Best Late Night Coffee Places in Kashid Still Open After Dark

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18 min read · Kashid, Maharashtra · late night coffee ·

Best Late Night Coffee Places in Kashid Still Open After Dark

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Words by

Shraddha Tripathi

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The Quiet After Dark: Finding Late Night Coffee Places in Kashid

Kashid is a beach village that most people associate with daytime. The white sand, the water sports, the dolphin-spotting boats that leave at 9 AM sharp. But after the sun drops behind the Western Ghats and the last tourist bus heads back toward Alibag or Mumbai, something else happens. A handful of spots stay open, lights still on, coffee still brewing, and they become the only places where you can sit with a cup and actually hear the waves. I have spent enough evenings here, through enough seasons, to know which late night coffee places in Kashid are worth your time and which ones are just a chai stall with a plug point. This is that list.

1. The Beach Shack Clusters Near Kashid Beach Main Stretch

The main beach road in Kashid does not technically have a single address you can pin on Google Maps. It is the strip that runs parallel to the shoreline, starting roughly from the main parking area and extending toward the northern end where the sand gets quieter. After 10 PM, most of the daytime shacks pull their plastic chairs inside, but two or three of them keep a single bulb burning and a gas stove going. The coffee here is instant, Nescafé or Bru, made with powdered milk and too much sugar, and it costs between ₹40 and ₹60 a cup. But the reason to come is not the coffee. It is the fact that you are sitting three meters from the Arabian Sea at midnight with no one else around, and the only sound is the tide pulling back over flat sand.

The Vibe? A half-lit plastic table, a kerosene lantern if the power is out, and the sea doing all the talking.

The Bill? ₹40–₹80 for coffee or chai, ₹100–₹150 if you add a plate of Maggi or a bread omelette.

The Standout? Sitting there during a new moon night when the sky is completely dark and the stars are sharp enough to feel unreal.

The Catch? The power cuts are frequent between March and May. If the inverter dies, you are drinking your coffee in the dark, which is either romantic or annoying depending on your mood.

The local detail most tourists miss is that the shack owners will sometimes let you stay past midnight if you are a regular or if you bought dinner earlier. They do not advertise this. You just have to ask. During monsoon season, from late June through September, most of these shacks close entirely because the beach access road floods and the sand shifts. Winter, from November to February, is when this stretch comes alive after dark. The air is cool enough to sit outside without sweating, and the weekend crowd from Mumbai keeps things going until 1 AM.

2. Café 350 Near Kashid Village Center

Café 350 sits on the main road that connects Kashid beach to the village, about a five-minute auto ride from the shore. It is one of the few places in Kashid that has actual espresso equipment, a proper grinder, and a menu that lists cappuccino and cold brew as separate items. The coffee here runs between ₹120 and ₹220 depending on what you order, and they use real milk, not powder. The place stays open until around 11:30 PM on weekdays and midnight on weekends, which makes it one of the more reliable cafes open late Kashid has to offer. The owner is a Mumbai transplant who moved here five years ago and set up the place with a specific idea: give weekenders from the city a reason to stay past dinner.

The Vibe? Low lighting, a small bookshelf with dog-eared paperbacks, and a playlist that leans heavily on lo-fi and old Bollywood instrumentals.

The Bill? ₹120–₹220 for coffee, ₹250–₹400 if you add a sandwich or a slice of cake.

The Standout? The cold brew, which they steep for 18 hours and serve over ice with a splash of condensed milk. It is the best coffee I have had in Kashid, full stop.

The Catch? The Wi-Fi is unreliable after 9 PM because the local broadband connection in the village gets throttled during evening hours. If you are planning to work, bring a mobile hotspot.

What most people do not know is that Café 350 does a small batch of homemade granola and yogurt parfaits in the morning, and if you ask the night staff, they will sometimes set aside a portion for you to pick up the next day. It is not on the menu. You have to know to ask. Getting here from the beach costs about ₹80–₹120 by auto-rickshaw, and the last autos start heading back toward the village around 10 PM, so plan your return or be prepared to walk the 2 kilometers back in the dark.

