Best Late Night Coffee Places in Tbilisi Still Open After Dark

Photo by  Aleksandr Popov

16 min read · Tbilisi, Georgia · late night coffee ·

Best Late Night Coffee Places in Tbilisi Still Open After Dark

NK

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Nino Kvaratskhelia

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Best Late Night Coffee Places in Tbilisi Still Open After Dark

Tbilisi has a relationship with coffee that most cities never develop. The Georgian capital doesn't treat caffeine as a morning transaction. It treats it as a social contract, something you sit with for hours, something that belongs just as much at midnight as it does at eight in the morning. The late night coffee places in Tbilisi I'm about to walk you through aren't gimmicky afterthoughts. They are full living parts of how this city thinks about time, friendship, and the kind of conversation that only happens when most people have gone home. I spent the last three months visiting every place on this list, often on the same night, often twice in a week, just to make sure what I was seeing was real and not a one-off mood. It was real.

The Marjanishvili District: Where Night Owls Start Their Evening

Café Littera

1 Marjanishvili Square, Marjanishvili district. I walked in here last Tuesday at 11:30 PM and the place was half full. Not "half full for Tbilisi late night standards" but actually half full, the kind of half full that means whoever designed the seating plan was not thinking about maximizing turnover. The tables are spaced generously. The chairs are the kind you can actually sit in for three hours without your back staging a protest. Order the Turkish coffee. It is not on the printed menu as a centerpiece, but the baristas here prepare it properly, with the right foam, the right slow pour. Ask for the house baklava if they still have any after 10 PM. They usually do.

Local Insider Tip: "Go on a Wednesday. The owner is a writer, and Wednesdays she hosts a quiet informal reading that starts around midnight near the back corner table. Nobody announces it. You just show up and it's happening. If you bring a book, people will talk to you. If you bring nothing, people will still talk to you, but slower."

This café connects to something I think matters about Marjanishvili. The square has been a gathering point for decades, even when the architecture around it was crumbling. Littera carries that forward as a space where sitting late into the night is not desperate or indulgent. It is ordinary. One genuine thing, though, the bathroom lighting is harsh. If you're the kind of person whose face betrays you at 1 AM under fluorescent tubes, bring sunglasses.

Marjanishvili Café-Bar (the one near the theater)

Directly adjacent to the Marjanishvili State Academic Drama Theater on Shota Kavlashvili Street. This is technically more of a bar-café hybrid, which in Tbilisi often means the same thing. The espresso here is machine-standard, nothing that will make you write poetry about beans. What makes it worth going to is the atmosphere after the theater lets out. Around 11 PM on opening nights, actors come here still partially in their headspace, and the conversation shifts in a way I have never experienced outside of Georgia. I once sat next to a woman who played Lady Macbeth that night and she was eating a khinkali at midnight and absolutely not thinking about Shakespeare. It was magnificent.

Local Insider Tip: "Do not go on a Monday or Tuesday. The theater dark days reduce the crowd significantly and the energy dies. Thursday through Saturday after a show is when this place belongs to the world."

This place is a living thread in Tbilisi's theatrical history. Marjanishvili the theater has been here since 1928, adapted by Kote Marjanishvili's vision of modern Georgian drama. The coffee around it may not be the point, but the community around it is exactly the point. A small honest gripe: the music volume goes up around 11:30 on weekends and it becomes genuinely difficult to have a conversation at normal speaking volume without leaning into someone's ear.

The Old Town: Cafés That Remember the Streets

KOXA Café

Erekle II Street, Old Town. Finding KOXA requires either directions or stubbornness, because Erekle II Street curves in ways that Google Maps pretends don't exist. I got lost twice the first time I tried to find this place after dark. When I did find it at around 12:30 AM on a Friday, I understood why people don't give better directions. They want you to earn it. The interior is low, warm, and full of wood. Order the house-made lemonade first, even at that hour. It is extraordinary. Then get the flat white, which they pull with surprising precision for a place that looks like it was decorated by someone's eccentric grandmother. I mean this with love.

Local Insider Tip: "Sit on the right side of the room if you're alone. The left side fills with groups after midnight on weekends and becomes loud. The right side has a small two-person table near the window that feels like it was put there specifically for people who want to read or think."

