The Best Cafés in Großraum Stockholm
Named after the Armenian who opened Paris’s first coffee stall in 1672, this Vasastan favorite carries forward a pioneering spirit. The three Seropian siblings (also from Armenia) started here around 2013, grew the café into a roastery, and now run three locations. Pastries from Compass Bakery and lunch options.
Award-winning café at Artipelag art museum, a sophisticated day-trip destination east of Stockholm. Annie Hesselstad and her team bake everything from scratch, creating new signature pastries for each exhibition. The word “båda” refers to the exposed rock inside the building.
Step into the 1950s at this retro café in the suburb of Midsommarkransen. Near Konstfack art school, students and locals gather over espresso from Drop Coffee beans and sandwiches (the tuna melt is superb). The building once housed a fishmonger; it reopened as a café in 2015.
This roastery specializes in the kind of competition-grade coffee that baristas use to win world championships. Founded in 2021, Standout roasts in the back room of Stockholm Brewing Co., so craft beer sits alongside rare Panamanian geshas. Open Fridays and Saturdays for espresso, V60, and private tastings.
Founded in 2011 by Johan Montan Ahlgren and Øner Kulbay, this roastery moved to Slakthusområdet in 2020. The industrial setting suits the uncompromising approach to sourcing and small-batch roasting. Coffee and open sandwiches are served mere meters from the drum.
This minimalist coffee and tea room with Korean and Japanese aesthetics is set in a converted garage. Multiple grades of ceremonial matcha reveal the drink’s flavor spectrum, from floral to nutty. Artistically plated cakes and specialty coffee follow the same care. Open Wednesday to Sunday.
The café that sparked Sweden's third-wave coffee movement opened in 2004 and continues to set standards. Beans are roasted at their facility south of Stockholm, one of Europe's best-equipped specialty roasteries. The cardamom buns are exceptional.
The scent of stone-baked levain greets visitors to this small, French-inspired bakery on Lidingö. Owners Fredrik and Anna both have credentials from the Nobel Banquet. The Tosca bun with almond topping and a buttery base is a local favorite. Coffee beans and apple juice come from the island.
This konditori with in-house bakery is set inside an 1867 summer villa on Lake Mälaren that once welcomed prominent guests: King Oscar II visited twice; authors Selma Lagerlöf and Henrik Ibsen came for the salon gatherings. The shrimp sandwich and princess cake make great fuel for a hike along the lakeshore.
This classic konditori on Karlavägen has served the upscale neighborhood since 1920. Now run by award-winning chef Mattias Ljungberg, it offers both traditional recipes and new inventions such as the famous “semmelwrap.” Lesser-noticed delights are the buttery Rimbo bun and the painted tiles on the walls.
Specialty café on Rörstrandsgatan since 1996, using beans from Gringos and serving cardamom buns. This Vasastan institution is a sibling of Kaffebar, the Södermalm café that featured in Stieg Larsson's Millennium novels. The breakfast with boiled egg and kaviar is a solid start to the day. Specialty café on Rörstrandsgatan since 1996, using beans from Gringos and serving cardamom buns. This Vasastan institution is a sibling of Kaffebar, the Södermalm café that featured in Stieg Larsson's Millennium novels. The breakfast with boiled egg and caviar is a solid start for the day.
Magnus Johansson set a record by creating the Nobel Banquet dessert eleven times. His bakery in the modern district of Hammarby Sjöstad, founded in 2011, brings refined craft to everyday pastries, cakes, and breads. The bostocks alone justify the detour. Glass walls reveal the busy workshop.
Colorful retro café with creative freakshakes and its own inventions like the Wraffle, a waffle folded into a wrap. Owner Susanna honors her grandmother, who ran a popular suburban café in the fifties. The décor from that era includes family heirlooms, vintage porcelain, and a working jukebox.
Fika royale: The legendary cake buffet served in a manor from the early 19th century on Lake Mälaren holds around 65 varieties, all baked on-site. Coffee is brewed with water from the estate’s Drottningkällan spring. The journey from Stockholm on a vintage steamship is breathtaking.
A red cottage amid allotment gardens and horse stables creates an idyllic setting for this suburban fika destination. The tiny space fills quickly, especially on Friday pizza nights. Stone-baked loaves, grilled sandwiches, various buns, and buttery brioche justify the metro ride to Svedmyra.
Six years after co-founding Frantzén/Lindeberg (now Frantzén), Daniel Lindeberg returned to his hometown suburb to open an ambitious neighborhood bakery. Since 2014, he has brought choux au craquelin, fraisier cakes, prinsesstårta, and macarons to the local center of Orminge.
For over three centuries, the Kronobageriet supplied bread to the military. It produced up to 60,000 loaves a day before closing in 1958. New owners reopened in 2022 in the historical building with levain and laminated pastries. Contrary to the name, “the big bakery” is not that big after all. Luckily, there is outdoor seating.
A tiny counter, a deli ticket system, and some of the city’s most sought-after cardamom buns. Founded in 2003 on Valhallavägen, this Östermalm bakery expanded to three locations without losing its neighborhood character. Sourdough loaves and fruit pastries consistently impress.