Best Coffee in La Paz
Specialty roasters and laptop-friendly coffee shops, ranked by price with verified WiFi and work-friendly scores.
La Paz has 5 laptop-friendly coffee shops for remote workers, with an average coffee price of $2.80. The most affordable is Organic Mountain Cafe at $2 per coffee. Every spot in our guide is verified for quality coffee and a workspace that supports productivity — WiFi reliability, power outlets, and the kind of ambiance that makes long sessions enjoyable.
Coffee Culture in La Paz
Bolivia grows excellent coffee in its Yungas valleys just east of La Paz, though most of the best beans get exported. What stays in the country feeds a small but growing specialty scene in Sopocachi and the Prado area. Coffee LAB+Co. and The Writers Coffee lead with single-origin Bolivian beans — typically from Caranavi or Coroico — roasted in-city and brewed as pour-over or espresso. A cappuccino costs 15-22 BOB ($2.20-3.20), and the earthy, medium-bodied profile of Yungas coffee tastes distinctly different from Colombian or Brazilian beans.
Traditional Bolivian coffee culture is simpler. Most locals drink 'cafe pasado' — a concentrated brew diluted with hot water or milk — at market stalls for 3-5 BOB. The stronger 'cafe de olla' preparation with cinnamon appears at some traditional restaurants. Mate de coca (coca leaf tea) is actually more common than coffee as a daily drink, especially for altitude adjustment, and costs 2-3 BOB at any cafe or restaurant. If you want to understand La Paz's relationship with caffeine, alternate between specialty cafes and market stalls — the gap in price and preparation tells you everything about the city's economic contrasts.
Organic Mountain Cafe
Organic Mountain Cafe is located on Calle Vincenti in Sopocachi, a tree-lined residential street that runs parallel to the neighborhood's main avenue. The cafe fills a small ground-floor space with exposed brick walls, wooden shelves displaying organic products for sale, and a handful of tables arranged in a room that seats no more than 15 people. The decor is earthy and unforced—burlap sacks of coffee beans, ceramic mugs, handwritten labels—and the menu emphasizes organic ingredients sourced from Bolivian highland and Yungas producers. The crowd is mostly Sopocachi residents: health-minded professionals, yoga practitioners, and the occasional expat.
WiFi sits at 8 Mbps on a fair connection, the joint-slowest among La Paz cafes. It covers basic email and document editing but won't reliably support video conferencing. The quiet noise level is consistent with the residential street and the small, calm room. Power outlets are accessible at wall-side tables, and the good-comfort wooden chairs work for focused sessions of two to three hours. The coffee is organic Bolivian from the Yungas region, prepared simply but with fresh beans.
More Coffee Shops in La Paz
Café Epico
A cycling-themed specialty café in the Calacoto neighborhood that roasts its own premium Bolivian Arabica beans and serves them alongside healthy dishes and artisanal chocolate alfajores. The neat, tidy dining room with bicycle accents, free WiFi, and peaceful ambiance creates a focused workspace with friendly staff and generous opening hours until 10pm.
Experiment Coffee
A women-owned specialty tea and coffee house with an Asian-inspired aesthetic and a charming back garden perfect for sunny afternoon work sessions. Fast WiFi, quiet atmosphere, and creative offerings like stuffed Japanese waffles and drinks served with elegant glass straws bring a distinctive international flair to the La Paz café scene.
Hb Bronze Coffeebar
A sophisticated specialty coffee bar on Plaza Tomas Frias that roasts Bolivian beans on-site and pairs them with innovative sandwiches on sourdough focaccia and natural Bolivian wines. Strong WiFi, plenty of charging points, and a quiet, elegant atmosphere with soothing décor make it one of La Paz's top-rated workspaces, consistently ranked among the city's best cafés on Tripadvisor.
