Via Fabio Massimo 80/a, Prati, Rome 00192. A short walk from Lepanto and Ottaviano metro, a few blocks east of the Vatican walls.
Plan Your Visit
Sciascia runs as a classic Roman stand-up bar. Order and pay at the till, then take the receipt to the counter. Mornings before the Vatican rush are the quietest window. No reservations, just walk in.
Ask Us a Question More Hidden Gems in RomeOur Take on Sciascia Caffè
Sciascia Caffè sits on Via Fabio Massimo in Prati, the orderly grid of streets between the Vatican and the Tiber, and it has poured coffee from the same address since 1919. The Sciascia family built it as a neighborhood bar and it still reads that way. Burnished wood panelling, period artwork, and vintage machines fill a narrow room that feels closer to a 1930s salon than a modern café. In a district thick with tourist coffee, that restraint is the whole point.
The order to know is the espresso served in a cup lined with dark chocolate. The chocolate melts into the crema as you drink, so the last sip carries the most. Lonely Planet and AFAR have both pointed to Sciascia as one of the best coffees in the city, and the queue of locals at the counter most mornings backs that up. This is a coffee bar first, not a place for a long sit, which is exactly how Romans use it.
Service is stand-up and quick. Pay at the till, carry the receipt to the bar, and drink your espresso on your feet the way the regulars do. Prices track a neighborhood Roman bar rather than a Vatican tourist café, which is part of why the room stays full of locals rather than tour groups. Yelp reviewers, across more than forty write-ups and two hundred photos, return again and again to the chocolate cup and the old-school polish of the place.
For a Prati morning, Sciascia is the anchor. Set it against the grand piazza cafés across the river at Rosati on Piazza del Popolo and Canova on Piazza del Popolo, or trade the espresso for a glass later in the day at Il Goccetto wine bar. Sciascia is the one to start the day with.
The house signature. An espresso served in a cup lined with dark chocolate that melts into the coffee as you go. Order this first, every time.
Widely rated among the best in Rome. A morning-only order by local custom, dense and well balanced.
The summer move. Crushed coffee ice, usually with cream, for the months when an espresso feels too hot.
Thick, dark, and closer to dessert than a drink. The cold-weather counterpart to the chocolate cup.
Best Time to Visit
Early to mid morning for the quietest counter and the freshest pastries, before Vatican-bound visitors fill Prati. Summer afternoons for the coffee granita.
Who It's For
Coffee purists, a proper Roman breakfast before the Vatican Museums, and anyone who wants a stand-up espresso done the local way. Not a spot for a long lingering sit.
Yelp and Tripadvisor reviewers keep coming back to the espresso served in the dark chocolate cup as the thing to order.
Regulars rate the cappuccino among the best in Rome and treat the place as a morning ritual rather than a sit-down café.
Lonely Planet and AFAR have both flagged Sciascia for serving some of the city's best coffee, which tracks with the morning crowd of locals.
Sources: Lonely Planet; AFAR; Tripadvisor; Yelp (47 reviews, 240 photos); In Your Pocket; Sciascia Caffè (2026).
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