LOAM coffee shop, pink shopfront with curtained window on Gloucester Road
© Ellie & Co

If you’re planning a day or weekend in Brighton, having a great cafe up your sleeve is essential – somewhere to catch your breath, read, or just watch the world go by in between sightseeing and shopping stints.

When I first moved to Brighton, the cafe scene meant a handful of chains and not much else. Nowadays, thanks to the global coffee culture trend, Brighton has one of the best cafe and coffee scenes in the world.

Best Cafes in Brighton

Rather than an overarching round up, this guide features 15 of what I consider to be the best cafes in Brighton. Or rather, my 15 favourites.

These are places where the atmosphere and setting matter just as much as the quality of the coffee and food – Brighton cafes and coffee shops with dreamy interiors and unique settings, serving up strong espresso and creamy cappuccino, all worth your time.

I’ve also pinned all my recommendations onto a handy map at the end of the post to help you plan your route.

Cafe Marmalade, one of the best places to eat in Kemptown

Best Brighton Cafes for beautiful Decor

I appreciate interior design, so I’m starting with my favourite cafes in Brighton with the most beautiful decor, from the elegant and stylish to whimsical and eclectic.

Marmalade, one of Brighton's best cafes
© Ellie & Co

1 Cafe Marmalade

When cafe-deli Marmalade opened in Regency Kemptown, I couldn’t get over the beautiful decor. I always feel it belongs in a Paris side street, rather than Brighton, a city of giant spray-paint murals, hipsters, and students.

With its collection of reclaimed tiles, Victorian patterned floors, hand-scrawled kraft-paper menus and colourful counter heaving with heaped salads, stacks of quiches, sandwiches and cakes, it’s no surprise it’s one of Brighton’s most photographed cafe interiors.

I’ll come for a bacon sandwich on Real Patisserie chewy brown bread and stay to browse the shelves stocked with gourmet gifts like tins of Italian biscotti and fridge bursting with Sussex produce and house-made dishes to take home.

Find Cafe Marmalade at 237 Eastern Road, Brighton BN2 5JJ

2 Oeuf

When I first visited Oeuf in Hove, I felt like I’d walked onto a film set belonging to American film director, Wes Anderson. This pastel-coloured haven, hidden along a grand avenue near the seafront – owner Amber’s dream location, apparently – has a similar aesthetic.

As the name suggests, egg dishes are its speciality, alongside their well-known “Frumpets” (crumpets done French-toast style). Everything arrives beautifully plated, with a seasonally changing menu and strong vegetarian and vegan options throughout.

It’s a proper sit-down brunch spot rather than a grab-and-go option, so give yourself time to enjoy it properly, starting with a mimosa.

Find Oeuf at 8 Third Avenue, Hove BN3 2PX

cafe rust brighton brunch
© Ellie & Co

3 CAFE RUST, Preston Park

This is the original Café Rust, open since 2015, where the small local group began. Hand-carved wooden doors open onto a stylish, rustic interior with a French farmhouse feel. There’s also a pretty flint-walled garden out back and a cosy cellar available for private hire.

I come here often for coffee and sometimes brunch – the rustic breakfasts are excellent – and it remains a firm favourite with Brightonians well over a decade on, alongside its sister branches across the city.

Find Cafe Rust at 50 Preston Road, Brighton BN1 4QF

Curio, a cafe-bar in the London Road neighbourhood of Brighton
© Ellie & Co

4 Curio

I often wonder what I did before Curio opened up near London Road. It’s an all-day neighbourhood cafe bar, rather than straightforward coffee shop, with a nostalgic, European feel that sets it apart. There’s also wine on tap and a proper little food menu alongside the coffee and select pastries (try the honey bread).

It’s small, charming, and  relaxed, and has become one of my favourite places in Brighton for a solo coffee date, to watch the world around Preston Circus go by, or for a pre- or post-cinema stop too, given its location opposite the lovely Duke of York’s picture house.

Find Curio at 1 Clyde Road, Brighton BN1 4NN

5 The Botanist Coffee Co

Whenever I’m in Hove in need of caffeine, I’ll head to The Botanist, a small peaceful cafe away from the main road. It’s filled with plants for sale and a peaceful atmosphere for working. I also love that it stays open into the evening for sundowners, too.

The drinks are where it really stands out, with rotating seasonal specials built around botanical and superfood ingredients as its name suggests: think chocolate orange chai lattes or a mocha with a lion’s mane mushroom tincture.

Find The Botanist at 67c Church Road, Hove BN3 2BD

cafe salvage western road hove

6 Cafe and Salvage

At the far end of Western Road towards Hove, Café Salvage has one of the most eclectic interiors of all Brighton cafes, built around salvaged and vintage finds.

It’s run by a couple who fill the space with antique and flea market pieces that change with every visit. What I love most about it is that most of what surrounds you is for sale.

While the decor is really the whole draw here, the coffee holds its own and the cake selection is genuinely excellent, everything served in mismatched proper china.

It’s the perfect environment for relaxing and letting go, coming up with your next idea for life, jazz music and a little chatter from the locals at the bar filling the air.

Find Cafe and Salvage at 84 Western Road, Hove BN3 1JB

Best Brighton Cafes for a Unique Setting

I love it when old buildings are remagined. From a seafront folly and a manor house, to a converted church, these spots also serve great coffee.