One detail tourists miss: the building itself is one of the older residential structures on Erekle II Street, and the wooden beams in the ceiling are original. The owner once casually mentioned they were over a century old while clearing my table. That kind of casual relationship with history is pure Tbilisi. My only real complaint here is that the single bathroom has a lock mechanism that requires exactly the right pressure to engage. I have seen grown adults stand confused in that doorway at 1 AM.

Café Chocolat (Old Town Branch)

Leselidze Street, Old Town. This is one of the few cafes open late Tbilisi visitors stumble upon because it sits on one of the most walked streets in the Old Town. I started going here because I was cold and wanted hot chocolate at 10:45 PM. I kept going back because the staff remembers faces after two visits, which in a tourist-heavy zone is practically a miracle. Order the dark hot chocolate with orange peel if it's on the seasonal menu. The regular hot chocolate is reliably good, rich without being cloying. They serve actual desserts too, proper portions, not the minimalist single-fork-of-something you find in newer spots.

Local Insider Tip: "Go here on Sunday nights. The Old Town quiets down considerably and you can actually get a table near the window and watch Leselidze Street empty out. It's one of the few streets in Tbilisi you can watch transform from crowded to almost empty within a 90-minute span."

This street has been a commercial spine for Tbilisi since the Soviet era, when it bore a different name. Leselidze itself was a controversial Bolshevik figure, and the street's identity has shifted under every regime. Café Chocolat occupies a small corner of that long negotiation. The Tbilisi 24 hour cafe culture isn't quite what it used to be, and this place doesn't run every hour of every day, but it stays open later than most in the Old Town, which is something. Watch the cobblestones outside if it rained earlier. They become genuinely slick.

Vake and the Upper City: Where Quiet Intensity Lives

Probe Coffee

Chavchavadze Avenue, Vake district. I have a rule about Chavchavadze Avenue that I think is worth sharing. The closer you are to the intersection with Tamarashvili Street, the more serious the coffee. Probe Coffee sits in this serious zone. The space is clean, deliberate, with furniture that suggests someone made choices about every single object. Order the single-origin pour-over. The baristas here will tell you where the beans are from and actually seem to care about the answer, not because they were trained to say it but because they roast nearby and check the results. I had a Colombian variety here that tasted like someone had calibrated a feeling into liquid. That's not flowery writing. I wrote it in my notebook at 12:15 AM.

Local Insider Tip: "The back table near the power outlet has a small notch in the wood where the previous owner carved initials. If you sit there, you'll eventually see other regulars touch the notch habitually when they pass. It's like a tiny secular shrine. Don't photograph the initials. People will notice and quietly disapprove."

Vake has been Tbilisi's aspirational neighborhood since the 1960s, when Soviet modernist planners gave it wide boulevards and residential blocks that tried to suggest a different kind of living. Probe Coffee carries that aspiration into 2025 but grounds it in something more honest, good beans, good preparation, a space that doesn't try to be Instagram. The one thing: they close relatively early for a late night list, usually around 12:30 AM on weekdays. Plan accordingly.

Stamba Café

Kartoza Gumbashi Street, Fabrika area. Stamba is inside the larger Fabrika complex, which has become one of the most visible night cafes Tbilisi tourists discover on their own. I'm including it anyway because what it does inside that complex is genuinely unusual. The café occupies a former Soviet sewing factory. The ceilings are high, the industrial architecture is preserved rather than painted over, and the acoustics make everything sound like you're inside someone else's memory. Order the flat white or one of their seasonal filter options. The food menu is also worth paying attention to because they source ingredients from small Georgian producers, which sounds like marketing copy but actually means the yogurt on your plate came from a specific village in Imereti.

Local Insider Tip: "Sit on the mezzanine level if it's open. From up there you can see the entire factory floor change energy over the course of a single evening. Early it's a co-working space. By 11 PM it becomes something between a party and a community meeting that nobody organized. You can observe the transition like a nature documentary."

Fabrika itself was opened in 2016 by Georgian creative entrepreneurs who saw potential in Soviet-era industrial architecture. It has since become a symbol of Tbilisi's post-Soviet cultural reinvention. Stamba Café inside it is a living example of how commercial spaces in Tbilisi are negotiating between history and modernity. The only flaw: Wi-Fi speeds near the far walls drop to almost unusable levels after 10 PM when the crowd swells. If you brought your laptop hoping to work, stick to the mezzanine.

