Coffeeshop Workstation Etiquette & Best Scenic Terraces
Working remotely from a coffeeshop? Learn the unwritten workstation rules, laptop etiquette, and find the top scenic outdoor terraces with canal views.
Dave Mak
Amsterdam Cannabis Explorer

Remote Work Meets Cannabis: The 2026 Etiquette
Amsterdam is a magnet for digital nomads and remote workers. The idea of opening a laptop, sipping a flat white, and enjoying a joint sounds like the ultimate workspace dream.
However, coffeeshops are social, community spaces first — not free office spaces.
As tourism and remote work grow, coffeeshop owners have faced crowded seating and power hogs who buy a single €3 soda and stay for six hours. To keep the vibe welcoming, a strict, unwritten code of workstation etiquette has emerged. This guide outlines how to work respectfully and highlights the best spots combining workspace comfort with scenic outdoor terraces.
The Coffeeshop Workstation Code
| Etiquette Rule | Recommended Behavior | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Ask Before Opening | Ask the budtender: "Is it okay if I work on my laptop for an hour?" | Many shops explicitly ban laptops on weekends or during busy evening hours. |
| 2. The Purchase Ratio | Buy something (a drink, snack, or pre-roll) every 60 to 90 minutes. | Coffeeshops operate on thin margins; you must pay for your workspace. |
| 3. Respect Privacy | Never take Zoom/video calls. Keep headphones on at all times. | CCTV is standard, but patrons value their anonymity and don't want to be in your meetings. |
| 4. Don't Hog Outlets | Charge your laptop before arriving. | Outlets are scarce. Asking to unplug a shop fan to charge your laptop is a massive faux pas. |
| 5. Move for Groups | If the shop gets crowded, pack up your laptop. | Keeping a 4-person booth for a single laptop when groups are standing is highly disrespectful. |
Top 3 Dedicated Laptop-Friendly Coffeeshops
If you need a reliable place to get some work done, skip the tourist center and target these spacious, workspace-welcoming shops:
- Club Media: Tucked away in De Pijp, Club Media is renowned for its bright, modern, and spacious interior. They have designated seating areas that are excellent for reading or quiet laptop work, combined with top-tier organic cannabis and friendly staff.
- Siberie: Located on a quiet canal in the Jordaan belt, Siberie feels like a cozy community library. It features large wooden tables, excellent herbal teas, and a relaxed, artsy crowd. Highly recommended for a quiet morning session.
- Katsu: A De Pijp neighborhood classic. While it can get busy in the evening, weekday afternoons offer a wonderful, creative gallery-style atmosphere perfect for brainstorming or casual writing.
Soak Up the Sun: Best Scenic Terraces
If you'd rather close your laptop, relax, and watch the boats go by, Amsterdam has beautiful outdoor seating options. Here are the top scenic terraces:
1. Easy Times (Canal Frontage)
Located right on the canal edge, Easy Times offers prime outdoor benches. You can sit directly by the water, enjoy premium strains, and watch the classic Amsterdam canal boats glide past.
2. Katsu (Sunny Garden Vibe)
Katsu features a colorful, plant-filled outdoor terrace. It's a gorgeous spot to catch the afternoon sun, chat with locals, and soak up De Pijp's vibrant neighborhood energy.
3. The Plug West (Modern Outdoor Seating)
For a trendy, high-end experience, The Plug West features sleek outdoor terrace layouts that are perfect for enjoying exotic genetics in the fresh air.
Ready to find these spots on the map? Use our Interactive Coffeeshop Map and filter by Outdoor Terrace, Canal View, or Laptop Friendly to find your perfect vibe instantly.
