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Tokyo Coffee Culture — Third-Wave Specialty Cafes

Published: Jun 3, 2026
Updated: Jun 3, 2026
coffeeTokyothird-wavespecialty cafesBlue Bottle
Tokyo Coffee Culture — Third-Wave Specialty Cafes

Tokyo's coffee culture has evolved from 1970s kissaten (喫茶店, retro cafes) to 2000s-2010s third-wave specialty coffee — single-origin beans, pour-over methods, latte art, and minimalist aesthetics. The city has 10,000+ cafes ranging from Starbucks Reserve Roastery (world's largest, Nakameguro) to tiny 8-seat roasteries where baristas weigh beans to 0.1g precision. The culture balances reverence for craft (Japanese obsession with mastery) and accessibility (¥500-800 for exceptional coffee).

Blue Bottle Coffee (ブルーボトルコーヒー, California-origin chain) opened Japan's first location in Kiyosumi-Shirakawa (2015) and sparked Tokyo's specialty coffee boom. Onibus Coffee (オニバスコーヒー, Tokyo-origin roastery) represents local excellence — direct-trade beans, meticulous roasting, and neighborhood cafe atmosphere. The third-wave philosophy: coffee is craft, not commodity; origin matters; preparation is ritual.

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Getting There

Access Information

Top coffee areas: Shimokitazawa (bohemian cafes), Kiyosumi-Shirakawa (Blue Bottle birthplace, warehouse cafes), Daikanyama (upscale), Shibuya (Fuglen, Onibus). Budget: ¥400-800 per coffee. Most cafes open 8:00-19:00 (some close by 18:00).

Insider Guide

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**Must-visit cafes:** Onibus Coffee (オニバスコーヒー, Nakameguro, ¥550 pour-over, tiny 10-seat roastery, minimalist aesthetic), Fuglen Tokyo (フグレン東京, Yoyogi, Norwegian roastery, vintage furniture, ¥650), Gli

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