Jomtien.
South of Pratumnak. Beachfront cafes, surf-and-skate energy, a growing specialty corner.
Jomtien is Pattaya's beach side — the long, flat stretch of sand south of the Pratumnak hill, with a looser, more residential pace than the centre. Where Central Pattaya is grid and neon, Jomtien is a single beachfront road, a strip of condos and a surf-and-skate energy that has crept in over the last few years. It draws a quieter crowd: families, long-stay residents, the digital-nomad wave that arrived with the DTV visa. Mornings here are slow in the good sense.
The specialty scene is real but still thinner than the centre — a growing corner rather than an established cluster. The coffee tends to gather near The Commons development and along the Ta Khian Tia stretch toward the Sanctuary of Truth, with a separate pull toward the beachfront itself. Dripoly Café, at The Commons, is the most design-forward specialty cafe the editors have logged anywhere in Pattaya — a monochrome room built around Thai-Brazilian blends and single-origin drips. Ratio Coffee Experience takes the opposite tack: a second-floor room in Ta Khian Tia, easy to walk past, with a creative menu that does not appear to come at the coffee's expense.
What a coffee-minded visitor should know: Jomtien works as a half-day, not a crawl. The cafes are spread out, the distances reward a scooter or a baht-bus down the beach road, and the beachfront option carries the usual trade-off of view against focus. The two research-only entries below — Atelier Coffee on the beachfront and Summer House, a beach-club-at-night venue pouring through an 8presso partner — surfaced in research but have not been visited. Treat them as leads to verify, not verdicts. The honest read on Jomtien: the scene is on its way up, but the centre still has the depth.