Bardo Tea
Tea house · Concordia ·

Bardo Tea

Tea house · Concordia ·

Tea shop with single-origin teas, tatami room, and tea meditations.

Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null
Bardo Tea by null

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2926 NE Killingsworth St, Portland, OR 97211 Get directions

Information

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2926 NE Killingsworth St, Portland, OR 97211 Get directions

bardotea.com
@bardo.tea

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Last updated

Dec 10, 2025

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@eater
391,113 Postcards · 10,988 Cities

At New Portland Shop Bardo, Tea Is Treated as Seriously as Wine | Eater Portland

"On Saturday mornings I find Veronika Vogler standing at the entrance to Bardo Tea on Killingsworth, greeting visitors who remove their shoes and hang up their coats before moving to a back room where a ring of meditation cushions surrounds a station with three small teapots and glossy ceramic vessels bumpy with the potter’s thumbprints. Vogler leads a tea meditation—preparing a pu’erh with the almost damp, floral funk of an April backyard, daffodils and grass and earth—while guests sit in lotus, using the sound of pouring, the feel of steam, and the lingering flavors to anchor themselves; as Vogler says, “In meditation, we use mantra to return to the present, we use breath. Here, we use tea.” Founded by Vogler and tea curator Ravi Kroesen (formerly Smith Teamaker’s vice president of tea production), Bardo began online in January 2023 and opened the Killingsworth shop this year; it’s become a cult favorite among Portland’s culinary community—bartenders like Jim Meehan are customers and collaborators, and Willamette Valley destination restaurant Okta serves cups of Bardo after its tasting menus. Kroesen and Vogler talk about teas with the seriousness of sommeliers—considering terroir, season, cultivars, and farming practices—while teaching customers to use a gaiwan and to slow down and feel tea, selling single-origin teas for gongfu service (examples include Yu-Fang Tseng’s Eastern Beauty oolong and Fu Chen’s Jade Mountain), pu’erh cakes, loose leaf, and house blends such as double-fold vanilla earl grey and jasmine-oolong with sarsaparilla and rose; Saturdays then shift from meditation to social tea rooms where many regulars treat the visit as a weekly ritual." - Brooke Jackson-Glidden

https://pdx.eater.com/2024/4/8/24124353/bardo-tea-portland-oregon-cafe-opening
Bardo Tea
@eater
391,113 Postcards · 10,988 Cities

The Best Tea Shops in Portland, Oregon | Eater Portland

"Smith Teamaker alumnus Ravi Kroesen and longtime mindfulness teacher Veronika Vogler opened this tea shop on Northeast Killingsworth to showcase one-of-a-kind, single varietal teas and distinctive blends. Bardo is an under-the-radar favorite among Portland’s chefs and bartenders, who listen to Kroesen discuss the terroir, flavor profile, and growers of oolongs and lapsang with the seriousness and specificity of a sommelier. On Saturday mornings, Vogler hosts a tea meditation at the shop, serving cup after cup of pu’erh to her silent guests." - Nathan Williams

https://pdx.eater.com/maps/portland-best-teahouses-tea-shops-cafes-restaurants-kombucha-chai
Bardo Tea
@postcardnews
20,018 Postcards · 1,279 Cities

A chef-loved tea room highlighting single-origin oolongs, pu’er, and heicha with weekend tea meditations. Included on Eater Portland’s tea map, Bardo blends connoisseurship with an inviting, shoes-off tatami room ambiance.

https://bardotea.com/pages/teashop
Tea Houses in Portland (2025)
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Bardo Tea

Grace L

Google
Bardo is a SANCTUARY 🙏🏼 since moving to Portland it’s been a highlight to my life to discover that such a soulful place exists! The team is fluent in honoring not only tea but their philosophy and practice of the Bardo. The atmosphere is always so generous and you can feel the care of their craft and passion. To come here means you are supporting a heart driven mission and vision of what a simple bowl of tea can do for our world!

Alex S.

Google
I talked to Ravi and bought tea from him at TeaFestPDX last two years. I've also visited the teahouse twice now and it's a fun intimate spot. Ravi is easy to talk to, helpful, and knowledgeable about tea. All the teas I've tried have been very enjoyable and high quality. This week I noticed a teapot I liked and asked Ravi to hold it for me which he promptly did. It's an excellent teapot that's reasonably priced. I also got a shou brick that was very tasty. Definitely recommend visiting their teahouse as it's a very cool spot to enjoy some tea.

Phoebe L.

Google
What an experience! (I fear this is about to be a long review. TLDR: highly recommend for a relaxing afternoon!) My partner and I came in yesterday and had the most wonderful time. There are to-go offerings but to fully appreciate Bardo’s tea prepare to stay a while. Our server Jake patiently walked us through the tea list - we went with Jade Mountain and Horse Blanket (both gongfu), and showed us the whole steeping process. One tea would’ve been sufficient but it was fun to try an oolong and puer in tandem. Bardo’s attention to detail is amazing - you can see the intention behind each lamp, table, ceramic, etc. It’s really special. We left having a learned a lot and feeling refreshed and uplifted! Thank you to Jake and Robbie 🙏🏼

Mango_mike 7.

