Skip to content
← ALL CITIES

Best Coffee Shops in Addis Ababa

495 coffee shops in Addis Ababa. Discover, check in, earn rewards with Pulled Coffee.

View specialty coffee shops in Addis Ababa

Get Pulled
495
Coffee shops
143
Specialty shops
0
Check-ins this month
0
Total check-ins
0
Unique pullers

About coffee in Addis Ababa

Addis Ababa is the city that gave the world coffee. The bean originates in Ethiopia, the traditional coffee ceremony is a daily practice in many homes, and the city has more coffee houses per capita than nearly any other capital. The scene operates on two registers: the traditional bunna (coffee) cafes that serve macchiato-style drinks with sugar and the ritual coffee ceremony, and a newer generation of specialty shops that source single origins from the surrounding regions (Sidamo, Yirgacheffe, Harrar, Limu) and brew them with third-wave precision.

The city has roughly 4.5 million people and over 100 named neighborhoods. Coffee culture varies by district: the central neighborhoods around Piazza, Bole, and Kazanchis have the densest mix of specialty and traditional cafes, while the more residential areas to the south and west are dominated by the traditional cafe model. Pricing for a macchiato runs from 20 to 60 birr (roughly $0.30 to $1 USD) depending on the cafe's positioning. Specialty cafes charge more, often in the 80 to 150 birr range for a pour-over or single-origin espresso.

The drink culture leans toward small, sweet, frequent. A macchiato (espresso with steamed milk and sugar) is the default order. Sugar is added at the bar, often heavily. Cardamom-spiced coffee is a regional specialty in some homes and cafes. The traditional ceremony involves roasting green beans over a small charcoal stove, grinding by hand, and brewing in a jebena clay pot served in small handleless cups. Many cafes still offer this on request.

Map of coffee shops in Addis Ababa
Explore on the interactive map →

Top Coffee Shops in Addis Ababa

  1. Wild Coffee 2nd(adey abeba stadium) The real thing. Addis Ababa.
  2. Yoya Coffee Roaster | Gotera Worth seeking out in Addis Ababa.
  3. Yoya Coffee Roasters The real thing. Addis Ababa.
  4. Primrose Speciality Coffee Craft coffee in Addis Ababa.
  5. Mattot Coffee ማቶት ቡና Specialty coffee in Addis Ababa.
  6. Green Gold Cafe and Roastery The real thing. Addis Ababa.
  7. Dukamo Coffee Bole | ዱካሞ ቡና Serious coffee. Addis Ababa.
  8. Stella Coffee Roaster and Cafe Specialty coffee in Addis Ababa.
  9. YAD Coffee Craft coffee in Addis Ababa.
  10. Hema Coffee Roasters Serious coffee. Addis Ababa.

COFFEE SHOPS IN ADDIS ABABA

Tomoca Coffee | Atlas Branch | ቶሞካ ቡና | አትላስ

Specialty

2Q4P+QFJ Medhane Alem Building, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

ፅጌ ቡና Tsige Coffee

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Testi specialty coffee Head quarter

Specialty

8.906944, 38.816389, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Fili Coffee Mexico

Specialty

2P6W+9RX, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Yoya Coffee Roaster | Gotera

Specialty

XQJ6+2JJ "Menschen für Menschen" Foundation, 404 Ethio China St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Etete Coffee - Bole DH Geda /Classic Outlet/ (እቴቴ ቡና)

Specialty

XQRP+3M6, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Tesfa Coffee | National Museum

Specialty

https://maps.app.goo.gl/fvybzfBCXFoMXxoB6, Addis Ababa 1000, Ethiopia

View shop →

Karavan Coffee

Specialty

Medhane Alem Building, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Stella Coffee Roaster and Cafe

Specialty

Ethio China St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Hadero Coffee Company - ሀደሮ ቡና አቅራቢ ድርጅት

Specialty

2R6C+WPF, Jacros - Salite Mehret Rd, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

KAF COFFEE/ ካፍ ቡና

Specialty

Nefassilk Lafto, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Robera Coffee | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | Jackros Salite-Mehret Road

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Kabod Coffee

Specialty

2Q96+35, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Abat coffee(አባት ቡና)

Specialty

Bole 3, 5, አዲስ አበባ, Ethiopia

View shop →

Chaka Coffee

Specialty

Mickey Leland St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Wild Coffee roaster factory location

Specialty

jacrose area wild coffee, Addis Ababa 3540, Ethiopia

View shop →

Galani Coffee

Specialty

Jacros - Salite Mehret Rd, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Akkoo Coffee | Post office | አኮ ቡና

Specialty

2QC3+C3W, Churchill Ave, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Dukamo Coffee Bole | ዱካሞ ቡና

Specialty

Mafi City Center Mall, Cameroon St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Rising Cub Coffee Roasters (formerly Black Lion Organic Coffee Shop) | Kazanchis | ብላክ ላይን ኦርጋኒክ ቡና | ካሳንቺስ

