Coffee Roasters in Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan's specialty coffee scene is anchored by Saskatoon and Regina, with 18 active independent roasters spread across the province from Lloydminster on the Alberta border through Swift Current, Moose Jaw, and a tail of small-town and rural operators. The scene has matured fast over the last decade.
18 independent roasters listed
Saskatoon anchors Saskatchewan's specialty coffee scene with six active independent roasters in our directory. Rampage Coffee Co. (founded 2019) has built a strong regional reputation, joined by Museo Coffee Roasters (founded 2007), Maduro Coffee and Tea (founded 2007), Road Coffee Co. (founded 2015), Venn Coffee Roasters (founded 2017), and Precision Coffee (founded 2021). The Saskatoon specialty scene has grown alongside the University of Saskatchewan, the city's broader food scene reinvention, and a customer base that's matured into specialty coffee at the same pace as the prairie food culture more broadly.
Regina runs Saskatchewan's other major specialty corridor with four active independent roasters serving the provincial capital. 33 1/3 Coffee Roasters (founded 2014) anchors the downtown specialty scene, joined by Caliber Coffee Roasters (founded 2013), Charged Coffee Co., and Duck Mountain Coffee Roasting Company (founded 2019). The Regina coffee culture runs alongside the University of Regina, the provincial legislature, and a downtown that's been steadily reinvented over the last decade. The interplay between Saskatoon and Regina keeps the province's coffee culture from feeling like a single-city scene, with both metros producing genuinely serious work.
Beyond the main metros, Saskatchewan's coffee scene reaches into the smaller cities and rural communities. Prince Albert's Dr. Java's Coffee House (founded 2011) anchors the northern reach. Moose Jaw's Evolve Coffee Roasters covers the trans-Canada highway corridor west of Regina. Lloydminster's Prairie Lily Coffee Roasters (founded 2012) serves the Alberta-Saskatchewan border city. Swift Current's Badlands Coffee Co. (founded 2018) anchors the southwest. The rural map adds Hague's 1905 Coffee Company, Hanley's Prairie Bean Roastery 219, Lumsden's SasKoffee Roastery, and Perdue's Rock Paper Coffee — small-batch operators serving prairie communities where specialty coffee infrastructure is genuinely thin. The 18 active independent Saskatchewan roasters represent a province whose coffee scene has built itself out methodically across both urban and rural geographies.