Go to:  
  1. Prague
  2. /
  3. coffee
  4. (9)

Czech Republic

A cup of coffee



A cappuccino kick-start in the morning before a day spent exploring a new city; a rest in the afternoon with a latte and a slab of cake; a teeny tiny super-strong espresso after a gourmet dinner - coffee is the perfect travel companion. We're looking for the best places around the world to stop for a cup of java. Share your suggestions by submitting a tip or emailing been.there@guardian.co.uk (and don't forget to check our companion tea and cake guide)
Order tips by: Most recent first  |  Most popular first

    This café is a place of contrasts: a modern menu, hyper-technical coffee and trendy staff with media specs and funky haircuts are ‘off-set’ by sepia prints and old-world pictures and documents about the building in walnut frames. Floor-to-ceiling curtains and elegant arm chairs in the back room lend a luxurious, adult feel. It’s a splendid blend of the modern and historic, which given its location just under the Hunger Wall in the Lesser Quarter, is important.
    The coffee at Café Lounge is really excellent, and available to take away. Unusually for Prague, the menu features a flat white (67 czk) - served in a glass tumbler, with a heart drawn into the foam and a delicate biscuit on the side. Other coffee offerings include vacuum press coffee (95/125 CZK for a tricky arrangement that involved what looked like a high-school chemistry kit) as well as the usual cappuccino and espressos. Coffees and teas are all served with a suduko game to attempt while you sip, which is a charming touch. Café Lounge also offers a very extensive food menu from breakfast through to snacks and main meals, as well as daily options.
    Service is impressive. Knowledgeable, friendly but unintrusive. A great experience and well worth the visit for something a little smarter than usual.

    www.cafe-lounge.cz
    Plaská 615/8, 150 00 Prague 5
    (+420) 257 404 020
    Google map: bit.ly/HUJPuy

    * Helen is our Been there local for Prague. Her page is here: www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/articles/prague-local-helen-ford.jsp and she has her own blog here: czechingin.wordpress.com/

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    tip

    Café at Veletrzni Palace

    Posted by czechingin 15 April 2012

    A rather surprising new, albeit temporary, addition to a previously bland building, the café on the ground floor of Veletrzni Palace seems more of a science laboratory than a traditional cafe. Large bowl-shaped test tubes and gargantuan funnels and filter papers combine to offer up fresh filter and siphon coffee brews. (From 70 czk for a filter coffee).
    An incredibly modern cafe frequented by tourists and Prague hipsters - the perfect place to rest gallery-wearied feet.
    Offers tea, coffee and a small range of sweet snacks.
    Open throughout summer 2012.

    www.ngprague.cz/en/5/sekce/veletrzni-palace/
    Dukelských hrdinů 47, 170 00 Prague 7
    Google map: bit.ly/HYoRvw

    * Helen is our Been there local for Prague. Her page is here: www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/articles/prague-local-helen-ford.jsp and she has her own blog here: czechingin.wordpress.com/

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    tip

    Čajovna Ve Věži

    Posted by czechingin 15 November 2011

    The name Čajovna Ve Věži (the tearoom in the tower) gives you a fairly big clue as to what to expect. A tea room right at the top of the remarkable tower at the edge of Letna park. The whole way up, you will be wondering if you have come to the right place. Don’t worry, you have. Just keep going right to the top.
    As well as a special location, Čajovna Ve Věži's boasts a lovely herbal smell throughout and a cosy ambience - decor includes mismatched chairs and tables, Persian rugs, a large Buddha and several small oriental wall hangings. Like a favourite teddy bear, everything looks a little tired but well loved.
    The menu is only available in Czech, although as most teas have Japanese or Chinese names, this is not too tricky. Staff speak some English but a phrase book might be useful.
    Čajovna Ve Věži offers over 80 teas (from 40 to 115 CZK) from India, China, Japan, Turkey, Nepal, Vietnam and Tibet, as well as some fruit teas and non-caffeinated teas. A small selection of soft drinks is also available, as well as wine.
    Light snacks are also offered – nuts (from 30 CZK), sandwiches (35 CZK), corn on the cob (44 CZK) and sushi (85 CZK).
    Slightly slow service is more than compensated for by the location, atmosphere, and the excellent teas.

