19 Best Restaurants in Germany

Café Knösel

$ Fodor's choice

Heidelberg's oldest (1863) coffeehouse has always been a popular meeting place for students and professors, and offers traditional Swabian food, pastries, and ambience. A historic change is that the café no longer produces café founder Fridolin Knösel's Heidelberger Studentenkuss. This iconic "student kiss" is a chocolate wrapped in paper showing two sets of touching lips—an acceptable way for 19th-century students to "exchange kisses" in public. They are now being sold exclusively in Knösel Chocolatier, a small, charming shop, owned by the Knösel family, just down the street.

Cafe König

$ Fodor's choice

A small chocolate and macaroon shop is attached to this ornate café specializing in breakfast, light lunches, and sweet cakes. It's a centrally located place that's perfect for people-watching and indulging in the German coffee-and-cake tradition.

Cortina Eiscafé

$ Fodor's choice

Ice cream sundaes towering with whipped cream and cones toppling under the weight of generous scoops are just a few of the frosty delights to be had at one of Miltenberg's cherished institutions. Located in the town's central square, you can take a cone to go or linger in on the ample terrace and watch the world go by.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Distrikt Coffee

$ | Mitte Fodor's choice

Known for having one of the best breakfasts in Berlin (think avocado toast and toasted brioche with berry preserves), the filtered coffee at Distrikt is far from an afterthought, with beans chosen from some of Europe's top roasteries. Tea lovers aren't left out with a fine selection from Kreuzberg's Companion Coffee & Tea, served up with a scrumptious choice of cakes.

The Barn Café

$ | Mitte Fodor's choice

One of Berlin's original third-wave coffee joints, this tiny café in the heart of Mitte’s gallery district serves up superlative hand-brewed coffees (always served black) and espresso drinks with trendy add-ons like oat milk, alongside a small but tasty selection of baked goods and sandwiches. There's limited indoor seating and laptops are banned, so this is a better place to sit outside when the weather's nice or to get your coffee to go.

Auguststr. 58, Berlin, Berlin, 10119, Germany
No phone
Known For
  • top-notch filtered coffee
  • sustainable, single-origin beans roasted in-house
  • delicious daily changing pastries

Art Cafe

$

Located right on the bustling Drosselgasse, this quaint café offers a picture-perfect rendition of the town's most iconic refreshment: the Rüdesheimerkaffee. First created in the 1950s by German television chef Hans Karl Adam, the Rüdesheimerkaffee is made by flambéeing Asbach Uralt brandy and sugar in a specially made cup until the sugar dissolves, pouring strong coffee over it, and garnishing with mountains of whipped cream and chocolate flakes. The café also serves an excellent rendition of a Baumstriezel (chimney cake) and a wide selection of local spirits and wines to enjoy while watching people pass by outside.

Drosselgasse 5, Rüdesheim, Hesse, 65385, Germany
Known For
  • Rüdesheimerkaffee and Baumstriezel
  • great selection of local spirits
  • charming old-world atmosphere
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Jan.

Café Felix

$

A modern two-level café and bar, Felix offers everything from sandwiches to steaks, and buzzes with activity from breakfast until the early hours. Light from an artsy chandelier and torchlike fixtures bounces off the many large framed mirrors.

Café Laumer

$ | Westend

The ambience of an old-time Viennese café pervades this popular spot, where there's a lovely garden in summer—as well as some of the city's best freshly baked pastries and cakes year-round, best teamed with a Kaffee mit Schlag (coffee with whipped cream). It closes early, by 7 pm.

Bockenheimer Landstr. 67, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60325, Germany
069-727–912
Known For
  • Viennese-style pastries and cakes
  • homemade soups
  • quiches and Wurst platters
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Café Liebling

$ | Prenzlauer Berg

A local favorite, this cozy, casual café is open from early morning into the wee hours, making it the perfect spot for everything from breakfast to a light lunch to evening drinks. There’s an affordable daily quiche and salad plate as well as a nice selection of cakes; if the weather is agreeable, find a spot on the sunny terrace, across from pretty Helmholtzplatz park.

Café Stanton

$$

Cologne's main pedestrian shopping street is practical but uninspiring—some even say ugly. This café is an airy, artsy oasis with outdoor terrace seating and a view of the 14th-century Antonite church. The food is international with an emphasis on the Mediterranean, and includes many organic, vegetarian, and gluten-free options. The selection of cakes is divinely German, and there's a jazz dinner every Saturday. Three enormous, delicate chandeliers, made entirely of plastic waste, provide lighting.

