Best Cafes in Delhi for Working Remotely: WiFi, Plugs & Vibes Ranked
Blue Tokai, Third Wave Coffee, Cafe Dori, Perch, Kunzum Travel Cafe — 12 Delhi cafes ranked by WiFi speed, power socket availability, noise level, coffee quality, and price range for remote workers.
Delhi's remote work cafe scene has matured considerably since the post-pandemic acceleration. The city now has a genuine specialty coffee culture — Blue Tokai and Third Wave have colonized every premium neighbourhood, and a second tier of independent cafes in Lodhi Colony, Hauz Khas, and Champa Gali has developed its own loyal remote-work ecosystem. The problem is knowing which ones are actually good for working, versus which ones look excellent on Instagram but have the WiFi of a 2008 internet cafe and exactly two power sockets contested by fourteen people. This guide is the honest version. No affiliate links. No sponsored rankings.
Ranking Criteria
Each cafe is rated on: WiFi speed and reliability (the non-negotiable), power socket density (plugs per seat), noise level (1 = library quiet, 5 = nightclub), coffee quality, and price range (per working session: minimum spend for 3–4 hours).
Tier 1: Optimal Work Cafes
1. Blue Tokai Coffee Roasters — Multiple Locations
Best branches for work: Lodhi Colony (Mehar Chand Market), Hauz Khas Village, Vasant Vihar, Khan Market.
WiFi: 30–60 Mbps, stable | Plugs: Good (every 2–3 seats) | Noise: 2/5 | Coffee: Exceptional — India's finest specialty roaster | Price: Rs 300–500 for a 4-hour session
Blue Tokai is the benchmark. Founded in Delhi in 2013, it pioneered single-origin Indian coffee from estates in Coorg, Chikmagalur, and Araku. The WiFi is consistently the fastest in Delhi's cafe scene — the Lodhi Colony branch in particular was upgraded in 2025. The beans are roasted in-house, and the baristas know what they are doing. Noise levels stay conversational throughout the day. The Lodhi Colony branch is the consensus top choice for serious remote work sessions. Kaam bhi hoga, coffee bhi achhi hogi.
2. Third Wave Coffee
Locations: Connaught Place, Saket, Lajpat Nagar, Noida Sector 18, Gurugram Sector 15.
WiFi: 25–50 Mbps | Plugs: Excellent (almost every seat has a dedicated strip) | Noise: 2/5 | Coffee: Very good | Price: Rs 280–450 per session
The Bangalore-origin chain that took Delhi by comfortable storm. Third Wave's interiors are thoughtfully designed for productivity: long communal tables with built-in cable management, individual booths with dedicated power strips, and a menu that extends into solid breakfast and lunch for long work days. The cold brew is excellent. WiFi passwords are on the receipt; no time limits are formally enforced on weekdays. Best chain option for the NCR satellite cities.
3. Cafe Dori — Champa Gali, Saket
Location: Champa Gali (Devika Bhavan), Sheikh Sarai Phase 2, Saket.
WiFi: 20–35 Mbps | Plugs: Moderate (table strips available on request) | Noise: 2/5 weekdays, 4/5 weekends | Coffee: Excellent | Price: Rs 400–700 per session
Champa Gali is Delhi's best-kept open-air food and cafe cluster — a converted industrial space in a quiet dead end behind Sheikh Sarai that hosts eight independent food concepts. Cafe Dori is known for its light European menu, excellent filter coffee, and quiet weekday atmosphere. The indoor section with exposed brick and good natural light is genuinely excellent for working. Only viable for work on weekdays — weekends are date-destination busy. Book a corner table.
Tier 2: Good for Half-Day Sessions
4. Perch Wine and Coffee Bar — Khan Market
Location: 73, Middle Lane, Khan Market.
WiFi: 15–25 Mbps | Plugs: Limited | Noise: 3/5 | Coffee: Excellent | Price: Rs 600–1,000 per session
A narrow two-floor space in Khan Market with exposed wooden beams, a serious wine list, and coffee that ranks with Blue Tokai for quality. The WiFi is reliable but the plug situation is not ideal (request a seat near the back wall). Noise builds by 1 PM as the Khan Market lunch crowd fills in. Best for morning sessions (9 AM–12:30 PM) before the lunch rush. Order the filter coffee and the smashed avocado; both are excellent.
5. Ama Cafe — Majnu Ka Tilla (Tibetan Colony)
Location: Majnu Ka Tilla, near Civil Lines Metro station.