Arched window inside The Temple cafe Brighton, looking out to the sea
© The Temple

7 The Temple

Overlooking the revamped Black Rock area near Kemptown, this tiny cafe is one of Brighton’s cutest, set inside a reimagined seafront garden folly built in 1835 as a place for wealthy residents of Lewes Crescent and Sussex Square across the road to gather and take in the seaviews.

Inside, I can’t get enough of the view through the huge floor-to-ceiling arched windows that frame the scenery perfectly. They serve Red Roaster coffee, Real Patisserie pastries and sandwiches by day, and wine and beer by night.

It’s my go-to spot for a takeout caffeine hit if ever I’m on a seafront walk. Most of all, on sunny days, I love slouching in one of the the stripy deckchairs on the terrace.

Find The Temple at Madeira Drive, Brighton BN2 1FY

The interior of The Reading Room cafe in Brighton filled with books and art

8 The Reading Room

Less known for stand out coffee than its cool historic setting, The Reading Room near The Temple is set in an 1835 building originally designed as a space for residents of Lewes Crescent to read in comfort by the sea, hence the name. 

It’s also one of the best cafes in Brighton for seaviews – arrive early if you want one of the window tables in the Regency-themed dining room filled with art and books.

Find The Reading Room at Black Rock, Madeira Drive, Brighton BN2 1FY

Café Rust at Preston Manor, blue bistro table in a walled garden courtyard
© Elie & Co

9 Café Rust, Preston Manor

When friends first took me to this branch of Cafe Rust inside Preston Manor near Preston Park, I couldn’t get over how lovely the setting was, in a wood-panelled room overlooking a croquet lawn. Lucky for me, it’s not far from where I live in Fiveways, for whenever I feel drawn here.

Now I go back regularly for a dirty chai, to enjoy the outside space in summer and to explore the pretty walled garden next door.

Find Café Rust, Preston Manor at Preston Drove, Brighton BN1 6SD

Café Rust at Hove Museum, antique teapot display cabinets in a green-walled room
© Ellie & Co

10 Café Rust, Hove Museum

I discovered Cafe Rust at Hove Museum by chance last Christmas when I decided to go for a run from my home in Fiveways to burn off some Christmas calories.

I ended up passing the museum and finding it open, I wandered inside and was captivated by the picturesque space filled with art and artefacts, where I caught my breath over a cappucino and waited for my husband to pick me up!

Find Café Rust, Hove Museum at 19 New Church Road, Hove BN3 4AB

Cielo Cakery, a Brighton cafe inside a converted church and with a leafy green kiosk display counter
© Ellie & Co

11 Cielo Cakery

This stand-out brighton cafe is hidden away. A two-minute walk from Preston Park, Cielo Cakery is at home within a converted church where I do yoga. It’s a beautiful space, cool in summer, with a counter filled with hard-to-resist treats like brownies and ‘dookies’ – deep-dish cookies – in fun flavours like biscoff, chocolate buttons and maltersers. Vegan and gluten-free options dominate the selection and they also make celebration and wedding cakes made to order.

Find Cielo Cakery at St Augustine’s Arts & Events Centre, Stanford Avenue, Brighton BN1 6EA

LOAM coffee shop, pink shopfront with curtained window on Gloucester Road
© Ellie & Co

Best Brighton Cafes for Great Coffee

When it comes to coffee itself, there are a few places in Brighton that rise above the rest. With award-winning baristas and quality beans, their coffee shows their dedication to quality.

12 Ground

I discovered Ground while researching my hidden Kemptown walk and have been going back ever since. It’s built its reputation purely on the quality of the cup – ethically sourced single-origin espresso and filter coffee from some of the UK’s best roasters, including Union Hand-Roasted and Square Mile.

 It’s a proper neighbourhood coffee house rather than a destination cafe with a laptop-friendly back room, cheerful staff, and a loyal local following. Worth the walk up St George’s Road if you’re serious about your coffee rather than the surroundings.

Find Ground at 80 St George’s Road, Kemptown, Brighton BN2 1EF

13 Puck

Tucked into Seven Dials, Puck is a proper community spot, and the coffee – single-origin beans from local roaster Pharmacie, regularly gets named among the best in the city. Regulars get their own cup; there are around 70 hanging in the kitchen for the people who come in often enough to earn one.

Its part coffee shop, record shop, with crates of vinyl to flick through while you wait for your order. It started life as a TV repair shop, and the warren-like back room, once a pirate radio station, now doubles as a gathering space for art and conversation.

Find Puck at 19 Chatham Place, Brighton BN1 3TN

14 LOAM

I walked past LOAM a million times before I learned what was inside. The beautiful dusky pink shopfront with cream lace curtain gives little away.

One day I ventured inside, and am so glad I did. I found a calming space away from the North Laine shopping crowds, run by a couple with complementary obsessions: coffee and design. They serve some of the best coffee in Brighton – and cinnamon buns people come back for.

Find LOAM at 111 Gloucester Road, Brighton BN1 4AF

15 Pelicano, The Level

Pelicano roasts its own beans in Brighton, and their strong, rich, flavourful coffee blows me away every time. The Level branch sits right beside the park’s entrance near St Peter’s Church, a relaxed, outdoor-focused kiosk rather than a sit-down cafe.

Expect their signature Smoky Bird espresso blend alongside rotating single origins, plus a good spread of cakes and pastries. It’s an ideal stop for people-watching or a casual catch-up before or after a wander through The Level.

Find Pelicano, The Level at The Level, London Road, Brighton

Best Brighton cafes and coffee shops map

Thanks for reading! If you enjoyed this post, would you consider buying me a coffee?

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