Outdoor Dining Area Cafés in Hovedstaden
Owner Jose Antonio, a Peruvian native, travels home regularly to source coffee beans from small farms. His café, with a front deck, sits by the lakes. Filter brewing gets real attention, joined by house specialties like espresso tonic, iced latte with coconut milk, and seasonal flavors like gingerbread and pistachio.
Inside a former bookshop in the Meatpacking District, pastries from Juno the Bakery rest in a wooden vitrine like statement pieces in a jewellery case. Co-founder Jonas Gehl, a two-time Danish barista champion, leads a team known for precise filter brews and espresso roasted on Refshaleøen.
This pioneering B Corp roaster brought its direct-trade philosophy from Copenhagen to Aarhus in 2023. World champion baristas serve bright Nordic roasts in a Latin Quarter corner spot. Buttery pain suisse, cinnamon rolls and other pastries from Jumbo bakery complete the selection.
Inside Another Aspect’s flagship store, a small coffee bar serves espresso and filter from one of Denmark’s most respected roasters. La Cabra began in Aarhus in 2012 and now reaches even New York and Bangkok. Minimal seating and a fashion-forward ambience characterize the space.
Every day, around 600 guests pass through the flagship café of this coffee roaster, which combines a brew bar, kitchen, and bakery. Its central location near Tivoli Gardens and opening hours until 8PM Monday to Friday make it easy to visit. The brunch menu includes plenty of vegan options.
London-born Darcy Millar opened this corner café after years as a barista. Espresso comes in two styles (“comfy” and “exciting”) with beans from local and international roasters. Behind windows stretching from floor to ceiling, mismatched lamps, framed posters, and the wooden floor remind guests of a living room.
After meeting during gap years in London, Nacho Jodar Arias and Jan Stenzl opened this coffee bar on Vesterbrogade in 2023. A hi-fi system sets the mood with a lo-fi playlist, and the NORSA running club gathers weekly. This place is shaped around coffee (from Prolog), sound, and sport.
Frederik Bille Brahe opened this former gallery space in 2013 and created Copenhagen’s most photographed breakfast: the Avokadomad with thin avocado slices fanned over rye with chili and lemon. His book “Atelier September: A Place For Daytime Cooking” contains 86 recipes to try at home.
Two decades behind the roaster show in every cup at this converted warehouse. The team sources exclusively from Kenyan and Ethiopian highlands, roasting twice weekly for peak freshness. The tebirkes, a Danish pastry sprinkled with poppy seeds, has become the signature pairing.
Childhood friends Nikolaj and Philip started as coffee-bike vendors in 2010, then opened their first café on the rooftop of the Illum department store in 2012. The location on the fourth floor offers views across Strøget and the Stork Fountain. The company now runs 18 locations, supplied by its own organic bakery.
This funky nano-roastery and brew bar (opened 2025) leans into fermentation-led coffees, where the beans are processed to amplify the aroma (for example, with the “sleeping-bag method"), then roasted light and served bright. Their joke: coffee is a tropical fruit, so they’ll prove just how “saftig” (juicy) it can be.