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☕ Beijing Café Guide · 2026

Beijing — coffee from the hutong
to the 798 art zone

One of China's fastest-growing specialty coffee scenes. Century-old courtyard houses turned into tiny cafés. Disused factories turned into galleries with great coffee. And roasters Beijingers are genuinely proud of — a capital that takes its coffee more seriously than you'd expect.

Why Beijing

The capital where coffee quietly took root

Imagine a narrow grey hutong lane that has been quiet for centuries, lined with old courtyard houses hundreds of years old. Then one wooden door opens onto a counter-sized café: a gleaming espresso machine inside, shelves of roasted beans, two or three wooden chairs. Outside it is still old Beijing. Inside it is specialty coffee as good as anything you'd find in Tokyo or Melbourne. This has been happening across the capital for the past decade.

Beijing is not China's number-one coffee city — that title belongs to Shanghai, which has more than 9,000 cafés, the most of any city on earth. What makes Beijing interesting is that its specialty scene runs deep and has a clear personality. Beijing drinkers tend to care about the story and origin of the beans more than chasing the newest flavour every week, and several specialty brands the whole country knows were born right here.

The most important difference is that Beijing's cafés are spread out. They don't cluster in one district the way Shanghai's do in the French Concession. You'll find a great café in a Gulou hutong one day, an upscale mall café in Sanlitun the next, a gallery café in the 798 Art District after that — which is exactly why this guide is built around zones. A good area usually holds several good cafés, so even if one has closed or moved on, you'll still be spoilt for choice.

Read this before you go: Independent hutong cafés change quickly — a place that was the talk of the town last year may have moved or closed. Before you make a special trip to any single café, check its current status and hours on Dianping (大众点评) or the café's WeChat account. We've deliberately led with zones rather than single addresses so this guide stays useful all year round.
The heart of the scene

The hutongs — coffee in the city's oldest lanes

Where hundred-year-old courtyard houses have become Beijing's most characterful cafés

The Nanluoguxiang hutong in Beijing — a leafy old lane lined with small shops and cafés in brick buildings, red lanterns strung overhead

A hutong (胡同) is one of Beijing's traditional residential lanes — a narrow passage flanked by grey courtyard houses (siheyuan), some of them centuries old. Over the past ten years these lanes have become home to the most characterful cafés in the city, because a tiny coffee shop inside an old house has an atmosphere no new-build mall can manufacture: aged timber beams, brick walls, a small courtyard, and the quiet of the lane outside.

The hutongs with the densest café scene sit around Gulou (the Drum Tower) and Beiluoguxiang, north of the old city, and around Wudaoying and Fangjia Hutong, close to the Lama Temple. Both areas are a pleasure to explore on foot, with cafés, design shops and little bars mixed together in the same lane. Wander, and when you spot a coffee-cup sign down an alley — go in. That is the right way to discover Beijing.

Getting there: For Gulou and Beiluoguxiang, take Subway Line 8 to Shichahai or Gulou Dajie and walk. For Wudaoying and Fangjia, take Line 2/5 to Yonghegong Lama Temple, a few minutes' walk away. The two areas are close together — a short taxi between them, or a pleasant walk along the edge of the old city.
Which zone to walk

Six café zones coffee lovers should know

Beijing is dispersed — walk one zone at a time and each gives you a different mood, from old courtyards to modern roasteries

Gulou & Beiluoguxiang
Hutongs · Subway Line 8, Shichahai / Gulou Dajie

The heart of Beijing's hutong café scene — the lanes around the Drum Tower and Beiluoguxiang (the calmer, cooler lane that runs parallel to the tourist-heavy Nanluoguxiang) are full of small cafés in old courtyard houses. Some have an interior courtyard; some hide behind a wooden door you'd barely notice from the street. The pace is slow and it's perfect for a whole morning.

