue Greneta, 75002 Paris, France

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Synapse Torréfaction

2 Rue du Fer à Moulin, 75005 Paris, France

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Tea House Montorgueil

7 Rue Montorgueil, 75001 Paris, France

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Kodama Tiquetonne

30 Rue Tiquetonne, 75002 Paris, France

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The Caféothèque of Paris

52 Rue de l'Hôtel de Ville, 75004 Paris, France

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Happy Caffé

214 Rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris, France

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The Tea House

76 Rue Bonaparte, 75006 Paris, France

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Back in Black

25 Rue Amelot, 75011 Paris, France

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Crêperie Arty Caffé - Restaurant à Paris

176 Rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris, France

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Les Deux Magots

6 Pl. Saint-Germain des Prés, 75006 Paris, France

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Café du Clown

6 Rue Lobineau, 75006 Paris, France

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Le Loir dans La Théière

3 Rue des Rosiers, 75004 Paris, France

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CORE Paris

5 Rue du Pas de la Mule, 75004 Paris, France

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Bohemia Cafe

30 Rue de Richelieu, 75001 Paris, France

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Aurava Paris

35 Rue Pastourelle, 75003 Paris, France

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Substance Café

30 Rue Dussoubs, 75002 Paris, France

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Café de Flore

172 Bd Saint-Germain, 75006 Paris, France

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Le Café Marly

93 Rue de Rivoli, 75001 Paris, France

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Café Tranquille

147 Rue du Faubourg Saint-Denis, 75010 Paris, France

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Hanami Teatime

50 Rue des Gravilliers, 75003 Paris, France

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Azur Café

63 Rue de Ponthieu, 75008 Paris, France

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Baguett's Café

33 Rue de Richelieu, 75001 Paris, France

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Moi paris

2 rue dupetit-thouars, 1 Rue de la Corderie, 75003 Paris, France

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L'Arbre à Café - Nil

10 Rue du Nil, 75002 Paris, France

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Showing 50 of 20,375 coffee shops in Paris. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Paris

The Marais, occupying the 3rd and 4th arrondissements, holds the densest specialty coffee in Paris. Fragments on Rue des Tournelles is the canonical address, with carefully sourced beans from European roasters and a daily filter brew that locals order without thinking. Boot Café, named for the boot-shaped storefront, has been in the neighborhood since 2013 and remains a fixture. Nuance and Le Peloton (more bicycle than coffee but still good) round out the area.

Belleville and the 19th arrondissement hold Belleville Brûlerie itself, the roastery that supplies many of the city's best independent cafés. The neighborhood feels less polished than the Marais, more working-class Parisian, and the coffee scene reflects that. Cream and a handful of newer cafés have emerged in the last five years.

The Left Bank, especially Saint-Germain-des-Prés and the surrounding 6th arrondissement, holds the classical Parisian café tradition. Café de Flore, Les Deux Magots, and the Brasserie Lipp triangulate the corner. Coutume Café, on Rue de Babylone, sits within the same neighborhood as a contemporary specialty counterpoint.

The 11th arrondissement, particularly around Oberkampf and Bastille, holds the contemporary craft café register. Ten Belles, Cafés Gabriel, and a wave of newer roasters have built a serious scene here over the last decade.


The 18th, Montmartre and the slopes below, holds Lomi as the major specialty anchor and a constellation of newer cafés, including KB Caféshop on Avenue Trudaine, which served the city's first reliable flat white.

Belleville and Ménilmontant in the 20th hold the working-class café-tabac tradition more loyally than any other part of central Paris. Espresso at the bar runs one-thirty to one-fifty, paid in coins.

What to expect in Paris

Café-tabacs are the everyday French coffee infrastructure. Open early, fast service, espresso ordered standing at the cheapest price in the country. The bar is staffed by the patron and one or two regulars who have been coming for years. The espresso is one euro forty at the bar, two euros at the table, and three at the terrace. The receipt is written by hand in a small book.

Espresso is the default. "Un café, s'il vous plaît" gets you espresso. Specifying a noisette gets espresso with a small dollop of warm milk. Café crème is a larger preparation closer to a cappuccino. Café au lait is a breakfast drink served in a bowl with a tartine. Americano is a tourist concession that exists at most cafés but is rarely ordered by Parisians.

Sit-down coffee in Paris is a different transaction. The waiter brings the espresso to the table, often with a small piece of dark chocolate or a tiny pastry on the saucer. The drink takes longer to arrive and longer to drink. The bill comes when you ask for it.

Pricing varies sharply by location. A standing espresso in Belleville is one-forty. The same espresso at Café de Flore in Saint-Germain is six-fifty. The difference is the chair, the room, and the proximity to the original Surrealist patrons. Both transactions are valid. Knowing which one you want before walking in is the trick.


Hours run early to late. Most neighborhood cafés open by seven. Specialty cafés often open at eight or nine and close by six. Sunday hours are reduced.

How earning works in Paris

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Paris. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 20,375 coffee shops in Paris 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. Paris’s shop density makes these challenges achievable for an active coffee drinker.

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FURTHER READING

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

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Frequently asked questions

Is the coffee in Paris still bad?

No. Paris's specialty coffee scene developed rapidly between 2010 and 2018 and is now comparable to London or any major Northern European city. Belleville Brûlerie, Coutume Café, Telescope, Lomi, Fragments, and a wide network of newer cafés produce excellent coffee. The brasserie espresso tradition still exists alongside the specialty wave, and you can have either or both. The reputation for bad Parisian coffee dates from twenty years ago and has not been accurate for at least a decade.

What is a café-tabac?

A café-tabac is a French establishment that combines a café, a small bar, and a tobacco license. They are everyday French infrastructure, particularly in working-class neighborhoods. Open from early morning to late evening, they serve espresso at the cheapest price in the country, sell cigarettes and lottery tickets, and function as the de facto neighborhood social hub. The patron knows the regulars. The regulars know each other.

What is the difference between a café and a café crème?

A café in France is an espresso, served short and dark in a small cup. A café crème is a larger drink, similar to a cappuccino, made with espresso and steamed milk. The proportions vary, but a café crème is generally larger than an Italian cappuccino, served in a wider cup, and ordered primarily at breakfast. A noisette is a smaller variation: espresso with a small dollop of warm milk, equivalent in spirit to a macchiato.

Why is coffee so expensive at Café de Flore?

Café de Flore charges six-fifty euros for an espresso because the price reflects the chair, the room, and the location. The café has been in operation since 1887 and has hosted most of the major French intellectual movements of the twentieth century. The coffee itself is conventional. The transaction is for the seat at the corner of Saint-Germain and Boulevard Saint-Germain and the proximity to a particular kind of Parisian history. The price is a museum admission disguised as a beverage.

Where can I find specialty coffee in Paris?

The Marais, the 11th, the 18th, and the 20th arrondissements hold the densest specialty coffee in Paris. Belleville Brûlerie's roastery, Coutume Café, Telescope, Lomi, Fragments, KB Caféshop, Honor, and Ten Belles are the most respected addresses across these neighborhoods. The total number of specialty cafés in Paris exceeded a hundred by 2020 and continues to grow. Most arrondissements now have at least one credible third-wave option within a fifteen-minute walk.

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