# Cypriot Coffee: How to Order It and Where to Drink

> The same Ottoman brew, a local name — how Cypriot coffee is made, how to order sade, orta or şekerli, the kahvehane institution, and Famagusta's best cups.

- Canonical: https://www.kiprarent.com/en/guide/cypriot-coffee-where-to-drink/
- Updated: 2026-06-13
- Language: English
- Publisher: Kipra Rent A Car — https://www.kiprarent.com/

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Cypriot coffee is the same small-cup, fine-grounds Ottoman brew you may
know as Turkish coffee — thick foam on top, sediment at the bottom,
served with a glass of water — under a local name. The island's coffee
tradition descends directly from the Ottoman one, as the Cyprus Mail
notes, and the way to drink it well is to order it right and sit a while
in a kahvehane, as of 2026. This is a spoke of the
[North Cyprus food guide](/en/guide/what-to-eat-north-cyprus/); below is
how it is made, how to order, and Famagusta's actual good cups.

## Is Cypriot coffee the same as Turkish coffee?

It is the same brewing method, named locally — and the naming is the
only real distinction. As the Cyprus Mail puts it, the Bosnian, Greek,
Egyptian and Cypriot "coffees" are regional names for one Ottoman
technique: very finely ground coffee simmered in a small pot, poured
unfiltered into a small cup so the grounds settle, and served with
water. The wider tradition carries international recognition —
**Turkish coffee culture was inscribed on UNESCO's Representative List
of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity in 2013** — which is the
heritage the island's cups belong to.

## How do I order Cypriot coffee?

Order by sweetness, because the sugar is brewed in, not added after.
The three you need:

| Order | Means | For |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Sade** | No sugar | Tasting the coffee straight |
| **Orta** | Medium sugar | The common default |
| **Şekerli** | Sweet | A dessert-side cup |

Drink slowly, let the grounds settle, and do not drain the cup — the
sediment stays at the bottom. Reading the upturned cup's grounds is a
familiar custom done informally between friends, not a paid service, so
take it lightly.

## What is the kahvehane?

The kahvehane is the neighbourhood coffee house — the social institution
where men have traditionally gathered to play backgammon and talk, found
in every quarter. The local press writes about it as a fading
institution, and the island has a saying that "a single cup of coffee is
remembered for forty years," which captures how much the ritual carries
beyond the drink. For a visitor it is the unhurried end of the spectrum:
sit, order an orta, and stay.

## How is it brewed, and how should I drink it?

It is brewed unfiltered in a small long-handled pot and served grounds
and all, which is why how you drink it matters as much as how you order
it. The very finely ground coffee, water and any sugar go into the pot
together and are brought just to the foaming point — never boiled hard —
then poured into a small cup so the thick foam stays on top and the
grounds sink. Let it rest a moment before the first sip so the sediment
settles, drink slowly in small mouthfuls, and stop before the muddy last
centimetre. The glass of water alongside is for cleansing the palate
before the coffee, not for diluting it. None of this is fussy ritual for
a visitor — it is just how the cup is built, and getting it right is the
difference between a smooth coffee and a mouthful of grit.

## Where are Famagusta's good cups?

Famagusta's best coffee runs from an island-famous pastry house to
specialty roasters near the university, as of 2026:

- **Petek Pastanesi** — Walled City, by the harbour. The island-famous
  pastry house with a terrace; a Turkish coffee here pairs with baklava
  and Maraş ice cream.
- **One Shot Coffee** — opposite the Land Gate (Kara Kapı). Fresh
  roasting, with live music on Fridays.
- **Buğday Cafe** — Walled City, Venetian Palace view. Specialty coffee,
  sourdough and daily cakes, with a secondhand-book shelf; closed
  Mondays.
- **Coffeemania** — the university strip. On-site roasting, a student
  favourite.

## What does a coffee cost?

A Turkish coffee is capped at **40 TL** on Eastern Mediterranean
University's official 2025/26 maximum price list — the cleanest price
floor in Famagusta — while cafés charge upward; a 2024 press survey
already put the café average at **75 TL** (band 50–100 TL). The full
drinks bands, including where espresso-based coffee jumps to Western
European pricing, are in the
[restaurant price guide](/en/guide/restaurant-prices-north-cyprus/).
North Cyprus recorded **2,589,729 visitors in 2025, up 17.2% year on
year** according to the TRNC Tourism Planning Department, and the good
cafés around the Walled City and the harbour cluster within easy reach.
Kipra Rent A Car is a Famagusta-based local rental company with VAT and
insurance included in every displayed price, so hopping between the
roasters and the kahvehanes — and on to the
[Famagusta eating list](/en/guide/where-to-eat-famagusta/) — is a short
drive, not a logistics problem.

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A coffee is best when you do not have to rush for the bus — sit as long
as you like and drive when you are ready:
[book a car](https://app.kiprarent.com/en/book/cars) · WhatsApp
[+90 546 996 1004](https://wa.me/905469961004) — English spoken.

## Frequently Asked Questions

**Is Cypriot coffee different from Turkish coffee?**

It is the same Ottoman brewing method under a different name — small cup, fine grounds, thick foam, served with water. The island's coffee tradition descends from the Ottoman one, as the Cyprus Mail notes.

**How do I order it?**

By sweetness: sade (no sugar), orta (medium, the common default), or şekerli (sweet). Decide the sugar when you order — it is brewed in, not stirred in after.

**Can I get my fortune read?**

Reading the grounds in the upturned cup is a familiar custom around the coffee, done informally between friends rather than as a paid service.

**What does a coffee cost?**

A Turkish coffee is capped at 40 TL on the official campus price list as of 2025/26; cafés charge upward from there. See our restaurant price guide for the wider drinks bands.

## Sources

- Cyprus Mail — Cyprus coffee culture and its Ottoman roots (2026-05): https://cyprus-mail.com/
- UNESCO — Turkish coffee culture and tradition (inscribed 2013): https://ich.unesco.org/en/RL/turkish-coffee-culture-and-tradition-00645

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Kipra Rent A Car — Famagusta, North Cyprus. No-deposit, no-credit-card car rental; VAT + insurance included.
Rezervasyon / Booking: https://app.kiprarent.com/book/cars · WhatsApp: +90 546 996 1004
