Best Coffee Shops to Work From in Amsterdam (2026)
Where to work from in Amsterdam: a curated guide to specialty coffee shops with WiFi and room to settle in, from West to Oost to Zuid. Laptops welcome.

The Best Coffee Shops to Work From in Amsterdam (2026)
Amsterdam is one of Europe's most comfortable cities for working over a flat white. The specialty scene runs deep, the neighbourhoods are walkable, and on a grey Dutch afternoon there are few better places to open a laptop than a warm roastery with a fresh batch brew on the bar. This guide rounds up the best coffee shops to work from in Amsterdam, all drawn from cafes our community already tracks as work-friendly.
Every spot is chosen on the strength of the coffee, not the size of the brand. A respected specialty roaster with a few locations belongs here as much as a one-room cafe, as long as the coffee is serious. Every pick below has reported WiFi and the kind of seating that lets you actually settle in. We have spread the picks across West, Oost, Zuid, Centrum and Noord so you can find something close to wherever you are based. You can also explore the full, filterable list of work-friendly cafes in Amsterdam whenever you want more options.
How These Picks Were Chosen
Three filters shape this list. First, every cafe reports offering WiFi. That flag comes from the venue rather than a live speed test, so treat it as a strong signal rather than a promise, and confirm on arrival.
Second, each one is marked work-friendly, meaning the layout and atmosphere suit sitting down with a laptop rather than grabbing a quick takeaway shot. We have leaned toward cafes that also serve food, since a lunch option matters when you are settling in for a few hours.
Third, this is specialty-only, chosen on the strength of the coffee rather than the size of the brand, with no filler. BrewAtlas is a curated directory, and the cafes here are the ones the community keeps coming back to. The result is a shortlist you can trust, spread deliberately across several neighbourhoods.
The Best Coffee Shops to Work From in Amsterdam
LOT61 Coffee Roasters (Amsterdam-West)
LOT61 Coffee Roasters brings a Sydney sensibility to Amsterdam-West, with house-roasted beans and one of the larger, brighter rooms on this list. There is genuine space to spread out a laptop and a notebook here, which makes it a comfortable pick for a long heads-down stretch. WiFi is reported, and the bright airy feel keeps energy up through the afternoon. Order a flat white made with their own roast to start the session.
Friedhats FUKU Cafe (Amsterdam-West)
Friedhats FUKU Cafe is a micro-roastery from a multiple-time Dutch champion, so the coffee is exceptional even by Amsterdam standards. It is on the compact side, which makes it ideal for focused solo work rather than calls. Grab a filter from the rotating experimental lineup and a bite to keep you going. With WiFi reported and a serious coffee program, it rewards an early arrival before the seats fill.
Espressofabriek (Amsterdam-West)
Steps from Westerpark, Espressofabriek is an in-house roastery and espresso bar with an easy, industrial feel. The proximity to the park makes it a natural base for a working day where you want to step out for air between tasks. Food is on the menu for longer sessions, and WiFi is reported. The skilled latte art is a nice reward when you hit a milestone.
Rum Baba (Amsterdam-Oost)
Rum Baba is a well-known fixture for remote workers in Amsterdam-Oost, with a full brew bar, home-roasted beans and a proper bakery. The shop and brew-bar setup gives you room to settle, and the pastries make it easy to stay through lunch. WiFi is reported here. It suits both quiet solo work and the occasional low-key catch-up, though headphones are wise if you need to take a call.
4850 (Amsterdam-Oost)
4850 is a relaxed neighbourhood bar in Oost pouring La Cabra from Copenhagen alongside rotating single-origin filters. The come-as-you-are vibe makes it comfortable to linger, and with food available it works for a half-day rather than a quick stop. WiFi is reported. Try a seasonal filter and settle into the calmer weekday rhythm that makes Oost so workable.
Coffee District (Amsterdam-Zuid)
Coffee District sits near Olympiaplein in Amsterdam-Zuid and pairs espresso and filter with house-made pastries. Zuid skews residential and a little quieter than the centre, which often means an easier time finding a table mid-morning. WiFi is reported and the pastry counter makes long sessions painless. A good base if you are staying or working south of the canals.
Brandmeesters Amsterdam (Amsterdam-Zuid)
Brandmeesters Amsterdam is a family-run roastery dating to 1994, brewing across just about every method from V60 to moka pot. The depth of the menu rewards a curious palate during breaks, and the established, settled feel of the room suits heads-down work. WiFi is reported and food is available. Ask the team what they are brewing on filter that day.