Google
TLDR: Lovely experience in teashop. Good music. Gongfu tea, beginner friendly, but the experience lacks in a lot of ways for me. The online website is claiming to have incredibly rare teas, which is very suspicious for a small vendor. As well, the prices of this place are much higher than standard. While the quality is there, the markup is around 1.5, 2 times larger vendors. This is a small business, less capital, tight margins, but you should know the value. I don't want to burn bridges here, and will come back for more tea, but I'm a little suspicious. Let's back up here, I'm a budding tea enthusiast and my mom decided to take me out here, after talking about doing it for a while. I'm finally getting her into tea, finding out she loves pu erh tea. Upon coming in the smell was fantastic, tea and incense. I saw they had a record player and they were deejaying pretty intensely, very focused on getting new records spinning. Music was good, sometimes odd, but I like odd. We sat down, and the seating was pretty tight, the space being quite tight after all. The furniture was odd, and the tea table especially left much to be desired. When doing gonfu cha, and pouring out steeps, most of the water wouldn't go into the reservoir and instead pour on my leg. The chair I was sitting on was odd, slightly uncomfortable, made of strings of a peculiar silicone or other stretchy polymer. I was greeted by what could very well be an angel, a soft spoken woman dressed in off white. Lovely service from her. I ordered two pots, in order to try as much tea as possible. I forget the names but it was an aged sheng and a shu pu erh. The woman prepared the teas and handed us the pots, instructing us how to brew gonfu style. The instructions were a little different than I like to brew, but I thought they were fantastic for the less stubborn and opinionated newcomer. Here come the problems. First of all, the teapots I was given varied drastically in volume. There was a fairness pitcher for each tea, and one filled to the brim, while the other barely filled up to a quarter. They are surely trying to highlight the teapots made by various artisans, which is nice, but the volume should not vary to this extent. Despite this, neither one of the teas got very flavorful, not matter how long I steeped it, these teas were not getting flavor. I'm curious if they are testing the teas that are being sold, because every tea I have had, aged or not, has had a lot of flavor in the second steep. But these teas simply did not. From a price standpoint, it's a small business that's offering a frivelous service. The gaiwan service is not a bargain, but if you want it cheaper, they sell tea as well. On that topic, the tea they sell errs on the expensive side. 200g gram cakes ranging from 60-100$ is pretty high, and is reserved for high end teas or vintages. I'm skeptical about the quality vs price. For example, most online vendors (and in person stores like Tao) sell sheng and shu for much lower prices, and the quality is very similar. While they may be a smaller vendor, with less connections and experience in the industry, the prices are a little high. The biggest red flag to me, is the shu pu erhs they sell, claiming to be from the 70s or 80s. I'm sorry, but shu pu erh from the 70s is incredibly rare, expensive, and hard to verify. A small vendor like this is likely lying or being lied to by a factory. Age in shu is important, but less easy to spot, it's very likely the claims about these incredibly old shu's are false. For more evidence, the 200g cakes of 80's shu for 125 dollars, sorry, no. That's 40 year old vintage, there is a scam somewhere in the supply chain, but that screams BS. If you want good service and average gonfu cha, with decent tea, come here, you won't regret it.

Justin K.

Google
I love everything about this hidden gem of a tea house. Great high quality tea. Awesome staff and ambiance. There’s a tea bar if you’re feeling social or tables if you’re not or want to chat with friends. Easy to find and easy to park. Also nice tea ware and such in addition to tea for purchase. Certainly one of my favorite tea houses in Portland.

Shannon H.

Google
This tea house should be a gem and by many accounts it is - it doesn't take much to scratch the surface to see the pomp and dismissive judgement and lack of kindness. My friends and I have been treated horribly by the owner several times that no amount of ambiance would overcome. There are better, kinder tea houses - go to Fly Awake for superior experience and service and equal to better teas. The owner was condescending to my guest and their relatively new to tea experience (though she is highly intelligent and was curious till treated with such disregard and disgust). I was yelled at for moving a chair that I was concerned did not look stable to sit in (others have mentioned the fragility) and did not want to have break while enjoying our tea. He was shaming and yelled. When seeking to make a retail purchase he ignored us for 20 minutes though he was aware the whole time I was at the register - it is a tiny space and he opted to keep greeting new people coming in at the door - until I decided to depart and then he offered to ring us up. No thanks, I do not want torture prior to purchase. I found the items for much less and still supported local elsewhere. Not worth it EVER AGAIN.

Emma C.

Google
Had a relaxing visit at Bardo Tea! On a rainy day it's the perfect cozy escape. Multiple areas to enjoy tea: at the tea counter, at a custom tea sink table (so neat!), or take your shoes off and have tea in a room with beautiful tatami flooring. We shared a gongfu of Forest Floor Puer. One gongfu is good for 2 people. The tea is high quality so it lasts for multiple steepings. Listening to the calming music combined with rain pattering on the metal roof of the shop made for a very relaxing experience. There is also tea for sale. I love the alder oolong as a non-caffeine option! The owner is very knowledgeable and helpful. We'll be back again!

gerald

Google
Fantastic atmosphere, super quality teas, wide selection. The owner is very knowledgable and friendly. 10/10 tea shop.
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Robert H.

Yelp
Bardo has been doing tea importing and even blending. They have been selling it on their website and shipping. Now they have a store, a tea bar, and a tea room to sit and sip tea. The two owners are very knowledgeable about tea and local tea lore. The tea room is a shoes-off tatami room, always a pleasure. That space has low floor tables and cushions to sit on the floor. It is a beautiful spot to quietly converse. The store has tea, teaware, incense, and wellness gift combinations. They are always sampling teas at their bar with 4 tall seats. Their packaging, printed materials, interior design, and social media fit with their product vibe. They are in a cool old building which they tastefully remodeled in a dynamic balance of rustic and refined. Bardo is a special spot to drink tea, bring rare teas home, and it is a great spot to learn more about tea and explore your own tastes in tea.
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Ofer F.

Yelp
An absolutely beautiful teahouse. A hidden gem on Killingsworth. You'd never know looking at this building that it houses such a lovely space. The tea service is so good and you can tell that everyone here is really passionate about good tea. They know their stuff.