3. The Highway Dhaba Stops on NH-166A

This is not a café in any traditional sense. Along the NH-166A highway that connects Kashid to the larger road network toward Alibag and Mumbai, there are two or three dhabas that operate through the night, catering primarily to truck drivers and overnight bus passengers. The coffee here is strong, milky, and served in steel tumblers. It costs between ₹20 and ₹40. The setting is fluorescent lights, plastic chairs, and the constant hum of diesel engines. But if you are driving back from Kashid late at night, or if you are the kind of person who finds beauty in highway stops at 2 AM, these dhabas are worth knowing about.

The Vibe? A truck stop with excellent coffee and zero pretense.

The Bill? ₹20–₹40 for coffee, ₹80–₹150 for a full meal of dal rice or chapati sabzi.

The Standout? The filter coffee at the dhaba closest to the Kashid turn-off, which the owner makes on a stovetop with a cloth filter he has been using for years. It tastes like something your grandmother would make.

The Catch? The seating is outdoors and uncovered. During monsoon, you are sitting in the rain. During summer, the heat radiating off the highway tar makes it genuinely uncomfortable even at night.

The insider detail is that one of these dhabas, the one about 3 kilometers before the Kashid turn-off when coming from Alibag, keeps a small room in the back with two beds that they will let you use for ₹300–₹500 if you are too tired to drive further. It is not a hotel. It is a concrete room with a fan and a bucket. But it has saved me on more than one occasion. These dhabas are accessible only by private vehicle or auto. There is no public transport on this stretch after 9 PM.

4. The Homestay Café at a Kashid Beach Homestay

Several homestays in Kashid, particularly the ones clustered along the road between the beach and the village, have small café setups that are technically for guests but will serve outsiders if you call ahead. One such place, located on the lane that branches off from the main beach road near the northern end, has a covered veranda with string lights and a small kitchen that stays open until about 11 PM. The coffee is filter-style, made with locally sourced beans from a supplier in Alibag, and it costs ₹80–₹120 a cup. The food menu is limited, mostly Maharashtrian home cooking, but the misal pav here is genuinely good and costs around ₹100–₹140.

The Vibe? Someone's home, because it is someone's home. Quiet, personal, and unhurried.

The Bill? ₹80–₹120 for coffee, ₹100–₹200 for food.

The Standout? The veranda at night, with the sound of crickets and the distant sea, and the owner's dog sleeping under your chair.

The Catch? You need to call at least two hours ahead to confirm they will be open and serving. This is not a walk-in place. If you just show up, the kitchen is likely closed.

The thing most tourists do not realize is that many Kashid homestays are run by families who have lived here for generations, and the café setup is often a side income they started after the tourism boom of the last decade. The coffee beans they use come from the same Alibag supplier who supplies several restaurants in the region, so the taste is consistent across multiple homestays. If you find one you like, ask the owner who their supplier is. They will tell you, and you can buy beans directly. Winter is the best time for this experience because the veranda is comfortable. In summer, even with fans, the humidity makes sitting outside past 9 PM a sweaty affair.

5. The Rooftop Seating at a Kashid Restaurant

There is a restaurant on the main beach road, a little south of the central parking area, that has a rooftop seating section. During the day, it is a standard beach-view restaurant serving seafood and North Indian fare. After 10 PM, the ground floor closes, but the rooftop stays open for drinks and coffee until about midnight on weekends. The coffee is basic, ₹80–₹120, but the view from the rooftop at night is the real reason to come. You can see the curve of the beach, the dark water, and on clear nights, the lights of distant fishing boats.

The Vibe? A rooftop with plastic chairs, a cool breeze, and the kind of view that makes you forget the coffee is mediocre.

The Bill? ₹80–₹120 for coffee, ₹150–₹300 for snacks or light food.

The Standout? The 11 PM moment when the last of the beach crowd leaves and the sand goes completely empty. From up there, it looks like a postcard.

The Catch? The rooftop has no railing on one side, just a low wall. If you have had a few drinks, be careful. Also, the stairs up are narrow and poorly lit.

The local detail is that the restaurant owner is connected to the local fishing community, and on certain nights, particularly during the full moon when the catch is good, he will bring up fresh grilled pomfret or surmai from the day's catch and serve it on the rooftop even though the kitchen is technically closed. This costs extra, around ₹200–₹350 for a plate, but it is the freshest fish you will eat in Kashid. You cannot plan for this. It just happens. Getting here is easy from the beach, a two-minute walk. From the village, it is a ₹60–₹80 auto ride.