    www.dojo.cz/cajovna/rozvrh/index_eng.html
    Na výšinách 1/Korunovační, Prague 7
    +420 724 593 215
    Nearest tram: Sparta (trams 1, 5, 8, 25 or 26).
    Open 16:00 - 22:00 in winter and 17:00 - 23:00 in the summer.
    Google map: bit.ly/vbodTC

    * Helen is our Been there local for Prague. Her page is here: www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/articles/prague-local-helen-ford.jsp and she has her own blog here: czechingin.wordpress.com/

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    MamaCoffee is a great example of the growing interest in Fair Trade in the Czech Republic. With five branches in Prague, MamaCoffee was the first Fair Trade coffee roaster in Central Europe and it is fair to say, remains one of the most popular.
    Its largest café on Vodičkova off Wenceslas Square is always busy, its two stories frequented by locals, expats and tourists alike. Table service is offered by helpful staff who are will offer advice on their range of Ethiopian, Honduran and other coffee beans and Fair Trade Teas, which are all also available to buy. They are also happy to leave you to relax, or work on your laptop (offering free Wi-Fi upstairs).
    MamaCoffee offers good quality snacks – cakes, brownies and sandwiches. I had the best spinach quiche of my life here, which was an unexpected perk.
    Floor to ceiling windows and a non-smoking policy make this a lovely, bright place to relax or work, and offers high quality Fair Trade coffee at reasonable prices.

    www.mamacoffee.cz/
    Vodickova 6, Prague 1
    Nearest metro: Mustek
    Nearest Tram 3, 9, 14, 24 or 91 (to Vodickova)
    Mon - Fri: 8:00 - 22:00, Sat - Sun: 10:00 - 22:00
    Google map: bit.ly/vgIibU


    * Helen is our Been there local for Prague. Her page is here: www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/articles/prague-local-helen-ford.jsp and she has her own blog here: czechingin.wordpress.com/

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    When you step into Café Louvre on Národní, it is as if you step back in time. Opened in 1902, Louvre has always ranked highly in Czech kavarna culture. For a time it was the meeting ground of philosophy groups whose members included Franz Kafka and Max Brod. Many key players in the European literary scene of the early twentieth century spent time here, including Czech the Čapek brothers and Otto Pick.
    Although the café closed for several years under the communists, its interior underwent considerable reconstruction in the 1990s. Today visitors will still get a feel of the grandiose café scene that existed at the beginning of the last century, as they walk up the wide staircase with marble walls and an iron handrail. The main room of the café, overlooking Národní below, boasts high ceilings, large windows and huge mirrors, which makes this one of the most splendid locations to drink caj or kava in the whole of Prague.
    Louvre does offer full savoury meals, including soups, salads and pancakes. However, the best reason for a visit is the magnificent coffee and cake menu. Their homemade cakes, strudels and waffles will satisfy even the sweetest tooth – the blueberry cake on linz dough with vanilla ice-cream (65 CZK) keeps me coming back again and again.
    An impressive drinks menu makes Louvre a winter time favourite – hot chocolate with rum and whipped cream (59 CZK) will keep you warm when it’s cold outside.
    For good quality coffee and dessert set in historic opulence, look no further.

    www.cafelouvre.cz/
    Národní 22, Praha 1, 110 00
    +420 224 930 949
    Nearest metro: Narodni Trida or Mustek
    Nearest tram: Narodni Trida (6, 9, 18, 21, 22 or 91)
    Mon-Friday: 08.00 to 23.30
    Sat-Sun: 0900 to 23.30
    Google map: bit.ly/mQerhN


