The best Cafés with Outdoor Area in Sweden
Inside a converted riding hall from the 19th century, sacks of green coffee and flour line the walls while baristas pull espresso and bakers shape dough. Seating ranges from the roastery floor to a hidden courtyard. Since 2003, this Gothenburg institution has defined Swedish specialty coffee.
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.
Since 2016, this specialty coffee roastery has sourced 100 % traceable beans, roasting them in the countryside outside Linköping. The team grinds eighty percent of the grain for their bread themselves. The cardamom buns sell out fast, while the courtyard garden invites guests to linger.
One of Sweden’s pioneer micro roasteries opened here in 2006, tucked inside a building from the 17th century and spreading out over two floors with its café. Beans are roasted nearby at their own facility, and the resulting espresso even supplies fine dining restaurants. The barista school trains Malmö's next generation.
Sara Wennerström trained under master baker Jan Hedh before restoring the old stone oven in this former summer house. The bakery opened in 2011 and has since earned several awards, such as Best Semla in West Sweden. The slow-fermented sourdough is made with organic flour from Halland mills.
This small Lund roastery has been crafting specialty coffee since 2009 with a 25-kilo Diedrich drum roaster. Founder Daniel brings over two decades of expertise to beans sourced through long-term producer relationships. The hidden courtyard out back invites slow sipping throughout the warmer months.
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.
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.
Plants, bohemian furniture, light pouring in: This neighborhood café has been a local favorite since 2019 (Café of the Year 2024). The all-day veggie menu with hummus bowls, sandwiches, and cakes is built on seasonal local produce, and the coffee from Balck and Koppi is spot-on.
Formerly Mellqvist Kaffebar, this Södermalm institution is featured in Stieg Larsson’s Millennium novels as Mikael Blomkvist’s go-to spot and served as the author’s own regular café, too. It serves David Haugaard’s micro-roasted coffee alongside Valhallabageriet pastries and has a sunny terrace.
Founded in 2014 as a destination rather than a drop-in stop, this bakery occupies a former military base outside Karlstad. Stone-oven sourdough and Danish rye line the counter; specialty coffee receives equal attention. Hobby bakers can buy flour and a sourdough starter to continue at home.
A handwritten espresso menu and colorful dishes define this bright corner café, where lattes are served in large glass cups, and breakfast stretches long into the afternoon. Pancakes and salmon are brunch favorites. Outside, a courtyard shaded by lilac bushes makes the most of the sunny season.
Besides award-winning buns and bread, this artisan bakery-café curates a cultural calendar with live music and readings. When artist Lars Winnerbäck founded the Nypon Award for Culture in Linköping in 2016, the three ladies behind Babettes were the first ones to receive it.
A mayor’s house from the 19th century now serves as Falkenberg’s most design-conscious café, furnished with pieces by notable Scandinavian brands. The kitchen bakes everything on-site and shifts the menu with the seasons. In summer, tables extend the café towards the main street.
A converted tannery beside the Säveån river now houses gastronomy, creative studios, and a sauna. A rest stop on the Gotaleden worth planning around: coffee from a friend’s roastery, freshly baked buns, as well as local and Mediterranean dishes, fuel hikers for the next leg.
Specialty coffee in Sweden’s fika capital: This café in a renovated warehouse from the 18th century serves Bergstrands-roasted beans alongside house-baked pastries made with organic flour from Vänga Kvarn. Velvet sofas and crystal chandeliers set the mood; a courtyard awaits sunny days.
Around the corner from the award-winning restaurant PM & Vänner, this bakery produces naturally leavened loaves and buttery pastries from local and organic ingredients. While “bröd” means bread, “sovel” is old Småland dialect for the scraps you spread on it, rooted in scarcity rather than abundance.
British castle gardens inspired the grounds surrounding this Västerbotten café and farm shop. Here, landscape architect Mona Prestele bakes in a traditional German wood-fired oven using organic flour and eggs from her own hens. The show garden teaches about cold-climate cultivation.
A former waterworks on Lake Kottlasjön now houses a stone-oven bakery where cinnamon and cardamom buns share the heat with slow-fermented bread. The building dates to 1915. Coffee from nearby Lidingö Rosteri accompanies the food. Ideal as a walking destination or as a summer escape from the city.
Inside a converted stable on the Bjäre peninsula, this garden café pours organic coffee alongside herb-laced pastries decorated with edible flowers. Maggan’s cardamom buns follow family recipes. An award-winning destination since 2015, it is surrounded by greenhouses growing 40 tomato varieties.