Barrier-free Cafés 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.
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.
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.
In the shadow of Scandinavia’s tallest tower, this sleek newcomer (opened 2025) imports award-winning beans from a Bulgarian roastery founded by Cup of Excellence juror Jordan Dabov. The serious coffee menu spans from house espresso to Geisha and Kopi Luwak, with V60, Chemex and cold brew alongside.
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.
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.
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.
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.
On an 1890s farm in Österlen, the courtyard fills with visitors drawn by legendary carrot cake and wood-oven sourdough. The shop sells own-brand muesli, crispbread, and marmalades alongside bakery classics. Queues form early, but patient locals know: every bite justifies the wait.
Ambitious konditori crafting mousse cakes and large bread loaves with Tahiti vanilla, Valrhona chocolate, and organic butter. Frida Antonsson and Micke Svensson trained at some of Stockholm’s finest bakeries before returning to their hometown in 2008.
Family-run since Pelle Stålbom opened the original on the town square in 1957, this local institution supplies classic Swedish pastries. The current garden location seats 400 for summer concerts featuring top Swedish artists. No WiFi: “Because here, we talk to each other.”
Specialty coffee bar in central Nyköping with trained baristas and top-tier Victoria Arduino equipment. The seasonal menu features salads and soups alongside house pastries made with Valrhona chocolate. In summer, organic gelato from local dairy brand Vår Gelato joins the lineup.
Rows of shiny pralines fill the glass counter like gems, each one shaped by hand. Award-winning chocolatiers have worked here since 2002, using single-origin cacao such as fruity Madagascan and floral Ecuadorian to match each filling. Book a tasting or simply pause with an espresso.
Inside a stable from the 19th century, once kept for the Swedish royal family, rough wooden tables face views across farmland and sea. Petter Polacek and Jonatan Zaar bake cold-fermented sourdough using organic flour and butter. The house marmalade makes a worthy souvenir.
Expect a southern European mood on this pedestrian lane: tiled walls, tight seating, and a terrace that fills the moment the sun appears. In the afternoon, after the espresso machine cools, bottles of natural wine are opened instead. Same owners as Nostra Café; same attention to seasonal ingredients.
Everything on the menu is made in-house: banana bread with espresso butter, raw caramel cake, eggs Florentine with hollandaise. Weekend brunch fills fast.
Marble walls and a glass-roofed atrium: Latteria is located inside Antikhallarna (“the antique halls”), a converted bank palace completed in 1905. With cakes, pastries, waffles, and light dishes, it is a popular daytime meeting spot. The adjacent British Shop is not to be missed for unexpected souvenirs.
Anders Oskarsson, who runs this 1920s bakery, was named World’s Best Pastry Chef in 2017, and a gold medal on display proves it. He created the mini princess cake in a taco-like shell. Everything is made from scratch, using vanilla, organic Gotland flour, Valrhona chocolate, and other selected ingredients.
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.