35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Avoca Coffee Roasters can be found in Mule Alley along with three other locations.
Avoca Coffee Roasters can be found in Mule Alley along with three other locations.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Black Coffee's Churro Latte pops with cinnamon sugar.
Black Coffee's Churro Latte pops with cinnamon sugar.
Source:
35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Brewed, behold the S'more Latte.
Brewed, behold the S'more Latte.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Casa Azul located in a charming Northside home. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Casa Azul located in a charming Northside home. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
Source:
35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Cherry Coffee Shop, roasts its own beans found in its Magnolia shop.
Cherry Coffee Shop, roasts its own beans found in its Magnolia shop.
Source:
35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Flat Track Coffee Roasters brewing along Camp Bowie.
Flat Track Coffee Roasters brewing along Camp Bowie.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Hogan Alley is a welcome escape in downtown.
Hogan Alley is a welcome escape in downtown.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Ivy Coffee Roasters is an upstart coffee cart and roaster near the Stockyards.
Ivy Coffee Roasters is an upstart coffee cart and roaster near the Stockyards.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
La La Land Kind Cafe - Fort Worth
La La Land Kind Cafe - Fort Worth
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Match Point near the entrance to Monticello. Even the armadillo loves it.
Match Point near the entrance to Monticello. Even the armadillo loves it.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Portico Coffee in Northside is an artsy escape.
Portico Coffee in Northside is an artsy escape.
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35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Race Street, meet the Purple Rain lavender latte.
Race Street, meet the Purple Rain lavender latte.
Source:
35 Best Coffee Shops In Fort Worth ― The Ultimate Coffee Shop Guide
Roy Pope coffee bar is a great addition to the neighborhood.
Roy Pope coffee bar is a great addition to the neighborhood.
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Need a place to study or work while you caffeinate? Simply looking to refresh and relax with a friend? Or are you just in search of the best cup of coffee you can find plus a bag of specialty beans to go? Here’s where you’ll find it in town. These are the 35 best coffee shops in Fort Worth.
With three locations in Dallas, plus one each in Frisco and Addison, and another set along the Trinity Trail in Fort Worth’s Westbend, Ascension is way more than just responsibly sourced, craft-roasted coffee. It also serves breakfast and lunch, including its Australian-style ‘all-day Brekky’. Southlake will get its first Ascension soon.
Avoca Coffee Roasters can be found in Mule Alley along with three other locations.
One of Fort Worth’s first coffee roasteries, Avoca has four locations, including one in Denton. Beans are sourced from Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Ethiopia, as well as other famous coffee-growing regions, then micro-roasted, ensuring the freshest cup.
You can find Ampersand at DFW Airport in Terminal C, across from the TCU campus, and the original in Artisan Circle, which does double duty. It transforms into a speakeasy by night. Proven winners include the Vietnamese iced coffee and the butter brew latte.
Black Coffee’s Churro Latte pops with cinnamon sugar.
Located near Texas Wesleyan University, Black Coffee is a fixture in the neighborhood. They host pop-up events and Sunday music. The Churro Latte pops with cinnamon sugar, and the super Southern Iced Sweet Potato Pie Latte is another one-of-a-kind creation.
Founded in 2014 by a military veteran, Black Rifle has hired over 10,000 veterans to join the mission. They are focused on giving back to law enforcement and first responders as well. Coffee shops are everywhere, and the many varieties they roast come in your choice of whole beans, ground, or pods.
Craft brewery, Maple Branch, has added its own roastery and coffee shop on site. They serve handcrafted coffee, with beans freshly roasted in-house, along with breakfast tacos to start your day. And, the shady patio is a great place to relax with a cup of coffee.
This Magnolia Avenue mainstay serves coffee in its stylish digs from 7 am to 3 pm daily. They also have a location in Dallas and one in DFW airport. Their famous S’mores Latte is a mocha with a dramatic graham cracker rim and toasted marshmallow.
Locations are in Grapevine and in First on 7th in downtown Fort Worth. Buon Giorno specializes in Italian espresso coffee roasting. Not over-roasting, but the age-old craft of profile roasting achieves several distinct styles of beans. If you love espresso ― this is the place to find it.
You can drive through or walk up to order your morning cup of drip or cold brew. Grab a pastry or a breakfast burrito to go with it. You’ll find Carter’s at 2700 Stanley Avenue.
Casa Azul located in a charming Northside home. (Photo by Courtney Dabney)
This cozy, artistic Northside coffee shop leads with Latin flair. Fresh Mexican conchas are in the case. A strong Cuban espresso made with Piloncillo brown sugar is classic, and the churro latte never disappoints.
Cherry Coffee Shop, roasts its own beans found in its Magnolia shop.
Another Magnolia Avenue shop, Cherry Coffee, invites you to linger or just “hang around.” They began roasting in-house in recent years. Cherry even has a Hang Around blend with notes of creamy melon and chocolate-covered caramel.
Located within walking distance of campus, this is a favorite stop for TCU students. Many drinks come with Secret Sauce. It has been described this way: “the secret sauce tastes similar to boba tea and hot sauce.” The “sleep is overrated” section of the menu is highly caffeinated for all-night study sessions.
Crude is the perfect fusion of barista-style craft coffees with homemade, small-batch desserts and specialty cakes. Owner Teresa Bloodworth and her son, Corey Bloodworth, have long been a part of South Main Village, serving an array of coffee drinks made from Cultivar coffee beans.
