Best Coffee Shops to Work From in Los Angeles (2026)
A curated guide to the best coffee shops to work from in Los Angeles, with reported WiFi, room to spread out, food for long sessions, and tips on the city's best work neighbourhoods.

Best Coffee Shops to Work From in Los Angeles (2026)
Finding the best coffee shops to work from in Los Angeles is its own kind of commute. The city is enormous, traffic is real, and the cafe that works for a focused morning of writing is not always the one that works for back-to-back calls. This guide pulls together specialty cafes across Los Angeles that are set up for laptop sessions, with reported WiFi, room to spread out, and in most cases a food menu so you are not packing up at lunch.
Every cafe below comes from the work-friendly cafes in Los Angeles filter on BrewAtlas. These are specialty-only spots, chosen on the strength of the coffee rather than the size of the brand, and picked because they actually suit getting work done. You can always open the live filter to see the full list and sort by neighbourhood.
How These Picks Were Chosen
Three things decided this list. First, every cafe is flagged work-friendly and has WiFi reported on its BrewAtlas profile. Second, every cafe is genuinely specialty: a respected roaster with a few locations belongs here as much as a one-room cafe, as long as the coffee is serious. Roasters, multi-roaster bars, and dedicated espresso programs all qualify. Third, the picks are curated, not scraped, so the goal is a useful spread of rooms across the city rather than a directory dump.
Within that, the ones that earned a spot tend to have a food menu for longer stays, enough seating to land a table, and a location in a neighbourhood you might actually base yourself in. We have spread the picks deliberately so wherever you are in Los Angeles, there is a credible option nearby. For the complete and always-current set, the city page and the work-friendly filter are the source of truth.
The Best Coffee Shops to Work From in Los Angeles
Verve Coffee Roasters (Downtown Arts District)
Verve Coffee Roasters is the cafe that comes up again and again when remote workers talk about Downtown. The Arts District outpost is a big, industrial space with a patio, which means there is usually room to settle in. WiFi is reported and there is a food menu, so it suits a long heads-down stretch. The open layout carries sound, so save your loud calls for a corner and order a batch brew to refill cheaply through the morning.
Groundwork Coffee Co. (Downtown Arts District)
Groundwork Coffee Co. is one of the more reliably spacious rooms in the Arts District, with communal tables, an upper section, and booths. That mix is ideal because you can pick a communal table for focus or a booth for a quieter call. There is solid food alongside the organic coffee, so it holds up for a full work session. Order an iced batch brew if you are planting yourself for the afternoon.
Intelligentsia Coffee Silver Lake Coffeebar (Silver Lake)
Intelligentsia Coffee Silver Lake Coffeebar has been a Silver Lake laptop standby for years. Expect a laid-back, light-filled room with food and reported WiFi. It can fill up midday, so it leans better toward heads-down work than long phone calls. Their pour over is the move if you want to slow down and make a single cup last.
Dinosaur Coffee (Silver Lake)
Dinosaur Coffee is a Silver Lake fixture pouring locally roasted Woodcat beans, with a food menu and reported WiFi. It is a smaller, design-forward room, which makes it great for quiet focused work and less ideal for back-to-back calls. The signature burnt sugar latte is the order, and an early arrival is worth it to claim a table.
Alchemist Coffee Project (Koreatown)
Alchemist Coffee Project is a long-running Koreatown favourite for laptops, with a sleek, cozy interior that people settle into for hours. There is food and reported WiFi, so it works for a full session. It is a popular work spot, so headphones and a courteous table footprint go a long way. A pour over pairs nicely with a slower morning here.
Maru Coffee (Downtown)
Maru Coffee is a minimalist, precision-focused espresso bar that nomads gravitate to for the quiet and the quality. Honest note: the seating is on the smaller side, so it is best as a focused, shorter-session spot rather than an all-day base. There is a food menu and reported WiFi. Order the matcha or a clean pour over and keep your footprint tight if it is busy.
Paisita Cafe (Venice)
Paisita Cafe is a laid-back Latin American spot in Venice with ample seating and reported WiFi, which is a rarer combination on the Westside. There is food, so you can stay through lunch. The relaxed pace suits both heads-down work and the occasional quiet call. The chocolate-forward espresso drinks are the highlight.
