Kaffemik on Zollergasse is a small street-front room with a narrow counter, a few tables, and shelves that mix bags of coffee with gear. The outside seating does as much work as the interior, which suits Neubau's foot traffic and the cafe's quick, browse-and-go rhythm.
The offer is broader than a fixed espresso bar. The cafe address sits in Vienna's 7th district, the roastery operates in Wolfsgraben, and the counter leans on changing espresso and filter coffee alongside cakes, cookies, brewing tools, workshops, subscriptions, and magazines. That makes Kaffemik feel like a working coffee business first and a lounge second.
Coffee style
The clearest reason to come is the coffee range. Expect espresso and filter cups that change often, plus house-roasted beans and enough retail choice that the counter never feels static. The room reads as a place for tasting, shopping, and talking through a roast rather than a fixed one-note menu.
What people go for
People come here for the filter line, the beans, and the gear, then usually add a pastry or a coffee for the walk. If you want to leave with something as well as drink something, this is the part of Vienna where that impulse feels built into the room.
The feel
The room is tidy rather than grand, and it suits short visits. The interior stays compact, the service keeps the pace moving, and the outdoor seating softens the limit of the inside. There is enough practicality here for a short laptop stint, but the best version of the visit is still a quick one rather than a full workday.
That tradeoff is part of the appeal. Kaffemik works best when you treat it as a coffee stop with a browsing habit: order, ask about the roast, pick up a bag or a filter cone, and move on.
Why Kaffemik Coffee Roasters is shortlisted by Filter Notes
Kaffemik is shortlisted because it gives Neubau a tightly edited specialty stop with real depth: changing coffee, beans to buy, gear on the shelf, and enough pastry support to make the visit more than transactional. Cross town for the filter cup, the retail shelf, and the sense of a shop still making decisions in public; know before going that the room is small and rewards a shorter stay.