The Writer's Coffee
Hidden inside the historic Librería Gisbert on Calle Comercio, this first gourmet coffee shop in central La Paz evokes Victorian England and pre-war Paris with its sumptuous bookshop setting and expertly brewed Geisha, chemex, and espresso tonic. WiFi access is provided via time-limited vouchers and seating is limited, so arriving early is key to securing a spot in this literary sanctuary.
Price Comparison
| Cafe | Coffee Price | Score | WiFi | Hours |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ☕Organic Mountain Cafe | $2 | 6 | 8 Mbps | 09:00–19:00 |
| Café Epico | $3 | 7 | 10 Mbps | 08:00–22:00 |
| Experiment Coffee | $3 | 7 | 10 Mbps | 08:30–21:30 |
| Hb Bronze Coffeebar | $3 | 8 | 10 Mbps | 09:00–22:00 |
| The Writer's Coffee | $3 | 7 | 8 Mbps | 09:00–19:30 |
Why La Paz for Remote Work?
Sitting at 3,650 meters above sea level, La Paz is the highest administrative capital on the planet — and that altitude shapes every aspect of working from its cafes. WiFi in the five main laptop-friendly spots averages just 9 Mbps, the lowest of any city in this guide, though fixed broadband in apartments can reach 40-50 Mbps on fiber. Coffee costs about $2.80 per cup at specialty cafes like Coffee LAB+Co. in Sopocachi, and the main work-friendly venues cluster in the Sopocachi and Miraflores neighborhoods where expats and students create a quiet, focused atmosphere.
The nomad community is small but the economics are impossible to ignore — $700 per month covers rent, food, transport, and cafe sessions in a South American capital. English proficiency is low, so basic Spanish is necessary for daily interactions beyond tourist restaurants. The stunning mountain scenery surrounding the city and the world's highest cable car system (Mi Teleferico) provide a visual backdrop that no flat city can match. La Paz also serves as a gateway to extraordinary day trips including the Uyuni salt flats and Death Road cycling, and the city is notably safe compared to other Latin American capitals.
The trade-offs are significant. Altitude sickness will cost you at least 48-72 hours of zero productivity on arrival, and the cold temperatures year-round with limited heating in most buildings mean you'll be typing in layers. Internet speeds are variable and often slow by global standards, and political protests with road blockades can shut down neighborhoods without warning. Infrastructure can be unreliable — power outages and water cuts happen — and the few coworking spaces that exist are basic compared to what you'd find in Medellin or Mexico City.
Tips for Working From Cafes in La Paz
Acclimatize before working hard
Plan zero productivity for your first 48-72 hours at 3,650 meters. Chew coca leaves, drink water, skip alcohol, and consider staying in lower Zona Sur at 3,200 meters to ease the altitude adjustment.
Use ENTEL mobile as primary backup
ENTEL delivers the fastest mobile speeds in La Paz at 18-20 Mbps on 4G. Their 10 GB plan costs just $14 monthly — more reliable than most cafe WiFi at 9 Mbps average and essential for video calls.
Exchange USD cash at blue rate
Bolivia's parallel dollar market trades at Bs 9-14 versus the official Bs 6.96. Bringing clean US bills and exchanging at casas de cambio on Calle Colon can nearly double your purchasing power at cafes and restaurants.
Buy Every 2-3 Hours
Order a drink or snack every couple of hours to support the cafe and keep your seat.
Test WiFi First
Run a quick speed test before settling in to avoid surprises during important calls.
Visit Off-Peak
Arrive 8-11am or 3-5pm to grab the best seats and the fastest WiFi.
Bring Headphones
Noise-cancelling headphones are essential for blocking lunch rushes and chat.
Carry a Power Bank
Outlets aren't guaranteed everywhere — a backup keeps you working.
Respect Quiet Zones
Take long video calls outside or in coworking spaces, not in quiet cafes.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Plan your stay in La Paz
Get the full city guide with cost of living, neighborhoods, visa info, and more — everything a digital nomad needs.