Go Get Em Tiger (East Hollywood)
Go Get Em Tiger is a well-known house-roasting cafe in East Hollywood with a food menu and reported WiFi. The seasonal coffee program is excellent and the room is friendly to a working morning. It can get social at peak times, so aim for the off-hours if you need quiet. Their seasonal espresso drink is always worth trying.
Civil Coffee (Highland Park)
Civil Coffee brings an airy, Mexican single-origin focus to Highland Park, with food and reported WiFi. The high-ceilinged room feels open enough for a comfortable stretch of work. It is a good base if you are staying on the Eastside and want something away from the Downtown crowds. Try one of the house specialty lattes.
Found Coffee (Eagle Rock)
Found Coffee is a multi-roaster shop in Eagle Rock spotlighting California roasters, with food and reported WiFi. The rotating lineup keeps the coffee interesting across repeat visits, which matters if this becomes your regular. It is a quieter, neighbourhood-paced room, so it leans toward focused work. Ask which roaster is on bar and order a pour over.
Caffe Luxxe (Brentwood)
Caffe Luxxe is a polished artisan roaster in Brentwood with a full food menu and reported WiFi, a strong option if you are working from the Westside. The room has a refined, calm feel that suits steady, heads-down work better than loud calls. The cappuccino is the classic order here.
Smoky Hollow Roasters (El Segundo)
Smoky Hollow Roasters is an open warehouse roastery in El Segundo, which makes it one of the more spacious South Bay options for working. There is food and reported WiFi, and the airy layout means tables are usually findable. The high ceilings carry noise, so headphones help. Their small-batch single origins are the draw.
WiFi, Outlets and Seating: What to Expect
A quick, honest reality check. On BrewAtlas, WiFi is shown when it is reported for a cafe, but reported is not the same as guaranteed. Networks change, speeds vary by time of day, and a busy room can slow things down. If your work depends on a stable connection, bring a phone hotspot as a backup.
Outlets are even less predictable. Some of these rooms have plugs along the walls and under counters, others have one stubborn outlet behind a bench. Treat power as a bonus, not a given, and arrive with a full battery and a charged power bank if you plan to stay a while.
Seating in Los Angeles swings hard with the time of day. Mid-morning through early afternoon is peak in most of these cafes, especially the Downtown and Silver Lake rooms. If you want a good table near a window or a plug, arriving before 10am or after 2pm makes a real difference.
Best Neighbourhoods to Work From in Los Angeles
Downtown and the Arts District have the densest cluster of work-friendly specialty cafes, with bigger industrial rooms like Verve and Groundwork built for spending time. It is the easiest area to cafe-hop on foot.
Silver Lake is the classic Eastside creative-class base, with Intelligentsia and Dinosaur anchoring a walkable scene. Koreatown is central and well-priced, with rooms like Alchemist that people settle into for hours.
For quieter alternatives, Highland Park and Eagle Rock on the Eastside, Venice and Brentwood on the Westside, and El Segundo in the South Bay all have solid work cafes with more room to breathe. East Hollywood sits handily between the Eastside and the central neighbourhoods.
Cafe Etiquette: Working Remotely in Los Angeles
A few unwritten rules keep cafes happy to host laptops. Buy something when you arrive, and keep buying through the day if you are camping out. A coffee every couple of hours is the fair rent for a table.
Avoid the peak rush if you can. Settling into a four-top during the busiest hour, especially on a weekend, is the fastest way to wear out your welcome. Off-peak arrivals are better for you and for the cafe.
Free up tables as the room fills. If a two-top opens and you are spread across a four-seater, move. And take calls outside or on mute with headphones, since a packed espresso bar is not a phone booth. A little courtesy is why these rooms stay laptop-friendly in the first place.
Find More Work-Friendly Cafes in Los Angeles
This is a curated slice, not the whole map. To see every option with reported WiFi and a work-friendly flag, open the work-friendly cafes in Los Angeles filter on BrewAtlas. You can sort by neighbourhood to find something near your hotel or coworking spot, then check each cafe's profile for hours, food, and the latest details before you head out.
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.