Known for: courtyard cafés · old-Beijing atmosphere · Price: ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Best time: weekday mornings, when the lanes are still quiet
Sanlitun & Taikoo Li
三里屯 · Subway Line 10, Tuanjiehu / Line 3, Sanlitun

The modern side of Beijing's coffee scene — Taikoo Li is an open-air mall packed with brunch cafés, good-looking design spots and % Arabica, which has spaces in both the north and south sections. Nearby, Soloist Coffee runs its largest and most upscale branch. This is the zone for anyone who wants good coffee, a full breakfast and comfortable seating on a day they don't feel like walking the lanes.

Known for: % Arabica · Soloist · brunch · mall cafés · Price: ¥40–60 (~฿200–300) · Best time: late morning to afternoon
798 Art District
798艺术区 · Chaoyang District · easiest by taxi/DiDi

A 1950s Bauhaus-style industrial complex that became Beijing's largest art zone. Galleries, studios, outdoor sculpture and cafés are scattered all through it. Voyage Coffee has a branch here. Cafés at 798 are made for a day spent wandering between exhibitions and stopping to rest in stages — coffee and art in one place.

Known for: gallery cafés · Voyage Coffee · contemporary art · Price: ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Best time: afternoon, gallery-hopping as you go
Wudaoying & Fangjia Hutong
五道营 / 方家胡同 · near the Lama Temple · Line 2/5, Yonghegong

Beijing's two most indie lanes, right by the Lama Temple (Yonghe Temple). Wudaoying Hutong was an early leader of Beijing's modern coffee wave, with roasters, indie cafés and small restaurants. Fangjia Hutong is quieter, with cafés tucked in among art studios. Both lanes can be explored in half a day, before or after visiting the Lama Temple.

Known for: indie roasters · lane cafés · near the Lama Temple · Price: ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Best time: late morning, after the temple
Liangmaqiao & Chaoyang
朝阳 · CBD · Liangmaqiao · Subway Line 10

The east side of the city, Chaoyang District, is home to several specialty roasters and flagship cafés, including Metal Hands, which has multiple branches. The Liangmaqiao area along the Liangma River is an up-and-coming café pocket, while the CBD and Guomao have larger cafés that suit working — wide tables, lots of seats, some with power outlets. For a long half-day stay, this side is the most comfortable.

Known for: roasters · Metal Hands · work-friendly · Price: ¥35–60 (~฿175–300) · Best time: any time of day
Guozijian Street
国子监街 · near the Lama & Confucius temples · Line 2/5, Yonghegong

One of the leafiest, most tranquil old streets in Beijing, with ancient ceremonial archways and big trees shading the road, fronting the Confucius Temple and Imperial College. Cafés here feel calmer and more classic than the indie lanes. It pairs beautifully with the Lama Temple and Wudaoying right next door — you can comfortably walk all three in a single day.

Known for: tree-lined street · calm cafés · near the temples · Price: ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Best time: late morning to afternoon on a weekday
Coffee + art

798 — the factory that became an art city

Spend a day gallery-hopping and stop for coffee along the way — Beijing does both of these well at once

The 798 Art District in Beijing — red human sculptures standing in front of an old graffiti-covered brick factory wall, a glimpse of the art zone where cafés are scattered throughout

The 798 Art District is a former 1950s electronics-factory complex, designed in Bauhaus style by an East German team. When the factories moved out, artists moved in for the cheap space, and it grew into the largest and liveliest contemporary art zone in Beijing. Today galleries, studios, bookshops and cafés are spread throughout it. The old brick walls still carry graffiti, sculptures stand in the courtyards, and original factory pipework has become part of the atmosphere.

The best way to do 798 is to walk the galleries and stop for coffee in stages — there's no need to rush, and the site is big enough to fill an afternoon. Voyage Coffee has a branch here, and there are plenty of gallery cafés where the coffee is as good as the art around you. It's a day best saved for fine weather, when you can take it slowly — honestly one of the best days in Beijing for anyone who loves both coffee and art.