    * Helen is our Been there local for Prague. Her page is here: www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/articles/prague-local-helen-ford.jsp and she has her own blog here: czechingin.wordpress.com/

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    tip

    Cafe Montmartre

    Posted by czechingin 25 August 2011

    Prague is full of places claiming to have been frequented by Kafka, Max Brod and the like,
    but in Café Montmartre you really believe it.
    Walking through the door is like stepping back in time (aside from the laptops set out by the
    modern crowd who now sit where Kafka used to) to the beginning of the twentieth century,
    when the café regularly held literary events, debates and dances. Founded in 1911, the café
    was closed in 1937 and only reopened fairly recently. Great care has been taken to recreate
    the kavarna’s original character, with kitch, mismatched chairs, threadbare sofas and faded
    photographs of the original clientele.
    Good coffees and cakes and a well-stocked bar, for reasonable prices in the city centre. This
    cosy gem will appeal to those looking for something authentic and not too sterile.

    Řetězová 7, Prague 1
    +42(0)222 221 244
    Google map: bit.ly/qEjxTb

    * Helen is our Been there local for Prague. Her page is here: www.ivebeenthere.co.uk/articles/prague-local-helen-ford.jsp and she has her own blog here: czechingin.wordpress.com/

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    tip

    Café Louvre

    Posted by GiuliaFalsetti 27 June 2011

    This is a great place to have breakfast, lunch or dinner (vegetarian meals are included, a rarity in Prague). There is a large non-smoking room upstairs, which is very nice, as cafés and pubs in Prague tend to get very smoky and uncomfortable.
    This place serves top quality coffee, including Viennese coffee, Algerian coffee, Mafioso (cappuccino with Amaretto), and various types of hot chocolate, with coffee, with ice cream, with rum and whipped cream, with egg liqueur and whipped cream, you get the idea.
    I ordered a double espresso and a warm apple strudel with vanilla and chocolate sauce and whipped cream – the pastry was light, flaky and not too buttery; the minced apples had just the right blend of cinnamon, sugar, and nuts, and the whipped cream, oh, the whipped cream! Light and airy, it melted in my mouth as soon as it reached my tongue. This dessert wasn’t sweet or heavy, and the mix of vanilla and chocolate sauce was perfect.
    Café Louvre is open from 8am every day; and offers morning newspapers.
    Free wi-fi is also available.

    Národní 22, Praha 1, 110 00
    +420 224 930 949
    www.cafelouvre.cz
    Google map: bit.ly/jsXOmW

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    Bio Zahrada (meaning Bio or Eco Garden) is a shop and café with an emphasis on fresh and organic food, moments from Namesti Miru.
    Enjoy brilliant fresh coffee in the non-smoking café (with small outside terrace) behind the shop. Different fresh soups and main meals are available daily (if you weren’t hungry when you arrived, the wonderful smells emanating from the kitchen will probably entice you) and a good range of cakes.
    The shop sells a good range of organic produce including locally produced vegetables and organic meat.

    Belgická 33, Praha 2
    +420603752468
    Nearest Metro – Namesti Miru
    www.bio-zahrada.cz/en
    Google map: bit.ly/l8qT81

    0%

    agreed

    0

    people

    I agreeI disagree

    tip

    The Café Louvre

    Posted by Sissi 9 January 2009

    This café is steeped in history and is one of the best coffee houses in Prague. There is a huge breakfast selection and the restaurant serves superb traditional Czech food. The summer terrace is also a really great way to imagine you’re in the company of Kafka, Capek and Einstein who all frequented here. We were staying at the hostel downtown, so it was the perfect place to meet up with friends for a drink as the café is open every evening until 11:30 pm.

    Národní 22, Praha 1, 110 00,
    tel: +420 224 930 949

    100%

    agreed

    1

    people

    I agreeI disagree


      Your tips about Prague