The Best Coffee Shops, Restaurants, and Trails in Bothell, WA
The Best Coffee Shops, Restaurants, and Trails in Bothell, WA: A Local's Honest Review
Coffee before conversation. Food as love language. Here's where I actually go, what I actually order, and why none of it requires a passport.
By Aaron Robinson · Keller Williams Realty Bothell · June 2026

Anyone who knows me knows two things. First, I do not go a day without coffee. If you're really close to me, you know better than to try to talk to me before I've had it. Second, food is my love language. When I travel somewhere new, I am looking up restaurants before I am looking up UNESCO World Heritage sites. That is just how my brain is wired.
We don't have any UNESCO sites here in Bothell. What we do have is a genuinely good lineup of coffee, food, and trails that I actually use, not just recommend for the sake of a blog post. So here it is. The honest, no-filler version of where I go and why.
Coffee: Where I Actually Get It
Let's start with coffee, since nothing else in this post happens for me before it.
I want to set an expectation here. You are not going to find a third-wave coffee shop in Bothell doing Hario V60 pour-overs of single-origin, honey-processed beans with a tasting note card. We are in the suburbs, and that is fine. If people want a post on that kind of coffee culture in Seattle proper, I can get coffee-nerdy real quick on a future post. For now, here is what's actually local and what I actually drink.
Starbucks
Yes, it counts. Starbucks was founded at Pike Place Market and is still headquartered in Seattle. If you're going to draw a hard line excluding it from a Greater Seattle coffee list because it's "too big," you're drawing a strange line. It's local. It's reliable. It's everywhere you need it to be.
Woods Coffee
Family-owned, originally from Bellingham. The coffee itself is fine, nothing that's going to change your life, but the vibe and the consistency make it a solid regular stop. Woods Coffee
Mercurys Coffee
Headquartered in Bellevue. A solid Eastside chain option if you want something with a bit more local identity than the big national name. Mercurys Coffee
Gourmet Latte
A local chain of drive-thru coffee shops. If you're commuting and need something fast without sacrificing quality, this is the practical local pick. Gourmet Latte
I'm not pretending Bothell is a third-wave coffee destination. It's not. What it has is reliable, local, and convenient options for people who need their coffee on the way to somewhere, not as a ninety-minute ritual. There's a place for both. This is the suburbs' version, and it works.
Food: The Love Language Section
This is the part I actually look forward to writing. Food is how I connect with a place, and Bothell has earned a real spot on my personal map, not just a professional one.
Maltby Cafe
The biggest and best cinnamon roll you will find in this area, made fully in-house. If you can't get a table, and you often can't because it's popular for good reason, you can just buy a roll to go. That's a feature, not a workaround. Worth the trip on its own. Maltby Cafe
McMenamins Anderson School
A genuinely unique spot. Multiple dining and drink options on one property, plus a theater where you can watch a movie while you eat. They do a great Easter brunch here every year, and it's become something of a tradition for a lot of people in the area, myself included. McMenamins
Stack 571
A great NYC-style burger and a genuinely good whiskey selection. I love whiskey, and this is one of the spots that does it right alongside food that holds its own. Could honestly be its own future post. Stack 571
Tortas Jalisco
A reliable, satisfying option when you want something fast that still feels like a real meal. The kind of place that earns repeat visits without needing a big production around it. Tortas Jalisco
Ranch Drive-In
A local institution. The kind of spot that gives Bothell some of its character, where the experience is as much a part of the appeal as the food itself.
I'll be honest about something. None of these places are trying to be the trendiest spot in Seattle. That's not the point. The point is that they're genuinely good, they're run by people who care, and they give this town a real food identity instead of a string of chains. When I bring people through Bothell who are considering a move here, I take them to these places before I take them to a listing. The food tells you more about a town's character than a spec sheet ever will.
Thinking About Moving to Bothell?
The food and coffee scene is part of what makes a place worth living in. Let's talk about the neighborhoods that put you closest to the spots that matter to you.
Talk to Aaron Read: Bothell Neighborhoods RankedThe River Walk and the Trails That Make It Worth It
Bothell's relationship to the water and the trail system is one of the things that makes living here feel different from a lot of other Eastside suburbs. The Sammamish River runs right through the heart of town, and the trail network built along it connects you to a much bigger picture than Bothell alone.
The Park at Bothell Landing sits right on the river and is the spot where the Sammamish River Trail effectively begins as it heads west. Cross the historic bridge there and you're on a paved path that connects all the way to Gas Works Park in Seattle, with Blyth Park, Log Boom Park in Kenmore, and the Wayne Golf Course area along the way, per King County Parks.
