Our Story

A common table is where friends become family.

CommonTable Coffee Company didn't start with a business plan. It started with a love for people, and a love for coffee, and the slow realization that the best things in life almost always happen when those two come together.

Think about the most important moments of your life. The first cup with a new neighbor. Tuesday nights with your small group. The morning your friend showed up at your door, and you put on a pot without saying a word. The hard conversation with your teenager that finally cracked open over a refill. The quiet cup before sunrise, when you were figuring out who you wanted to become.

A table doesn't care how much money you make. It doesn't ask for your title. It just asks you to sit down, and stay a while, and be honest. And when there's a good cup of coffee in your hands, somehow it gets easier to listen, easier to talk, easier to be known.

That's the table we're building.

What we believe

We believe a good cup of coffee is a small act of hospitality. We believe friends become family around tables, not around screens. We believe transformation rarely happens in a single conversation, but always happens in the cumulative weight of a thousand of them. And we believe the host who keeps the pot warm is doing holy work, whether they know it or not.

What we roast

We carry six coffees, and only six on purpose. Single origin beans from Brazil, Colombia, Guatemala, and Mexico. Two house blends, Breakfast Blend + and Cowboy Blend, built for the way real people actually drink coffee at home. All medium roast, all whole bean, all chosen because they taste good in the third cup, not just the first.

We will add more. But we will never carry coffee we wouldn't pour for someone we love.

The invitation

If you're hosting a small group, raising kids who need to see what hospitality looks like, walking a friend through something hard, or just trying to be a little more present at your own table, we made this coffee for you.

Pull up a chair. The pot's on.