WiFi: 15–20 Mbps | Plugs: Moderate | Noise: 2/5 | Coffee: Good (Tibetan-style butter tea also available) | Price: Rs 250–400
Delhi's most unexpected remote work location — a quiet Tibetan cafe in the colony behind Majnu Ka Tilla, Delhi's Tibetan refugee settlement north of the university. Prayer flags, thangka art, momos assembled in the open kitchen, butter tea service. The WiFi is functional if not fast. The thukpa noodle soup is the best lunch option in North Delhi. Best for creatives who need an atmosphere shift to unblock. Koi alag jagah chahiye toh yahan aao.
6. Hauz Khas Social — Hauz Khas Village
WiFi: 20–30 Mbps | Plugs: Good on upper floors | Noise: 3/5 daytime, 5/5 evenings | Coffee: Good | Price: Rs 500–800
Primarily a food-and-drink destination that tolerates working rather than a work cafe that also has good drinks. Morning hours (10 AM–1 PM) are genuinely usable: quieter, good WiFi, excellent views over the Hauz Khas lake. By 3 PM the music gets louder and the crowd shifts decisively toward socializing. Come for mornings only; use the lake-view window seats on the second floor for maximum focus.
Tier 3: Vibe-First, Work-Second
7. Kunzum Travel Cafe — Hauz Khas Village
Location: T-49, Ground Floor, Hauz Khas Village.
WiFi: 10–15 Mbps | Plugs: Very limited | Noise: 2/5 | Price: Pay what you like (genuinely — there is no menu price).
Unique in India: a travel-themed cafe run on an honor system where you pay what you feel the experience was worth, placed in a box near the door. Coffee and chai available. The bookshelves are full of travel literature. Do not come here for a serious work sprint. Come here when you need to decompress, think slowly, read something physical, and remember that not everything needs to be optimized. The model has survived since 2010 because the Delhi creative community has chosen to support it. Worth one visit entirely on those terms.
8. The Piano Man Jazz Club — Safdarjung
WiFi: Present | Plugs: Limited | Noise: 1/5 afternoons, 4/5 evenings | Price: Rs 500–800
A jazz club by night, quiet cafe by day. The afternoon hours (12–6 PM) before live music starts are surprisingly conducive to work — good coffee, low ambient noise, and tasteful interior design (exposed brick, vintage music posters). End your workday with a live set. Dual-purpose venue: morning work, evening culture.
Remote Work Cafe Survival Guide — Delhi Edition
- Weekday mornings (9–12 AM) are universally the best window. By 1 PM, lunch crowds arrive; by 6 PM in Tier 1 venues, the post-work socializing begins.
- Ask about minimum spend before settling in for a 4-hour session — popular weekend venues in Champa Gali get territorial about tables during peak hours.
- Carry your own portable charger as insurance — power sockets are the scarcest resource in any Delhi cafe.
- Speed test on arrival (use Fast.com on your phone). If the cafe WiFi is under 5 Mbps, use your mobile hotspot and save cafe WiFi for low-bandwidth tasks.
- Delhi's November–February season is the best time for outdoor cafe sections. By May the heat is prohibitive; by July the monsoon makes open sections unusable.
Quick Comparison Table
- Blue Tokai Lodhi Colony: WiFi 30–60 Mbps | Plugs good | Noise 2/5 | Rs 300–500
- Third Wave Coffee: WiFi 25–50 Mbps | Plugs excellent | Noise 2/5 | Rs 280–450
- Cafe Dori (Champa Gali): WiFi 20–35 Mbps | Plugs moderate | Noise 2/5 | Rs 400–700
- Perch Khan Market: WiFi 15–25 Mbps | Plugs limited | Noise 3/5 | Rs 600–1,000
- Ama Cafe (Majnu Ka Tilla): WiFi 15–20 Mbps | Plugs moderate | Noise 2/5 | Rs 250–400
- Kunzum Travel Cafe: WiFi 10–15 Mbps | Plugs very limited | Noise 2/5 | Pay what you like
Delhi's cafe culture is in its best phase: the beans are better, the baristas are trained, and enough cafes have figured out that remote workers are the most reliable, highest-spend, lowest-drama daytime customers they have. The city rewards those who know where to go. Pick your spot, open the laptop, order something with single-origin beans, and let Delhi work its particular magic around you. Kaam karo, coffee piyyo, dilli ka maza lo.