The Burke-Gilman Trail itself runs more than 20 miles between Bothell and Shilshole Bay in Seattle, and it intersects with the Sammamish River Trail right here, which means Bothell sits at a genuinely meaningful junction point in one of the best multi-use trail systems in the region, per King County Parks.
Trail and park data per King County Parks and City of Seattle Parks and Recreation. Trail conditions and access points can change due to construction or maintenance. Check current trail status before planning a route.
If you live anywhere near this corridor, your weekend default becomes a walk, a run, or a ride along the river instead of a drive somewhere else to get it. That changes the day-to-day feel of living here in a way that's hard to capture on a listing sheet but very easy to feel once you've actually walked it.
Why This Matters If You're Thinking About Moving Here
Here's what I would say about that: when people are deciding whether a place is going to feel like home, the data point that matters most is rarely the median home price or the commute time, even though both of those matter. It's whether the place has a texture to it. Whether there's a cinnamon roll worth driving for, a trail worth walking after dinner, a bar with a whiskey list worth exploring.
Bothell has that texture. It's not flashy. It's not trying to be downtown Seattle, and it shouldn't try to be. What it offers is a genuinely livable collection of local spots that give the town its own identity, layered on top of direct access to one of the best trail systems in the region.
And that's amazing, honestly. You don't need a UNESCO World Heritage site to make a place worth living in. You need a good cinnamon roll, a solid burger, decent coffee, and a place to walk it all off. Bothell has all four.
Bothell's food and trail scene is unpretentious, locally rooted, and genuinely good, from Maltby Cafe's in-house cinnamon rolls to the Sammamish River Trail connecting straight through to the Burke-Gilman system. It's not trying to be a big-city food destination, and it doesn't need to. What it offers is real local character and direct access to one of the region's best trail networks, which together say more about what it's actually like to live here than any market report can.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best breakfast spot in Bothell, WA?
Maltby Cafe is widely regarded as a top breakfast destination in the Bothell area, known especially for its large, in-house-made cinnamon rolls. The cafe regularly draws a wait for tables, but it also offers to-go options, including the cinnamon rolls on their own, for visitors who don't want to wait for seating. It's a long-standing local favorite that draws visitors from across the Eastside, not just Bothell residents.
Where does the Burke-Gilman Trail connect to Bothell?
The Burke-Gilman Trail intersects with the Sammamish River Trail in Bothell, with its eastern terminus at Blyth Park, accessible from Main Street via 102nd Ave NE and West Riverside Drive, per the Washington Trails Association. From there, the Sammamish River Trail continues through Bothell, including the Park at Bothell Landing, before extending toward Redmond. The full Burke-Gilman Trail runs more than 20 miles from Bothell to Shilshole Bay in Seattle, passing through Kenmore and Lake Forest Park along the way, per King County Parks.
Is there good coffee in Bothell, WA?
Bothell has solid, reliable coffee options, though it is not currently home to a dedicated third-wave specialty coffee scene the way some Seattle neighborhoods are. Local and regional options include Starbucks, which originated in Seattle and remains headquartered there, Woods Coffee, a Bellingham-based family chain, Mercurys Coffee, headquartered in Bellevue, and Gourmet Latte, a local drive-thru chain. These options prioritize convenience and consistency over specialty single-origin offerings, which fits the practical, commuter-friendly character of the area.
What restaurants in Bothell have outdoor seating or unique dining experiences?
McMenamins Anderson School offers one of the more unique dining experiences in Bothell, combining multiple restaurant and bar options on a single property along with an on-site movie theater, allowing visitors to dine and watch a film in the same visit. The property also hosts a notable annual Easter brunch. For a more classic local feel, Ranch Drive-In offers a longstanding drive-in dining experience that has become part of Bothell's local character.
What trails are near Bothell, WA for walking or biking?
Bothell sits at a key junction of two major regional trails. The Sammamish River Trail runs through Bothell along the Sammamish River, connecting the Park at Bothell Landing to Blyth Park and continuing toward Redmond's Marymoor Park. The Burke-Gilman Trail, which runs more than 20 miles between Bothell and Shilshole Bay in Seattle, intersects with the Sammamish River Trail at Bothell, per King County Parks. Both trails are paved, multi-use, and suitable for walking, running, and biking, with additional access through Blyth Park, which spans approximately 41 acres and connects directly to both trail systems.
Want a Local's Tour, Not Just a Listing Tour?
I show buyers the food and the trails along with the homes. It's the only way to really understand what living in a neighborhood feels like. Let's get you out here.
Talk to AaronResidential Real Estate Agent · Keller Williams Realty Bothell
License #25032471 · Greater Seattle Area
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