Toki (Amsterdam-Centrum)
Toki is an industrial-styled hangout near Central Station, which makes it a handy pick if you are working between trains or arriving into the city. The brunch and baked-goods menu covers a longer sitting, and the central location means you are never far from your next meeting. WiFi is reported. It can get busy, so aim for the off-peak windows if you want a calm table.
De Koffieschenkerij (Amsterdam-Centrum)
For something completely different, De Koffieschenkerij serves V60 and organic coffee inside a 1517 sacristy beside the Oude Kerk, with a tranquil church garden attached. On a dry day the garden is a genuinely lovely place to think. It is more of a serene heads-down spot than a call-taking one. WiFi is reported and food is available. A memorable change of scene right in the centre.
Black Gold Amsterdam (Amsterdam-Centrum)
Black Gold Amsterdam is a vinyl-spinning specialty cafe in the centre with a strong V60 pour-over program and a music-immersed setting. The soundtrack makes it a great spot for creative work where you want atmosphere rather than silence. WiFi is reported and there is food on the menu. Bring headphones if you need to drown out the records for a call.
Cafe Keppler (Amsterdam-Noord)
If you are across the IJ, Cafe Keppler is a neighbourhood cafe in Amsterdam-Noord that roasts its own coffee, with clean, fruit-forward filters and Kees beans on espresso. Noord is quieter and more local than the centre, so tables tend to be easier to come by. WiFi is reported and food is available. A solid base for a focused day away from the tourist crowds.
WiFi, Outlets and Seating: What to Expect
A quick reality check before you pack your charger. The WiFi flag on every cafe here is reported by the venue, not measured live, so it is a strong indicator rather than a guarantee. If a stable connection is mission-critical for the day, it is worth confirming with staff when you order, or having a phone hotspot ready as backup.
Power outlets are the bigger variable. Some Amsterdam cafes line their shared tables with sockets; others have just one or two near the wall, and a few politely discourage cables across walkways. Do not assume you will find a plug at every seat. Arrive with a charged battery and you remove the problem entirely.
Seating norms shift with the clock and the calendar. Many Amsterdam cafes are relaxed about laptops on weekday mornings but tighten up at weekends and over lunch, when tables are needed for diners. A few have dedicated laptop areas or bars. The simplest move is to arrive off-peak, ask where laptop work is welcome, and read the room.
Best Neighbourhoods to Work From in Amsterdam
Amsterdam-West, and Oud-West in particular, is the city's default neighbourhood for remote work. It has the highest density of roasteries, a relaxed residential pace, and easy green space at Westerpark and Vondelpark nearby. If you only have time to base yourself in one area, start here.
Amsterdam-Oost is the other reliable choice. It is community-minded, a little cheaper, and its cafes tend to stay calmer on weekdays, which suits long focused sessions. Spots like Rum Baba have a loyal remote-working following for good reason.
Amsterdam-Zuid is leafy and residential, with quieter mid-morning rooms that make finding a table simple. Amsterdam-Centrum keeps you close to the stations and sights but gets busier, so lean on off-peak hours. And if you want to escape the crowds entirely, Amsterdam-Noord across the IJ is local, spacious and increasingly worth the short ferry ride.
Cafe Etiquette: Working Remotely in Amsterdam
A cafe is not a free co-working space, and the unwritten rules here are simple. Keep ordering. A coffee on arrival and another every hour or two is fair rent for the table, and ordering food at lunch keeps you firmly in everyone's good books.
Mind the peak. Weekday mornings are generally the most laptop-friendly window. At weekends and over lunch, tables are at a premium for people there to eat, so either arrive early or move on once you are done.
Free up space when you can. If a four-top is filling with customers and you are solo, offer to shift to a smaller table. And take calls outside or keep them brief with headphones in. Amsterdam cafes are sociable spaces, and a quiet, considerate laptop user is always welcome back.
Find More Work-Friendly Cafes in Amsterdam
This list is a starting point, not the whole map. To compare opening hours, neighbourhoods and amenities across every specialty option, browse the full directory of work-friendly cafes in Amsterdam on BrewAtlas.
You can also explore everything happening across the city from the main Amsterdam coffee guide, then filter down to the area you are working from. Find a good table, order something, and get to it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Written by
Sheldon Bishop
Founder, BrewAtlas
I built BrewAtlas to map the specialty coffee worth crossing a city for. I spend my time visiting roasters and cafes around the world and writing up what is actually worth your morning.













