Best Meeting-Friendly Cafes in Jakarta for Calls and Client Sessions

Photo by  David Kristianto

10 min read · Jakarta, Indonesia · meeting friendly cafes ·

Best Meeting-Friendly Cafes in Jakarta for Calls and Client Sessions

BS

Words by

Budi Santoso

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The Best Cafes for Meetings in Jakarta: A Local's Guide

I have spent the better part of a decade running consultant calls and pitching clients from coffee shops across this sprawling metropolis. Over the years, I have refined a mental map of what makes a good spot to discuss serious matters while sipping espresso. Below is my honestly earned list of the best cafes for meetings in Jakarta, complete with details I wish someone had told me when I first started working remotely from here. Every location mentioned is a place I have used myself. Not all of them are famous tourist haunts. Some are genuinely useful for getting real work done.

1. Anomali Coffee in Cikini

What to Order: Single-origin Toraja Arabica, brewed to order on a Pour-Over drip.

Best Time: Weekdays between 9 a.m. and 11:30 a.m., before the lunch crowd pushes volume up.

The Vibe: Warm wood interiors with exposed brick walls that keep the noise level surprisingly low even when half the tables are occupied. Power outlets are available along the main wall side.

This place sits on Jalan Cikini Raya, a street that once served as a colonial-era promenade in Menteng. The owners roast their own beans in-house. You can sometimes see the roaster through a rear partition. During Ramadan, they close earlier in the evening, so check their Instagram if you plan a late-afternoon session. Parking in front is extremely tight after 1 p.m.

Insider Tip: Sit near the back corner. That wall has two power outlets at desk height, a detail most visitors miss.

2. KKUP at Kemang

What to Order: House-blended cold brew or local Kopi Tubruk if you want a stronger start.

Best Time: Monday to Thursday, 8 a.m. to noon. Friday afternoons get busy for weekend brunchers.

The Vibe: Clean Scandinavian-esque design, deliberate grey tones, soft playlists that never surge above conversation level.

Tucked along Jalan Kemang Raya, this is a franchise of KKUP, a Malaysian-rooted brand that expanded into Jakarta several years ago. People underestimate how the layout helps: tables are spaced just far enough apart that you are not forced to overhear a stranger's order. Call acoustics stay decent even when the shop is at half capacity. Their outlets come with USB-C ports, which saved my phone more than once. The only complaint I have is that the bathroom is a single unit, so occasional waits mid-session become a minor disruption.

Insider Tip: There is a small semi-private table tucked behind a plant divider near the rear entrance. It feels slightly more secluded; arrive early to grab it on weekdays.

3. Snake Black Coffee in Menteng

What to Order: Iced Kopi Hitam or the manual brew single-origin from Flores.

Best Time: Mid-morning on weekdays, ideally 10 a.m. to noon.

The Vibe: Compact but uncluttered, with darker walls that absorb sound naturally, making it a quiet professional cafe Jakarta regulars appreciate.

Located along Jalan Teuku Cik Ditiro, this spot nods to Menteng's early-20th-century architecture without feeling forced. They play lo-fi tracks, rarely too loud. Their Wi-Fi is stable enough for Zoom calls in my experience, although it dips slightly during peak lunch hours. Table count is limited, so finding an open seat around noon is unreliable. If you bring a larger group, consider a nearby backup.

Insider Tip: The two-seat table right under the front window has the strongest signal, which matters if you plan video calls rather than just emails.

4. Filino Coffee in Kebayoran Baru

What to Order: V60 Pour-Over or their espresso shots for a quick boost.

Best Time: Early mornings, 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. Come before Jakarta traffic clogs the nearby streets.

The Vibe: Pastel brick accents, mid-century seats, and an almost gallery-like calm that suits deeper conversations.

Filino sits among offices that date to Kebayoran Baru's early post-independence development. The regulars here are a mix of startup founders and NGO staff. The outlet walls have enough plugs to double as a small co-working corner, and the baristas will give you room to spread papers out without hovering. On weekends, they run brewing workshops, good for solo learning but less ideal if you want quiet.

Insider Tip: Ask for the slightly elevated corner nook; it blocks street noise from Kebayoran's busy roads.

5. Sudadi at Radio Dalam

What to Order: Their single-origin Gayo or local Kopi Jahe if you want something robust with ginger notes.

Best Time: Weekdays from opening at 8 a.m. through mid-morning.

The Vibe: Modern minimalist, more of a local neighborhood haunt than an Instagram stage.

Sudadi has quietly become a go-to zoom call cafe Jakarta workers rely on. Location on Jalan Radio Dalam keeps it close to office blocks without feeling sterile. The staff understands laptop users—they bring your coffee promptly and let you stay for an hour of solid Wi-Fi. Call screens behind the counter show prep time if you ever wonder about delays. People rarely talk about its connection to Radio Dalam's old radio-broadcasting plants, but the name itself honors that heritage.