💻 2026 Update: Confirmed Laptop Bans & Workspace Havens
With seating congestion in Amsterdam coffeeshops at an all-time high, local regulations surrounding laptops are changing rapidly. Below is a Reddit-audited directory of current laptop bans and vetted workspace-friendly havens in 2026:
4.1 Coffeeshops with Laptop Bans or Restrictions
| Coffeeshop | Laptop Policy | Source Evidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Bulldog (all locations) | Strict ban — laptops not allowed at any location | r/Amsterdam multiple reports 2024–2025 | "The Bulldog has never allowed laptops. They want turnover." Tourists walk in expecting cafe-style seating — wrong. |
| Barney's (all locations) | De facto ban — staff will tell you to finish up quickly | r/AmsterdamEnts user reports 2024 | Coffeeshop lounge is for smoking only. The attached Uptown restaurant allows laptops. |
| Green House (all locations) | No laptops after 2pm on weekends; weekday mornings tolerated | TripAdvisor reviews 2025 | Too busy for laptop squatters. Morning weekday only safe window. |
| 420 Cafe | Strict no-laptops policy (sign on door) | Multiple r/AmsterdamEnts posts | Small space, always packed. Laptops would block fire exits. |
| Coffeeshop Amsterdam | Banned — staff will ask you to leave | Google reviews 2024 | "They need the seats for customers who actually buy multiple rounds." |
| The Plug | Not allowed — explicitly no remote work | Implied from r/AmsterdamEnts discussions | High-traffic hotspot, premium prices, no lounging. |
| Family First | Not allowed — too small for laptop setup | Multiple reviews | Standing-room-only during peak hours. |
| Prix d'Ami | Banned on weekends; weekday tolerance is grudging | r/Amsterdam 2024 reports | "They let me sit with my iPad for 30 mins then asked me to move to a corner." |
4.2 The Best 5 Workspace Havens (Coffeeshops Welcoming Laptops)
1. Katsu (De Pijp)
- Wi-Fi Speed: Fast (100 Mbps tested)
- Socket Availability: Good — under-bar and wall sockets
- Seating Comfort: Medium — wooden benches, some soft seating
- Best Time: Weekday mornings (empty until 2pm)
- Notes: The gold standard for laptop-friendly coffeeshops. Spacious, local crowd, great hash, and power outlets throughout. Staff actively encourages remote workers. Buy a drink every 90 mins and nobody bothers you for hours.
2. Siberië (Nieuwmarkt)
- Wi-Fi Speed: Good (50 Mbps)
- Socket Availability: Limited — 4–5 wall sockets
- Seating Comfort: Excellent — large basement with soft sofas
- Best Time: All day (basement stays peaceful)
- Notes: Basement is a haven for laptop users. Quiet, dark, good vibes. Limited sockets so bring a battery pack. Their herb tea is €2 — cheapest re-up in town.
3. Paradox (Jordaan)
- Wi-Fi Speed: Decent (30 Mbps)
- Socket Availability: Moderate — windowsill outlets
- Seating Comfort: Cozy — small but comfortable
- Best Time: Weekdays before 3pm
- Notes: Tiny but welcoming. The staff at Paradox don't mind laptop users as long as you buy space cakes (their famous item). Seating is limited — arrive early.
4. Het Gelderse (Geldersekade)
- Wi-Fi Speed: Good (80 Mbps)
- Socket Availability: Good — multiple along walls
- Seating Comfort: Good — mix of bar stools and lounge
- Best Time: Weekday afternoons
- Notes: Off the tourist track despite being near Centraal. Spacious two-floor setup. Locals use it as a de facto office. Good WiFi, fair prices, excellent coffee (actual coffee).
5. La Tertulia (Jordaan)
- Wi-Fi Speed: Acceptable (20 Mbps)
- Socket Availability: Limited — 2 outlets
- Seating Comfort: Good — canal-side tables
- Best Time: Mornings (opens 10am)
- Notes: Artsy, relaxed, canal-facing. The owner is a ceramic artist — the space doubles as a gallery. Laptops are fine as long as you're respectful. Slow WiFi is the weak point.
4.3 Reddit Qualitative Audit — Key Verbatim Findings
r/AmsterdamEnts, post "Working on my laptop in a coffeeshop" (2024):
"I work as a graphic designer. My plan was to bring my laptop inside a coffeeshop and spend my work day there. I will make sure I buy weed, coffee and food. Do you think it would be a problem if I just stay in a coffeeshop for like 6 hours?"
Top-voted responses:
- "Don't do this. Coffeeshops are small. You taking up a table for 6 hours on one drink is an asshole move. Go to a library or a cafe."
- "Katsu is your best bet if you insist. They're big enough and don't care as much. But still, buy something every hour."
- "Most shops will kick you out. They need the table turnover. Coffeeshops in Centrum especially — they survive on selling €16/g weed to tourists, not €3 coffee."
The European-wide trend (Euronews, May 2024):
"Cafes across Europe are banning 'laptop squatters' — digital nomads who occupy a table for hours while spending the minimum. Amsterdam's smaller coffeeshop footprint makes this especially acute."
r/Amsterdam (2025) — "Locals not welcome":
A Brouwersgracht coffeeshop put up a sign banning locals from sitting inside, stating only tourists may sit. The sign read (translated): "TOURISTS ONLY! We have limited seating and we prioritize our guests who come from abroad. Locals: pickup only." This signals the extreme end of seating congestion pressures.
Non-coffeeshop cafe laptop bans (for context): Several popular Amsterdam cafes have also imposed restrictions:
- Coffee & Coconuts (De Pijp) — No laptops on weekends; dedicated laptop-free tables; laptop area on ground floor only
- Monks Coffee Roasters — No laptops on weekends; weekday users must sit in the back
- Motion Coffee — No laptops allowed at all (sign on door; reading encouraged instead)
- Bocca Coffee — Dedicated laptop area; laptops allowed on weekends (rare)
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