Schilderg. 57, Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, 50667, Germany
0221-271–0710
Known For
  • Stanton burger (with organic cheese, braised onions, tomatoes, and homemade ketchup)
  • Lammhüfte (leg of lamb with honey sauce, green beans, and potatoes au gratin)
  • vegan chocolate mousse

Cafe Vetter

$

This café has the most spectacular view in town—and Marburg is famous for its panoramas. Both an outdoor terrace and a glassed-in terrace take full advantage of the site. It's all very "Viennese coffeehouse traditional" here, with piano music on weekends. The house-made cakes and chocolate creams are hard to resist.

Five Elephant

$ | Kreuzberg

In addition to brewing first-rate, quality coffee from beans roasted on the premises, Five Elephant serves some of the best cake in town, including a cheesecake that has become something of a local legend. Inside, the café is bright, modern, and welcoming, usually with cool jazz playing on the sound system. Like most of its coffee-brewing brethren, the café sources its own coffee directly from growers, and makes sure interactions along every step of the chain are fair and humane.

Godshot

$ | Prenzlauer Berg

The eclectic mix of oddly matched couches, chairs, and tables in this tiny space create a cozy setting for enjoying excellent coffee and pastries. The latte art and the "godshot" logo on the coffee cups make for some Instagram-worthy photos, too. If you're interested in learning about the tools and practices of the barista trade, brewing and latte art workshops are offered. While these are normally given in German, instructors can accommodate English-speaking students, or you can book a private class in English.

Immanuelkirchstr. 32, Berlin, Berlin, 10405, Germany
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No credit cards

Kaffeehaus Riquet

$

The restored art nouveau house dates from 1908 has a pleasant Viennese-style coffeehouse upstairs—the best views are had from up here—and a noisier and more active café downstairs. Riquet is a company that has had dealings in the coffee trade in Africa and East Asia since 1745, as indicated by the large elephant heads adorning the facade of the building.

Schulmachergässchen 1, Leipzig, Saxony, D–04109, Germany
0341-961–0000
Known For
  • the best place for coffee and cake in Leipzig
  • Leipzig Meadowlark pastry
  • people-watching from the second floor
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No dinner

Metropol am Dom

$ | Altstadt

Breakfast is the main attraction at this café near the Römerberg and Dom. The dining room is large, and in the warmer months there are also tables on a garden patio. The kitchen serves until 11 pm. Reservations are accepted for dinner only, and not for the terrace. This is a cash-only restaurant.

Weckmarkt 13–15, Frankfurt, Hesse, 60311, Germany
069-288–287
Known For
  • cakes and pastries
  • pastas and traditional German dishes
  • no credit cards accepted
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Mon.

Mucki & Floyd

$ | Isarvorstadt

Hearty, healthy breakfasts (served until 4 pm) and weekend brunch are popular at this charming vintage-style café.

Passenger Coffee

$ | Treptow
While this small local chain operates two other cafés (one is just a stand) in Berlin, the roastery in Alt-Treptow is the most worth visiting. A large and spacious café with a retro design, it's a casual spot with a friendly staff willing to share everything they know about coffee roasting.
Elsenstr. 38, Berlin, Berlin, 12435, Germany
030-2357–5667
Known For
  • coffee roasted on-site
  • hipster vibe
  • limited seating
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: Closed Sat. and Sun.

Tambosi

$$ | Altstadt

Open since 1775, Tambosi is Munich's longest-running café. Its location is superb, partly sitting in full view of Theatinerkirche on Odeonsplatz and partly in the Hofgarten. Watch the hustle and bustle of Munich's street life from an outdoor table on the city side, or retreat through a gate in the Hofgarten's western wall to the café's tree-shaded beer garden. If the weather is cool or rainy, find a corner in the cozy, eclectically furnished interior.

The Barn Roastery

$ | Prenzlauer Berg

The Barn roasts their coffee beans on the premises and offers a limited menu of near-perfect brews—they take coffee seriously, and can get a bit dictatorial about how much milk or sugar you should add. There are baked goods and sandwiches on the menu as well, but the focus here is definitely on the coffee. There are several other locations scattered around the city, including the original Barn in Mitte, at Auguststrasse 58, at the corner of Koppenplatz.

Schönhauser Allee 8, Berlin, Berlin, 10119, Germany
Restaurants Details
Rate Includes: No credit cards