Noti Specialty Coffee, full name Noti Coffee Roasters & Kitchen, is a specialty coffee roastery and café in the center of Palma de Mallorca. On Carrer de Josep Tous i Ferrer, just steps from Plaça d'Espanya, the house roasts its own beans and pairs them with a brunch and bakery kitchen. Guests rate it 4.8 out of 5 on Google.

What makes Noti Specialty Coffee special
Noti isn't a café that happens to have a machine – it's a genuine roastery. Roasting happens in Mallorca, with a declared focus on serving only single origins scoring 85+ on the SCA scale. The team hand-picks every lot, covering the full spectrum of the coffee plant, from classically washed and naturally processed coffees to bold, vibrant cups with real character.
The range includes rare varieties you rarely find this concentrated on an island: Geisha, Wush Wush and Ombligón sit alongside a washed Nicaraguan Caturra and an anaerobic natural Ethiopian Heirloom. Want to go deeper? Noti runs cuppings where you taste more than eight exclusive coffees and have the roasting and bean selection explained by hand.

Coffee & menu
Behind the counter you'll find espresso, filter and cold brew, plus plant-based milk alternatives and decaf options. The house-roasted beans are also sold whole or ground to take home – the Nicaraguan Caturra starts around €13.50, the Ethiopian Heirloom around €18.50.
The food is taken seriously too: a changing brunch and breakfast menu with sweet and savory choices, fresh baked goods and freshly squeezed juices. Guests single out the white-chocolate-and-pistachio croissant and the tostadas on what seems to be house-made seeded bread. A detail many appreciate: breakfast is served throughout opening hours, not just until midday.

Atmosphere & location
Inside, Noti is small, colorful and lovingly furnished – more living room than coffee shop, with a handful of seats that fill up early. The staff has a reputation for attentive, fast service even when nearly every table is taken.
The location could hardly be more central: a short walk from the old town around the cathedral and Born, right on the Plaça d'Espanya transport hub with bus, train and the Sóller tram. Because seats are in demand and the sweet pastries can sell out early on busy days, an early visit pays off – especially at the weekend.