Cafés worth knowing

The roasters and cafés Beijing coffee lovers talk about

These brands have genuine reputations — but cafés change fast, so always check current branches and hours before you go

1
Metal Hands Coffee (铁手咖啡)
Beijing-born specialty roaster · multiple branches · mainly Chaoyang

One of the names Beijing coffee lovers mention most. Metal Hands started small and grew into a brand with several branches across the city. It roasts its own beans and is known for consistent quality and well-designed spaces that work for both a quick cup and a long sit. If you want to get to know Beijing specialty coffee through a trustworthy local brand, start with Metal Hands.

Find it: several branches across Chaoyang and the city
Price: coffee ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Check first: current branches and hours on Dianping/WeChat
2
Voyage Coffee
Beijing roaster · branches in 798, near Nanluoguxiang and more

Voyage is a Beijing roaster known for a range of roast levels, from light to dark, and a rotating seasonal menu. Its branches sit in some of the city's key spots, including the 798 Art District and near Nanluoguxiang, which makes it easy to drop into while sightseeing. If you like comparing several beans side by side, Voyage delivers.

Find it: 798 Art District · near Nanluoguxiang · other city branches
Price: coffee ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Check first: which branches are open, on Dianping
3
Soloist Coffee Co. (孤独咖啡)
In-house roaster · Yangmeizhu (old Qianmen) · Sanlitun Taikoo Li

Soloist began on Yangmeizhu Byway near Qianmen, in an old hutong house with timber beams and brick walls. It roasts its own beans and is known for its Dirty coffee and desserts inspired by old Beijing sweets. It later opened a branch at Sanlitun Taikoo Li, its largest and most polished. If you want both good coffee and a photogenic setting, Soloist works on both counts.

Find it: Yangmeizhu Byway (Qianmen) · Sanlitun Taikoo Li
Price: coffee ¥35–60 (~฿175–300) · Check first: each branch's hours on WeChat
4
% Arabica (Sanlitun Taikoo Li)
Kyoto-born specialty chain · Taikoo Li north and south

% Arabica is a name coffee lovers across Asia recognise. It started as a small mobile cart at Sanlitun back in 2019 and now has full spaces in both the north and south sections of Taikoo Li. Minimalist white counter, baristas in black, a focus on flat whites and espresso of dependable quality. It's not special because of any Beijing flavour — it's special for its reliable standard and an easy location to drop into between Sanlitun shops.

Find it: Sanlitun Taikoo Li (north and south)
Price: flat white ¥40–55 (~฿200–275) · Pays: WeChat Pay · Alipay · cards inside the mall
5
SOE Coffee & the indie hutong roasters
SOE born in Beijing · indie spots around Wudaoying / Beiluoguxiang

SOE is another specialty brand that started in Beijing and has several branches; the name stands for Single Origin Espresso, which tells you exactly where its priorities lie. Beyond it, the lanes around Wudaoying and Beiluoguxiang hold a rotating cast of indie roasters and small cafés that open and close. These are the soul of the hutong scene — there's no fixed list, so walk in and try one. Some of the best have never appeared in any guide.

Find it: several SOE branches · Wudaoying lane · Beiluoguxiang
Price: coffee ¥35–55 (~฿175–275) · Check first: indie spots turn over fast — check Dianping the day you go
The Lama Temple (Yonghe Temple) in Beijing — red halls with golden tiled roofs, near the Wudaoying and Fangjia lanes that are full of indie cafés

The Lama Temple (Yonghe Temple) — a good place to start a café-walk day. The indie-café lanes of Wudaoying and Fangjia are right next door.

Before you go

Practical tips that actually help

Paying: Beijing is almost entirely cashless. Nearly every café takes WeChat Pay and Alipay as its primary methods. Cafés inside malls like Taikoo Li and some premium spots also accept Visa and Mastercard, but many small hutong cafés take QR payment only, and some don't take cash at all. Before you travel, set up Alipay and link a foreign card through its international mode — it works for visitors (see our China payments guide).

