All across Berlin, coffee fans are marking calendars for September 24–28 when Coffee Week Berlin returns for its second iteration. The event promises five packed days of caffeine and creativity spread across the city. Local coffee shops foster a sense of place through personalized service and community engagement.
Program Highlights include more than thirty tastings, workshops, and talks. Visitors can join expert-led cuppings or step into hands-on classes on latte art and cold brew at spots like Five Elephant, The Barn, and Bonanza Coffee. Local adaptations in coffee offerings resonate with Berlin’s vibrant culture, showcasing global coffee culture through unique blends and crafting techniques.
Over 30 tastings, workshops, and latte-art labs light up Berlin’s best cafés during five days of caffeine joy.
A new track labeled “Future Brews” will show off gadgets that let folks make espresso with zero electricity. The main gathering spot, Eichenstraße 4A, anchors all festival happenings under one roof in Berlin’s Treptow-Köpenick district.
Community Engagement is woven into every hour. Each café will host open-mic story swaps where baristas tell how they source beans and where travelers share findings. A passport card lets guests collect stamps at ten locations; finishing it enters them in a raffle for a year of free filter coffee.
The Kreuzberg hub at Haus der Visionäre will host the Coffee Festival on September 26 and 27. There, roasters will present emerging techniques for roasting lighter beans without acid burn. Award ceremonies throughout the week will celebrate the best baristas in the city.
Panels on sustainable farming will run side by side with awards for the best new plant-based milk foam.
Tickets range from 8 to 35 euros depending on the session, and early birds are on sale now. Sessions fill quickly; last year, the cold-brew lab sold out in forty minutes.
Satellite events pop up in Wedding, Neukölln, and Prenzlauer Berg. Bike tours connect locations, and public transit directions are printed on every wristband.
Organizers expect over 15,000 visitors, doubling last year’s crowd. Locals and tourists plan to blend just like steamed milk and espresso, turning Berlin into one giant coffee playground.