Joe's Addiction is a locally roasted coffee company and cafe in Oklahoma City that roasts its own beans on-site and emphasizes single-origin and direct-trade sourcing rather than branded blends. The operation functions as both a retail roastery and a small counter-service cafe, serving espresso drinks, filter coffee, and pastries to customers who range from commuters grabbing a quick cup to coffee enthusiasts evaluating specific origins.
The business combines a working roastery with a modest cafe counter, meaning customers can watch roasting happen while they wait for their order. This setup distinguishes it from chain coffee shops and from pure wholesale roasteries without public-facing service. The roaster sources directly from farms in Central America, Africa, and occasionally South America, rotating single-origin options monthly and keeping a house blend available year-round. The inventory typically includes 6 to 10 different origins in stock at any given time, which is substantially higher than what a typical Oklahoma City cafe carries.
A standard 12-ounce filter coffee costs $4.25 to $4.75 depending on origin. Espresso drinks run $5.50 for a cortado to $6.75 for a 16-ounce latte or cappuccino. A pour-over of a featured single-origin runs $5.00, and flights of three 2-ounce samples across different origins are offered at $8.00, making exploration of roasts comparatively affordable. Whole-bean bags (12 ounces) sell for $16 to $19 depending on origin and processing method; subscription plans for recurring shipments run 10 percent lower than retail pricing. Food is limited to pastries and a small selection of grab-and-go items sourced from local bakers, priced $4 to $7. The cafe does not serve food prepared on-site.
Oklahoma City has a range of coffee venues that serve different needs. Picasso Cafe in Midtown offers a broader food menu and art-gallery setting, appealing more to lingerers and social visits; Joe's Addiction trades atmosphere for roasting transparency and origin depth. The Loaded Bowl, a local chain with multiple locations, prioritizes quick service and food pairings over single-origin focus. Stumptown (in limited markets) and national chains emphasize consistency over local roasting. Joe's Addiction occupies the space between casual third-wave coffee culture and a dedicated roastery, which matters: customers here are buying coffee sourced and roasted by the same business, not purchasing another company's beans. If you want to understand the roasting process or taste origins you cannot find elsewhere in the city, this place justifies a trip. If you want a 20-seat cafe with lunch service, Picasso Cafe is better.
Joe's Addiction works well for coffee enthusiasts willing to invest time in learning origins and processing methods, for people who buy whole beans regularly and want local freshness, and for anyone curious about how coffee moves from farm to cup. The counter service is fast enough for commuters, but the cafe has minimal seating (typically 4 to 6 seats), so it is not a workspace or hangout. People seeking a full meal, wifi-friendly environment, or drive-through convenience should look elsewhere. Novice coffee drinkers who find single-origin talk intimidating may feel more at ease at a Picasso Cafe or chain location.
Walk to the counter, where a printed menu lists current origins and their tasting notes (acidity level, body, flavor descriptors like "stone fruit" or "chocolate"). Staff will recommend an origin or suggest the flight if you want to sample before committing to a full cup. Brewing happens to order; filter coffee and pour-overs take 3 to 4 minutes. If you want to buy whole beans, staff can grind them on-site or sell them unground. Expect a single-file line during 7 to 9 a.m. weekdays; mid-morning and afternoons are quieter. Cash and card are both accepted.
Joe's Addiction operates Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 2 p.m., and Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., with Sunday hours varying seasonally; confirm before a weekend trip. The cafe occupies a street-level space in a neighborhood with street parking and one small adjacent lot, which fills quickly during morning rush. Public transit access is limited, and the location is designed for walk-in or short-visit traffic rather than all-day cafe culture.
Joe's Addiction justifies a detour for Oklahoma City residents who roast coffee at home or buy beans frequently; it is the only place in the city where you can taste what a specific farm produced and buy that same roast the same day.
