Best Coffee Shops on Bermondsey Street

Best Bermondsey Street Coffee Shops

If you’re in London and in the mood for a great cup of coffee, Bermondsey Street is a goldmine. Located in the heart of London and just a short walk from London Bridge Station and The Shard, this quaint street boasts an array of independent coffee shops to satisfy any caffeine craving. Starting from the north end, near the train station, here are some of the best coffee joints you’ll find on Bermondsey Street.

For such a small, discreet street, there are many providers of really great coffee. However, if you are looking for a coffee chain, I am afraid you are out of luck – B Street is for independents only. If you are more interested in the brand, there is Starbucks, Costa, and Café Nero on Tooley Street.

If you come to Bermondsey Street, you will probably come from the north end, nearest to London Bridge Station and The Shard. So we’ll cover Bermondsey Street’s coffee shops in the order that you’ll meet them.

Chapter 72

72 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3UD, United Kingdom

Chapter 72 is so called because it occupies the ground floor of Number 72 Bermondsey Street, which is one of a beautiful row of 5 Georgian houses on the right as you come down the street. It is just before you come to the garishly pink and orange Fashion and Textile Museum.

Depending on the weather, there will be a couple of tables outside Chapter 72, nice for the shop, but not so nice for the users of the pavement. Inside, the café is modern, but also dark and discreet.

Chapter 72 Coffee Bermondsey St
Chapter 72 is already busy at 9am on Sunday morning; image via Facebook

Like many of the coffee shops on Bermondsey Street, Chapter 72 serves Monmouth Coffee. , which is based just a short walk to the east, across Tower Bridge Road. However, just because you can get it everywhere, doesn’t mean that Monmouth isn’t really good coffee.

You can get the usual array of artisan baked goods to go with your coffee. A highlight is the oversized sausage roll – make sure you have it heated!

Chapter 72 is adjacent to a small archway called Carmarthen Place. If you look down you’ll see The Shared, a community-created sculpture, and also a pair of wooden eco houses, featured on Grand Designs and winners of a Wood Award in 2007.

B Street Deli

88 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3UB, United Kingdom

If Chapter 72 isn’t to your taste, or you just can’t get a seat, then there are plenty of other options; the next is the B Street Deli on the right. As the name suggests, this has a bit more to offer on the food front, but the coffee is also great. There is the usual set of tables and chairs on the pavement if the weather is good. There is also bar-stool-type seating inside for a few customers.

Get some coffee at B Street Deli, Bermondsey St; image via Facebook

Enjoy the fresh air while you dine al fresco with table and chair seating in the outdoor area. Inside, there are comfortable bar-style seats, providing a cozy atmosphere should the weather not cooperate. The menu offers an array of delectable dishes, and the coffee is absolutely sublime.

Eatalia

94 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3UB, United Kingdom

Eatalia is a cheerful, traditional café and a slightly less expensive option compared to others on the street. As well as coffee and croissants, you can get great Italian ice cream here.

Photos at EATalia - Bermondsey - 94 Bermondsey St
Comptoir Gourmand & Eatalia are neighbours; image via foursquare.com

Aside from the tables on the sidewalk, there is quite a lot of seating at the back of the restaurant – handy to know if it is raining.

Comptoir Gourmand

96 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3UB, United Kingdom

This bakery/coffee seller is a fairly recent entry to Bermondsey Street. It is clear that Comptoir Gourmand’s offering of decent coffee, expensive sourdough, and a wide spread of sweet pastries has hit the mark in this intensely competitive café environment – at most times of the day you’ll find queues lined up outside.

Comptoir Gourmand Bermondsey Street
Comptoir Gourmand, Coffee shop on Bermondsey Street

As well as coffee, you can also get great sandwiches here. It is a bit more shop than a café. There is room inside for a few to stand. Outside, you’ll find the inevitable bistro tables.

Like almost everywhere on the street, Comptoir Gourmand makes the maximum use of the premises by switching from morning bakery to lunch crowd sandwich seller to afternoon tea to wine bar in the evening. Bermondsey Street is very popular and rents are notoriously high, and businesses have to squeeze out every penny that they can.

Caphe House

114 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3TX, United Kingdom

Caphe House is a very successful Vietnamese restaurant. During the week, the queue to get pho stretches down the street.

Bermondsey Street Coffee Caphe House
Caphe House is the only place if you want Vietnamese Coffee; image via facebook

As you’d expect, it also provides coffee in the Vietnamese style; iced, and sweetened with condensed milk.

F*ckoffee

163, 167 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3UW, United Kingdom

Would you name your coffee shop after a pun? I’m not sure I would, and the owners of the building didn’t think much of it either.

F*ckoffee
This interestingly titled shop isn’t afraid to offend; image via f*ckoffee.com

Aside from the name, the shop itself is generally making a different statement to others on the street. Anti-establishment instead of urban chic, it is a comfortable sprawl, more reminiscent of a student house than a modern café.

What the décor and name get wrong, the coffee and food offering redeem. So if you are sick of trying-too-hard-to-be-cool coffee shops, you might like F*ckoffee.

The Watchhouse

199 Bermondsey St, London SE1 3UW, United Kingdom

The Watch House sits right at the end of the main stretch of Bermondsey Street. It is definitely the smallest coffee shop on the street and also has the most interesting backstory.

The Watchhouse Bermondsey Street
The Watch House has a rather macabre history and some really good coffee

Why was the watch house built?

The building sits on the corner of St Mary Magdalen’s Churchyard.

In the 1800s, there was a brisk and grim trade across the country in grave robbing to supply medical schools with bodies for dissection. At times this even strayed into murder.

In order to protect the graves of the newly buried, a watch tower was often built next to graveyards and manned every night to watch over the graves and discourage grave robbers. It is hard to imagine a more scary occupation!

With Guy’s Hospital close at hand, St Mary’s churchyard naturally attracted the attention of the grave robbers, or resurrection men, as they were also known. Hence this quaint octagonal tower was built with a fine view over the graveyard.

The current use of the building is much more pleasant. You can get the usual array of hot drinks and pastries. The seating inside is very limited, there’s room to seat only 10. But if you can’t find a place to sit inside, you can always take your coffee and sit out in the graveyard, which is now a very pleasant park with benches to sit on.

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