Specialty

2Q79+HJF, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Ithiopica Coffee & Eatery

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Fili Coffee

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

primo coffee house

Specialty

Warka Tower, Namibia St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Yomu Coffee | Hayahulet | ዮሙ ኮፊ | ሃያሁለት

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Zetseat Coffee Roaster

Specialty

Bench Sheko Zone Higher Court - B53 Addis Ababa, Addis Ababa 1000, Ethiopia

View shop →

Tinjaro coffee roaster

Specialty

Summit fiyel bet to Ayat 72, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Hema Coffee Roasters

Specialty

Akaki Kality, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Green Gold Cafe and Roastery

Specialty

2Q69+7VG Black Gold Complex, Addis Ababa 0000, Ethiopia

View shop →

Wild Coffee 1st(GazeboSquare | ዋይልድ ቡና | ጋዜቦ አደባባይ

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

La Patisserie

Specialty

Menelik II Ave, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

YAD Coffee

Specialty

Hatam Building, Ethio China St, Addis Ababa 1000, Ethiopia

View shop →

Tomoca Coffee

Specialty

XQVR+WC9, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

The Coffee Collection Addis

Specialty

Ednamall In front of kaleb hotel, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

AKKOO COFFEE

Specialty

Churchill Road, in front of General, next to the traffic light, Post Office, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Olkai Coffee Roaster

Specialty

XP9J+PJP, Guinea Bissau St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Eset Coffee & Roastery | እሴት ቡና

Specialty

XP2J+JWJ, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Primrose Speciality Coffee

Specialty

Lesotho St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Caffeol Coffee

Specialty

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Mawa Coffee and Roaster | ማዋ ኮፊ እና ሮስተር ደምበል

Specialty

Africa Ave, Addis Ababa 1000, Ethiopia

View shop →

Wild Coffee 2nd(adey abeba stadium)

Specialty

XQXQ+VPH, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Solina Coffee | Tewodros Square

Specialty

2QG2+JW6, Colson St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Mattot Coffee ማቶት ቡና

Specialty

2Q7W+M87, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

YA Coffee Roasters

Specialty

Lemi Kura Sub City Wossen Kara Road, 1000m from Kara Square, አዲስ አበባ, Ethiopia

View shop →

Yoya Coffee Roasters

Specialty

XQ87+772, Debre Zeit Road, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Zing Coffee Shop | Mekanisa | ዚንግ ቡና መደብር | መካኒሳ

Specialty

Around Mekanisa Abo Church Near, XPMG+JVH Mena Hotel, Lesotho St, አዲስ አበባ, Ethiopia

View shop →

Baron Cafe| ባሮን ካፌ

Baron, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

CAFE FRAISIE Café and RESTAURANT

Eshetu Mamo Commercial Building, Churchill Ave, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Cremino café

Africa Ave, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Panda Boba Tea & Cafe

Namibia St, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Mamokacha

XQVH+WF5, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

View shop →

Showing 50 of 495 coffee shops in Addis Ababa. Download Pulled to check in and earn rewards at any of them.

Best neighborhoods for coffee in Addis Ababa

Piazza

The historic center has a high density of traditional cafes around the Arada district. Tomoca, the legendary Italian-Ethiopian roaster founded in 1953, has its flagship here and is the touchpoint for any coffee visit to Addis. The neighborhood is walkable, dense, and full of small standing-counter cafes that have been operating for decades. Mornings are the busiest.

Bole

The modern commercial district near the airport has the highest concentration of specialty cafes. Kategna, Galani, Garden of Coffee, and other third-wave operators are based here. The clientele mixes Ethiopian professionals, expat workers, and visitors. Pricing is at the upper end of the city's coffee market. The Bole specialty scene is the closest thing to a London or Melbourne third-wave neighborhood in Addis.

Kazanchis

Between Piazza and Bole, this commercial and embassy district has a mixed coffee scene: traditional cafes on the side streets, a handful of specialty shops along the main avenues, hotel-attached cafes for business meetings. The energy is professional and the pace is slightly faster than the residential neighborhoods.

Kebena and Old Airport

Residential neighborhoods to the north and east have a different cafe culture: smaller rooms, more locals, slower pace, lower prices. The traditional coffee ceremony is more common here than in Bole or Piazza. The cafes serve as neighborhood meeting rooms rather than coffee destinations.

Sarbet and Mexico Square

The southwestern part of central Addis has a growing cafe scene anchored by a few specialty operators and many traditional bunna houses. The student population from Addis Ababa University adds energy. Pricing is mid-range.

What to expect in Addis Ababa

The Addis Ababa coffee day starts early. By 7 in the morning, the cafes around Piazza and Bole are full with commuters drinking their first macchiato standing at the counter. The standing-counter model is common, with seating reserved for those who want to linger over a second cup. The macchiato is the daily ritual order; many Ethiopians drink three or four a day across morning, mid-morning, and afternoon.