Flat Track Coffee Roasters brewing along Camp Bowie.
This Austin favorite opened 15 years ago, and Fort Worth landed the second Flat Track Coffee shop ever, two years back. You’ll find it at 6475 Camp Bowie Boulevard. Drop in for an Apple Crisp Latte or a Cookie Butter Cappuccino.
It’s a coffee house up front with a work space in the back, positioned along the bricks of Camp Bowie. From Café au Lait to pour-overs and specialty drinks made with fresh syrups, Fort Worth Coffee Co. delivers.
Something’s always brewing off Golden Triangle Boulevard. Good Company serves Onyx Coffee Labs coffees in a variety of brewing methods. Green tile backs the coffee bar with warm wood ceiling application and cozy seating vignettes.
Nearby, on Heritage Trace, Harvest Coffee + Kitchen feeds your tummy as well as your need to recharge. You can grab a bowl, salad, or sandwich. Specialties of the house include the Hazlewood, their signature hazelnut latte, and the Wildflower, their honey lavender latte.
In downtown Fort Worth, this coffee shop serves wine and mixed drinks as well. Coffee drinks come with a side of local lore. The Chisolm (as in Trail) is a cold brew, combining cherry syrup, brown sugar, and oat milk foam, topped with a Luxardo cherry.
Owners Tweety and Patrice Angwenyi didn’t want their coffee shop to blend in ― like its coffee, it’s bold. This Southside shop is famous for its small-batch Kenyan-style cold brews.
Ivy Coffee Roasters is an upstart coffee cart and roaster near the Stockyards.
Having just opened this fall, Ivy Coffee says, “All you need is love.” Owner and coffee roaster, Collin Brister, is focusing on wholesale roasting, barista training, and mobile catering as well. Sip a cup at 2726 Lipscomb St Suite 101.
This is a new arrival that opened in June of 2024 at 1050 West Magnolia Avenue. They serve 100 percent Arabica coffee blends, roasted by their parent company in St. Petersburg, Florida. This is only the second location in Texas.
When this sunny (yellow and white) coffee community landed along Camp Bowie in March of 2025, it broke the internet. Lines required police involvement to train fans off the main drag, weaving for blocks down side streets. Another arrived recently in Southlake to similar fanfare.
This classic French-style market and café is in Clearfork, serves coffee and tea in the morning and glasses of wine in the evening. They pour up proper cappuccinos, Americanos, and more in an upscale setting we love.
Match Point near the entrance to Monticello. Even the armadillo loves it.
This tennis-themed coffee shop is tucked near the entrance to Monticello. Location. Location. Not only can you score a single-origin pour over, you can also avail yourself of the podcast room or the conference room.
In the same building as HopFusion Ale Works, Ostara is best known for its fab cold brew. That’s why you know the name already, from farmers’ markets and other local retailers. The new coffee shop is art-filled, with a small patio to boot.
A coffee shop that leans into Arabic spices and flavors, Pax & Beneficia now has seven North Texas locations, including one in Waterside and another in downtown Fort Worth. The Zahr tastes like baklava with orange blossom and cardamom syrup. Yum.
Another Northside coffee bar, Portico, is “where cozy meets creative.” It’s located in a renovated century-old home, giving artsy vibes. Housemade syrups make lattes creative, like the Coconut Jaggery with organic coconut syrup, sweetened with jaggery ― a traditional Southeast Asian sugar alternative with the slight taste of caramel.
Aaron Latchaw turned a time-worn bail bond building into a welcoming hangout for creatives and coffee lovers. Located at 3021 Race Street, the coffee shop serves the Race Street Sweet Latte and the Purple Rain lavender latte.
This coffee shop at 109 Houston Street was once known as Vaquero; now it’s Rio Dulce. Try the creamy Horchata Latte, the Marlon Brando, a dreamy vanilla cold brew, or the Duke, their unique smoked espresso.
Roots was launched in 2009 in North Richland Hills. It’s now owned by Charlsye Lewis and Marcus Brunt, who also own Boulevard of Greens. The Fort Worth location is on Bryan Avenue in South Main Village, and is served at Boulevard of Greens as well. Roots features Novel Coffee Roasters’ beans.
Roy Pope coffee bar is a great addition to the neighborhood.
Westsiders know a secret. Inside the historic grocery store at 2300 Merrick Street is a coffee bar with inside and patio seating. Coffee drinks are made with their own Roy Pope blends, like the Camp Bowie Dark Roast.
Formerly named Sons of Liberty, this downtown hotspot is now known as Sons Coffee. The edgy and thoroughly urban coffeehouse fronts onto busy Lancaster Avenue. They brew their own beans as well, like the signature Panther City blend with floral and chocolate notes. Try a nitro cold brew or the salted rosemary honey latte.
Austin-based Summer Moon has mastered its wood-fired coffee roasts, achieving some very smooth beans. Grab a cup with some Moon Milk ― the fire-brand’s special creamy sweetener. With two Fort Worth locations, Summer Moon brings a Hill Country vibe to the city, and the case is filled with local pastries and snacks.
In a remodeled self-serve car wash across from Country Day School, you’ll now find Towne’s. The Fort is their breve with vanilla and caramel, and The Queen of the Prairie is an oat milk latte with white chocolate and lavender.
That’s plenty to sip and savor, or take home to brew your morning cup.