City guides with verified cafes, work scores, WiFi ratings, and local knowledge — built for people who take their coffee seriously.
The world's most respected specialty coffee scene outside the US — flat whites, third-wave roasters, and cafe culture embedded in daily life.
Strong independent cafe culture across Surry Hills, Newtown and the CBD, with a growing specialty roaster scene rivalling Melbourne.
Kissaten tradition meets third-wave precision — the world's most technically serious coffee culture.
The global benchmark for nomad-optimised cafes — dozens of air-conditioned spaces with fast WiFi, power at every seat, and excellent local arabica.
Canggu and Seminyak have built a dense work-cafe ecosystem, particularly popular with remote workers escaping European winters.
One of Asia's most technically advanced specialty scenes, with extraordinary cafe design in Gangnam, Mapo, and Insadong.
A compact city with a punching-above-its-weight specialty coffee scene and cafe spaces that take work infrastructure seriously.
Bangsar and TTDI have developed a strong independent cafe culture with consistent work-friendliness and excellent local coffee.
Shoreditch, Bermondsey, and Stoke Newington lead one of Europe's most developed specialty cafe ecosystems — uneven but excellent at its best.
A compact, walkable city with a mature specialty coffee culture and cafe spaces genuinely designed for long stays.
Prenzlauer Berg and Mitte concentrate Europe's most interesting independent cafes — inclusive, unhurried, and reliably work-friendly.
A rapidly evolving specialty scene in Mouraria and Príncipe Real, sitting alongside traditional pastelaria culture.
The specialty wave arrived late but committed — Le Marais and Canal Saint-Martin now have a dense cluster of quality roasters and work-friendly spaces.
Tiny market, outsized influence — Tim Wendelboe, Fuglen and Kaffa shaped global third-wave standards from this Nordic city.
El Born and Gràcia have the best work cafes — specialty operators who understand that remote workers are their best customers.
The original coffee house city — a tradition where extended stays are the expectation, not the exception.
Williamsburg, the West Village, and Nolita have world-class specialty cafes — the challenge is finding seats and convincing staff you're not on your way out.
Stumptown's hometown has maintained its cafe culture as the chain scaled nationally — still one of the most cafe-dense cities per capita.
The Mission and Hayes Valley have some of the world's best specialty roasters within a mile of each other.
El Poblado has built one of Latin America's best work-cafe ecosystems — fast infrastructure, excellent local coffee at Pergamino, and a growing nomad community.
Roma Norte and Condesa have developed a serious specialty scene, with dozens of independent cafes welcoming long-stay workers.
Palermo Soho and San Telmo have cafes that genuinely match European quality — and the economics of a long stay are more compelling than anywhere in the region.
Mile End and the Plateau have a distinct cafe culture shaped equally by French coffee house tradition and North American specialty values.
Karaköy and Beyoğlu layer a thriving specialty scene over one of the world's oldest coffee cultures — Turkish coffee and Kalita Wave side by side.
DIFC and Alserkal Avenue have serious specialty operators — air-conditioned, well-resourced, and increasingly work-friendly.
Florentin and Neve Tzedek have a Mediterranean cafe culture that genuinely accommodates long stays and laptop workers.
De Waterkant and Woodstock have a growing specialty scene with some of the best-value work cafes in the Southern Hemisphere.
Westlands and Karen have developed a small but committed specialty scene — remarkable given Kenya's status as producer of the world's most distinctive coffees.
The birthplace of coffee has a traditional ceremony culture and a growing modern cafe scene worth experiencing before anywhere else.