Wi-Fi and working: Mid-size and large specialty cafés in Chaoyang, Sanlitun and 798 are comfortable to work from — wide tables, plenty of seats, some with outlets. Small hutong cafés lean toward atmosphere, with limited seating, and aren't ideal for long stays. The key thing: Wi-Fi in China can't reach many foreign sites without a VPN, so set up a VPN and an eSIM before you travel (see our China internet & VPN guide).

Best timing: On weekday mornings the hutong lanes are still quiet, the light is lovely, and you'll have your pick of seats. On weekends Nanluoguxiang and 798 get very busy. And on opening hours — once more: independent cafés change fast, so before making a special trip to any one of them, check on Dianping (大众点评) or the café's WeChat first so you don't end up at a closed door.

The Sanlitun Taikoo Li area in Beijing — colourful glass buildings, an open-air mall full of cafés, restaurants and % Arabica

Sanlitun Taikoo Li — the modern, open-air side of Beijing's coffee scene, home to % Arabica and Soloist Coffee's largest branch

Hotels near the café scene

Stay close to the coffee

Basing yourself around Sanlitun/Chaoyang or near the Gulou hutongs puts good cafés within a few minutes' walk

Frequently asked

FAQ · what people ask before a Beijing café crawl

How much does coffee cost in Beijing?
It breaks down into tiers — local chains like Luckin or Manner start at ¥10–20 (~฿50–100). Independent specialty cafés in the hutongs and across Chaoyang charge ¥35–55 (~฿175–275). Well-known roasters like Metal Hands, Voyage or Soloist run ¥35–60 (~฿175–300). % Arabica at Sanlitun is ¥40–60 (~฿200–300). A signature drink or a Dirty coffee usually costs a little more than a standard latte.
Which neighbourhood has the best cafés in Beijing?
Beijing's cafés are more spread out than Shanghai's — they don't cluster in one district. The areas coffee lovers go to are the hutongs around Gulou and Beiluoguxiang for old courtyards; Sanlitun and Taikoo Li for modern cafés, brunch and % Arabica; the 798 Art District for gallery cafés; Wudaoying and Fangjia Hutong near the Lama Temple for indie spots; and Chaoyang/Liangmaqiao for roasters. Walk one zone at a time and each gives you a different mood.
How does Beijing's coffee scene compare to Shanghai's?
Shanghai has far more cafés — over 9,000, the most of any city on earth — concentrated in the walkable French Concession. Beijing has fewer and they're more dispersed, but the specialty scene runs deep with a distinct hutong flavour. Several major Chinese specialty brands started in Beijing, including Metal Hands, Voyage Coffee and SOE. Beijing drinkers tend to care about the story and origin of the beans as much as chasing new flavour trends.
Do Beijing cafés accept credit cards or do I need Alipay?
Most cafés take WeChat Pay and Alipay as their primary methods. Cafés inside malls like Taikoo Li and some premium spots also accept Visa and Mastercard, but many small hutong cafés take QR payment only and some don't take cash. We recommend setting up Alipay and linking a foreign card through its international mode before you travel — it's the smoothest way to pay.
Do Beijing hutong cafés open and close often — should I check before going?
Always check first. Independent cafés, especially in the hutongs, change fast — some relocate, some close, some shift hours by season. Before making a special trip to one café, check its current status and hours on Dianping (大众点评) or the café's WeChat account. This guide is organised by zone for exactly that reason: a good area usually has several good cafés, so even if one has closed you'll still have plenty to choose from.
Can you work from Beijing cafés, and do they have Wi-Fi?
Mid-size to large specialty cafés in Chaoyang, Sanlitun and 798 are comfortable to work from — big tables, plenty of seats, some with power outlets. Wi-Fi in China can't reach many foreign sites without a VPN, so set up a VPN and eSIM before you travel. Small hutong cafés usually have limited seating and lean toward atmosphere over long stays, so for a half-day of work choose a larger café on the Chaoyang side.
Klook · Beijing tours

Hutong & old-Beijing walking tour — with someone who knows what's down each lane

A guided walk through the hutongs around Gulou and Beiluoguxiang, past old courtyard houses, tiny lanes and the cafés a solo visitor might walk straight past.

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