6. The Night Cafes Kashid Offers Near the Phansad Wildlife Sanctuary Turn-Off

This is a stretch, literally. About 6 kilometers from Kashid beach, on the road toward Phansad Wildlife Sanctuary, there is a small cluster of eateries that cater to travelers heading to or returning from the sanctuary. One of them, a no-name roadside spot with a tin roof and a hand-painted sign, stays open until about 11 PM and serves coffee, chai, and basic food. The coffee is ₹30–₹50, instant, and the setting is bare bones. But the location is what makes it interesting. You are in the foothills of the Western Ghats, the air is cooler than the beach, and at night the sounds are entirely different, frogs, insects, the occasional jackal call in the distance.

The Vibe? A roadside stop in the middle of nowhere, and that is exactly the point.

The Bill? ₹30–₹50 for coffee, ₹60–₹120 for food.

The Standout? The drive here at night from Kashid, with no streetlights and the road cutting through dense vegetation. It feels like an adventure.

The Catch? There is no cell network for a 2-kilometer stretch on the way. If your auto driver does not know the road, you are navigating by memory and headlights. Also, during monsoon, parts of this road flood, and the spot may be inaccessible.

The insider tip is to come here on a night when the Phansad sanctuary has had a reported leopard sighting. The local guides and drivers gather at this spot in the evening, and the conversation is better than any podcast. You will hear stories about the forest, the wildlife, and the history of the area that no guidebook mentions. Getting here requires a private vehicle or an auto from Kashid, which will cost ₹150–₹250 one way. Negotiate the return fare before you go, because there is no auto stand at this location.

7. The Kashid 24 Hour Cafe That Almost Exists

I need to be honest here. Kashid does not have a true 24-hour cafe in the way Mumbai or Pune does. But there is a tea stall near the main beach parking area that operates on a schedule so extended it almost qualifies. The owner, a man in his sixties who has been running this stall for over two decades, opens at 5 AM and sometimes stays open until 1 AM or later, depending on whether there are customers. The coffee is ₹25–₹40, made on a kerosene stove when the power is out, and it is the kind of coffee that tastes like it has been made a thousand times before, in the exact same way, with the exact same pot.

The Vibe? A man, a stove, a few stools, and the beach road at its quietest.

The Bill? ₹25–₹40 for coffee or chai, ₹50–₹80 for biscuits or a bread pakora.

The Standout? The owner's memory. If you come back a second time, he will remember what you ordered. If you come back a third time, he will have it ready before you ask.

The Catch? There is no seating to speak of. You stand, you drink, you leave. Also, his hours are entirely dependent on his mood and his health. Some nights he is not there at all, and there is no way to know in advance.

What most people do not know is that this stall predates the tourism boom in Kashid by at least a decade. Before the beach became a weekend destination for Mumbai families, this stall served the local fishing community and the occasional traveler passing through on the coastal road. The owner has seen Kashid transform from a quiet fishing village to a tourist spot, and if you sit with him long enough, he will tell you about it. The stories are worth more than the coffee. This spot is walkable from anywhere on the beach. From the village, it is a ₹50–₹70 auto ride.

8. The Café Inside a Kashid Resort That Serves Non-Guests After Hours

Several of the larger resorts in Kashid have in-house cafés or coffee shops that are technically for guests only. But at least two of them, both located on the beach road in the southern part of Kashid, will serve non-guests in the evening if the place is not fully booked. The coffee here is the most expensive you will find in Kashid, ranging from ₹180 to ₹350, because these are resort prices. But the setting is also the most comfortable, proper seating, AC, clean washrooms, and a level of service that the beach shacks cannot match. These cafés typically stay open until 11 PM.

The Vibe? A resort lobby that happens to have good coffee and is willing to let you sit there even though you are not paying ₹4,000 a night for a room.

The Bill? ₹180–₹350 for coffee, ₹300–₹600 for desserts or light meals.

The Standout? The AC. In a place where most late-night options are open-air and humid, sitting in an air-conditioned room with a cappuccino at 10:30 PM is a luxury.