The espresso program

The espresso program in most cafes uses Italian-style commercial machines, often Faema or La Marzocco. The bean is local: Ethiopia is a major producer of Arabica and most Addis cafes use beans from one of the country's coffee regions. Sidamo and Yirgacheffe are the most common in specialty shops; commercial cafes use blends. The roast tends darker than third-wave European norms, in line with the espresso tradition, though the specialty wave has pushed some cafes toward lighter roasts and pour-over.

The traditional coffee ceremony

The traditional coffee ceremony deserves its own attention. In many cafes and most homes, the ceremony is performed for guests: green beans roasted in a small pan over charcoal, the room filling with the smell, the beans ground in a wooden mortar, the coffee brewed in a clay jebena pot, served in three rounds (abol, tona, baraka) in small handleless cups. The ceremony takes 30 to 45 minutes and is a social ritual rather than a beverage transaction. Most visitors get one offered to them within a week of staying in the city.

Food and payment

The food program in Ethiopian cafes is shaped by religious fasting (Wednesday and Friday vegetarian days, plus longer fasting seasons in the Orthodox calendar). Many cafes offer fasting menus alongside the regular options. Pastries are a smaller program than in European cafes; the bigger draw is buna (coffee) and tea, sometimes alongside ful (fava bean stew) for breakfast or kitfo (minced raw beef) for lunch in the more food-focused spots.

Card payment is increasingly common in central Addis but still inconsistent. Cash (birr) is the safer assumption. Tipping is not expected at counter-service cafes but is appreciated for table service. The pace is slower than European specialty shops; sitting for an hour with a single macchiato is normal.

How earning works in Addis Ababa

Pulled Coffee pays real cash via PayPal for visits to coffee shops in Addis Ababa. The app verifies each check-in with GPS and a photo, then credits your progress toward the city’s active challenges. With 495 coffee shops in Addis Ababa 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. Addis Ababa’s shop density makes these challenges achievable for an active coffee drinker.

Get Pulled

Earn up to $10,000 exploring coffee shops in Addis Ababa.

Download Pulled. Check in at any coffee shop. Earn real PayPal cash.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

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

Own a coffee shop in Addis Ababa?

List on Pulled, run sponsored challenges, reach every coffee drinker in Addis Ababa.

Get Pulled for Business →

Frequently asked questions

Where can I experience the traditional coffee ceremony in Addis Ababa?

Most traditional cafes offer the ceremony on request, particularly in Piazza, Kazanchis, and the residential neighborhoods. Tomoca's flagship in Piazza is the most accessible entry point for visitors. Many restaurants serving Ethiopian food include the ceremony as part of the meal. In homes, the ceremony is a daily or weekly ritual depending on family practice; expect to be offered one if you spend time with locals. Budget 30 to 45 minutes for a full ceremony, served in three rounds: abol, tona, baraka.

What is the coffee culture like in Addis Ababa?

Coffee is woven into daily life more deeply than in most cities. The macchiato is the default order, drunk multiple times a day, often standing at a counter. The traditional ceremony is a household ritual, not a tourist performance. Specialty cafes have built a third-wave scene in Bole and parts of Piazza over the past decade, with single-origin pour-overs from the country's coffee regions. Pricing is low by international standards. The pace is slow, and sitting with a single cup for an hour is normal.

When do Addis Ababa coffee shops typically open?

Most cafes open by 6 or 7 in the morning, when the commuter trade starts. Closing varies: traditional cafes often close by 8 or 9 in the evening, with specialty shops in Bole keeping hours closer to a European pattern (closed by 6 or 7). The hours are looser than in European or American cities, and reliability varies. Friday and Sunday hours are shorter at many traditional cafes due to religious observance.

What is the typical price for coffee in Addis Ababa?

A macchiato at a traditional cafe runs 20 to 60 birr (roughly $0.30 to $1 USD). Specialty cafes charge more, with pour-over and single-origin espresso typically 80 to 150 birr ($1.30 to $2.50 USD). Tomoca and other historic cafes sit in the middle. Pastries and food are extra. Bring cash (birr); card acceptance is improving in Bole but still inconsistent elsewhere. Tipping is not expected at counter service.

Are there good coffee shops for remote work in Addis Ababa?

The Bole specialty cafes are the best fit for a few hours of work: reliable wi-fi, table seating, professional clientele, longer hours. Galani Cafe, Kategna, and Garden of Coffee are reasonable starting points. The traditional cafes in Piazza and elsewhere are not designed for laptop work; they are conversational rooms with limited table space and inconsistent wi-fi. The international hotel cafes (Sheraton, Hilton, Marriott) are alternatives for guaranteed wi-fi and quiet, though pricing is much higher than at independent cafes.

Get Pulled.

Pulled Coffee is the rewards layer. Visit any shop in Addis Ababa, log a pull, get paid.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Other coffee cities in ET

Dire Dawa

34 shops