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Coffee Roasters in Washington, DC
Washington has 15 coffee roasters in this directory, including 5 that supply wholesale beans to cafés and offices. Listings are ranked by local reputation — rating weighted by review count — and refreshed from public map data.
Ebenezers Coffeehouse
4.5 ★★★★★ 1,360 reviews
Casual, church-owned coffeehouse featuring fair-trade coffee & tea plus live music on some evenings.
DUA DC Coffee
4.7 ★★★★★ 1,026 reviews
Casual coffeehouse with an industrial vibe, fixing up snacks and Indonesian espresso drinks.
Zeke's Coffee of DC
4.7 ★★★★★ 545 reviews
This artisanal roastery & coffee shop brews pour-overs, espresso & more & sells pound bags of beans.
Lost Sock Roasters
4.7 ★★★★★ 421 reviews
Zeke's Coffee of DC - Downtown
4.6 ★★★★★ 418 reviews
Casual cafe, featuring drip coffee, pour-overs and espresso drinks alongside pastries and sandwiches.
Harrar Coffee & Roastery
4.8 ★★★★★ 319 reviews
Cozy haunt offering a wide range of premium coffee roasted in-house, by the cup or to brew at home.
Swing's Coffee
4.6 ★★★★★ 298 reviews
Coffee connoisseurs stop by this long-running cafe for hand-roasted, fair-trade brews.
GIGIS COFFEE ROASTERS
4.9 ★★★★★ 215 reviews
Grace Street Coffee Roasters
4.5 ★★★★★ 210 reviews
Local baristas serve a range of coffee drinks brewed from beans roasted on-site; breakfast burritos are also served.
Roasting Plant Coffee
4.6 ★★★★★ 181 reviews
Coffee shop featuring a Javabot system for in-house roasting and brewing, plus pastries and sandwiches.
Grace Street Coffee Roasters at the Rubell Museum
4.8 ★★★★★ 46 reviews
Small Planes Coffee
4.4 ★★★★☆ 26 reviews
Wholesale coffee in Washington
These Washington roasters supply beans wholesale — for cafés, restaurants, offices, and anyone brewing at volume. Most will set up a standing weekly or biweekly delivery so the coffee is always days off the roast, and many offer cuppings so you can dial in a house blend before you commit.
- Ebenezers Coffeehouse — 201 F St NE
- GIGIS COFFEE ROASTERS — 4916 Central Ave NE
- Grace Street Coffee Roasters — 3299 K St NW Ste 102
- Grace Street Coffee Roasters at the Rubell Museum — 65 I St SW
- Truss Coffee — 1611 Eckington Pl NE #150
Coffee roasters near Washington
Buying beans in Washington
- Why buy from a local roaster instead of the grocery store?
- Freshness. Coffee peaks in the first few weeks after roasting, and beans from a Washington roastery are usually days old — supermarket bags are often months old. Look for a roast date on the bag; a local roaster will always have one.
- Can I visit these roasters in person?
- Most of the roasters listed above run a café or tasting bar at the roastery — check each listing for hours before a special trip, since roasting-only warehouses sometimes keep limited retail hours.