Insider Tip: They actually push their slower pour-over service on purpose to control lines during peak mornings—ask for an espresso if you need speed and reliability before a call.

6. Giyanti Coffee Roastery in Menteng

What to Order: Pour-Over from their Sulawesi beans or classic Espresso.

Best Time: Before 11 a.m.; occupancy spikes around lunch as office workers head there for takeaway.

The Vibe: Wood-accented, open layout, and one of the early specialty waves that shaped today's third-generation coffee culture in Jakarta.

Giyanti sits right in the heart of old Menteng, a neighborhood long-admired for its green lots and history as one of the city's first planned garden suburbs. The high ceilings keep even midday noise from feeling cramped. Their roasting experience is visible through a back window, which is fun for a quick curious break between agenda items. It has become such a client-facing staple that some consultants now use it like an open-plan boardroom. The downside is parking, always a headache during lunch; use Ojol apps or a scooter instead.

Insider Tip: You can pre-order via WhatsApp if you know what you want—this cuts in-shop wait time to about three minutes.

7. Tanamera at Kemang

What to Order: House Blend Kopi with a side of croissant or avocado toast if you plan a longer sitting.

Best Time: Late morning, around 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., after the early gym crowd leaves.

The Vibe: Casual-luxe with rattan chairs, white walls, and a reliably stable internet that handles video-conference calls.

Tanamera is on Jalan Kemang, the same road once lined with expat bars and now pivoted to boutique businesses. They roast green beans sourced from across the archipelago, each batch reflecting Indonesia's long trading routes. The outlet row covers every other table so laptops survive multi-hour sessions. Staff are quick with refills. The outdoor area is great when the air quality is decent, though Jakarta haze around July–October can make it less inviting.

Insider Tip: Request the smaller secondary room if you want a relatively quiet corner away from the main entry traffic.

8. Kopi Nyaur in Blok M

What to Order: Kopi Jahe Hitam or iced variant for a spicy kick before a heavy contract negotiation.

Best Time: Weekday weekday mornings before 11 a.m. Friday and Saturday evenings can grow louder.

The Vibe: Funkier murals and more experimental blends than you'd expect in a neighborhood known for food hawkers and nightlife.

Blok M has always hosted markets and street deals; Kopi Nyaur emerged as part of a newer wave turning the district younger and more tech-forward without killing its heritage. The tables are modest but functional. Wi-Fi is surprisingly consistent, making this a sleeper pick for a private-ish booth feel at budget prices—two seats along the side wall cater well for quick Skype or Zoom check-ins. Noise spikes again after lunch when delivery motorcycles clog Blok M's side streets.

Insider Tip: They do not post all drink options online; the chalkboard menu inside has specials not on apps like GoFood or Grab.


When to Go / What to Know

Jakarta's traffic dictates everything; even ten minutes of delay can turn a smooth scooter ride to a 40-minute crawl. For in-person meetings, try to schedule before 9:30 a.m. or after the evening rush begins, say past 7 p.m. Most of these spots open by 7 a.m. or 8 a.m., which gives you a window before the workday swells crowds. Public transit options like MRT are expanding, but walking to a specific cafe often still demands a motorbike taxi ride. Carry a portable charger as backup, even if outlets are listed. Rainy season (around November to March) can cut power briefly; having offline notes helps. Always check whether your selected location observes special shortened hours during Ramadan or local holidays.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Jakarta?

Several co-working brands such as Dojo, EV Hive, and Conclave operate branches in South Jakarta that offer 24/7 access with a membership plan. Day or night passes typically start around IDR 150,000 to IDR 300,000. Traditional coffee shops rarely stay open past midnight, so co-working hubs are your best bet for late calls.

What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Jakarta's central cafes and workspaces?

In well-reviewed central cafes and co-working hubs, download speeds commonly range from 30 Mbps to 100 Mbps and upload speeds from 10 Mbps to 50 Mbps. Actual performance varies by provider and time of day. Running a speed test on arrival is safer than assuming hotspot-level quality.

Is Jakarta expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier visitor who stays in a decent hotel (around IDR 500,000-800,000 per night), eats a mix of local warung and cafe meals, uses ride-hailing apps, and visits one or two attractions can expect to spend roughly IDR 700,000 to IDR 1,200,000 per day excluding flights. Adding frequent taxi rides or co-working memberships will push the budget higher.

What is the most reliable neighborhood in Jakarta for digital nomads and remote workers?

South Jakarta, particularly Kemang, Senopati, and Kebayoran Baru, has the highest density of co-working spaces, fiber-connected cafes, and English-speaking services. These neighborhoods offer a cluster of work-friendly coffee shops, apartments with decent internet, and evening social options, reducing the need to commute far between tasks.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Jakarta?

Most specialty cafes and co-working hubs in central Jakarta not only provide multiple power sockets at tables but also run on generator or UPS backup during power cuts. Budget-friendly warungs may have fewer sockets and no backup. Confirm socket availability by visiting early or checking recent reviews that mention charging and Wi-Fi stability.

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