The Catch? You need to call ahead and confirm they are accepting non-guests that night. During peak season, December and January, they will turn you away if the resort is full. Also, the resort staff may give you a look that makes you feel like you are crashing a party.

The local detail is that one of these resorts sources its coffee beans from a small plantation in Coorg and roasts them in-house. If you ask the barista, they will sometimes show you the roasting setup, a small machine in the back that they use once a week. The beans are good enough to buy as a souvenir, and they sell them in 250-gram packs for ₹400–₹600. Getting here from the main beach area is a ₹70–₹100 auto ride. The resorts are spread out, so confirm the exact location before you head out.

When to Go and What to Know

Kashid's late-night scene is entirely seasonal. From November to February, the weather is cool enough to sit outside comfortably, and the weekend crowd from Mumbai keeps places open later. This is the sweet spot. March through June is peak summer, and while the beach is popular during the day, the evenings are hot and humid enough that most places empty out by 10 PM. Monsoon, July through September, is when Kashid essentially shuts down. The beach access roads flood, many shacks and small eateries close entirely, and the ones that stay open are dealing with power outages and waterlogged seating areas.

Transport is a real consideration. There is no Uber or Uber-like service that reliably operates in Kashid after 9 PM. Auto-rickshaws are the only option, and they become scarce and expensive after dark. A ride that costs ₹60 during the day can cost ₹100–₹150 at night. Negotiate before you get in. There is no local bus service in Kashid. The nearest bus stop is in Alibag, about 15 kilometers away, and the last bus from Alibag to Kashid runs around 8 PM.

Carry cash. Most of the late-night spots, especially the beach shacks and the highway dhabas, do not accept UPI or cards. The resort cafés and Café 350 will accept digital payments, but even they prefer cash after 10 PM because the network is unreliable. Keep ₹500–₹1,000 in small denominations for late-night expenses.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most reliable neighbourhood in Kashid for remote workers and digital nomads, and what is the average co-working day-pass cost in ₹?

Kashid does not have a dedicated co-working space. The village center near Café 350 has the most reliable internet and seating options, but there is no formal day-pass system. Working from cafés costs between ₹120 and ₹300 in coffee and food purchases for a full day. Homestays with Wi-Fi charge ₹500–₹1,000 extra for guests who need a work-friendly room with a desk and stable power backup.

Are there good co-working spaces or cafes in Kashid that stay open past 9 PM for late-night work sessions?

There are no co-working spaces in Kashid. Café 350 stays open until 11:30 PM on weekdays and midnight on weekends, making it the most viable option for late-night work. The resort cafés are open until 11 PM but are not designed for extended work sessions. The beach shacks and highway dhabas have no Wi-Fi and limited seating, making them impractical for work.

How reliable is the internet connectivity in Kashid's cafes and co-working spaces, and which areas have the most consistent speeds?

Internet in Kashid is inconsistent across the board. The village center has the most reliable broadband, with speeds ranging from 10 to 25 Mbps during the day, dropping to 5 to 10 Mbps after 8 PM. The beach road area has patchy coverage, and the stretch toward Phansad Wildlife Sanctuary has almost no mobile data connectivity. Jio and Airtel work best in the village center. BSNL broadband is available in some homestays but is slower and less stable.

Is Kashid expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget in ₹ for mid-tier travelers covering accommodation, food, and local transport.**

A mid-tier daily budget for Kashid runs between ₹2,500 and ₹4,500 per person. Homestay or budget resort accommodation costs ₹1,200–₹2,500 per night for a double room. Food for the day, including three meals and coffee, costs ₹600–₹1,200. Local auto transport runs ₹200–₹500 depending on distance and time of day. Water sports and activities are extra, ranging from ₹300 to ₹1,500 per activity.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging points and power backup in Kashid, especially during summer load-shedding hours?

Charging points are available at Café 350 and the resort cafés, both of which have inverter or generator backup during power cuts. The beach shacks and highway dhabas have no power backup and limited or no charging points. During summer, load-shedding in Kashid can last 2 to 4 hours in the afternoon and occasionally into the evening. Carrying a power bank rated at 10,000 mAh or higher is strongly recommended for any extended stay.

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