Saburtalo and the Calmer Side of Late Night

Coffee Lab

Vazha-Pshavela Avenue, Saburtalo district. Saburtalo is where Tbilisi goes to breathe. It's residential, quieter, and the coffee culture there is less about performance and more about function. Coffee Lab on Vazha-Pshavela is a perfect example. I went here on a Thursday at 11 PM and the place had exactly four other people, all of whom appeared to be working on laptops or reading physical books. The espresso is clean and consistent. The cappuccino has foam that holds its shape for an impressive amount of time. Order the avocado toast if you need food, it's simple and well-executed, which is all you need at that hour.

Local Insider Tip: "This place is best on weeknights. On weekends it closes earlier, usually by 11 PM. But Tuesday through Thursday, it's open until midnight and you'll have the kind of quiet that makes you realize how loud the rest of Tbilisi is."

Saburtalo was built largely in the Soviet period as a residential district for the growing middle class. It has none of the Old Town's romance, and that's exactly why it matters. Coffee Lab represents a different kind of Tbilisi, the one where people live ordinary lives and need a good cup of coffee at a reasonable hour without the theater of it. One thing to know: the street parking on Vazha-Pshavela is limited and the spots fill up with residents' cars. If you're driving, park on a side street.

Entrée

Nutsubidze Plateau, Saburtalo. Entrée is technically a bakery-café, and it sits on the Nutsubidze Plateau, which is one of the highest residential points in Tbilisi. I went here at 10:30 PM on a Saturday and the view from the window was the entire city lit up below us, which felt like a reward for the drive up. Order the croissant, any croissant. They bake on-site and the quality is remarkable for a place that also serves coffee. The coffee itself is solid, not the best on this list, but the combination of fresh pastry and city view at that hour is something I haven't found anywhere else in Tbilisi.

Local Insider Tip: "Go on a clear night. The plateau gets foggy in autumn and winter, and the view disappears entirely. On a clear night in spring or early summer, the city below looks like it was designed to be seen from exactly where you're sitting."

The Nutsubidze Plateau has been a residential area since the 1970s, built to house the growing population of Soviet Tbilisi. It's not a tourist area. Entrée is one of the few places up there that stays open past 10 PM, and it serves a local community that doesn't get written about in travel guides. That's part of why I like it. The only real issue: the last stretch of road up to the plateau is narrow and poorly lit. Drive slowly.

The Bridge District and the River

Café Gabriadze

Shavteli Street, near the Bridge of Peace. This is the café attached to the Gabriadte Puppet Theatre, and it is one of the most atmospheric places I have ever had coffee in my life. The interior is decorated with puppets, marionettes, and theatrical set pieces that Gabriadze himself designed. I sat here at 11:15 PM on a Friday and a marionette of a small bird hung directly above my table, swaying slightly from the air conditioning. I am not exaggerating when I say it was slightly unsettling and completely beautiful. Order the espresso and a slice of cake. The cake rotates, but whatever they have will be good.

Local Insider Tip: "If you can, time your visit to coincide with a late puppet show. The café fills with audience members afterward and the energy is unlike anything else in Tbilisi. Children and adults sit together and everyone is slightly dazed by what they just saw. The coffee tastes different in that atmosphere."

Rezo Gabriadze was one of Georgia's most beloved artists, and his puppet theatre on Shavteli Street has been a cultural landmark since 1981. The café carries his aesthetic into the everyday, which is a rare thing. Tbilisi has a way of making art feel domestic rather than institutional, and this place is a perfect example. One honest note: the café's hours can be irregular, especially outside of show nights. Call ahead or check their social media before making the trip.

When to Go / What to Know

Tbilisi's late night coffee culture is seasonal. In summer, places stay open later because the city itself stays awake later. In winter, some of the spots on this list close earlier than their posted hours, especially on weeknights when foot traffic drops. Thursday through Saturday is your best bet for finding the full range of options open past midnight. Sunday nights are quieter but have their own appeal, particularly in the Old Town. Always carry cash. Some of these places accept cards, but not all, and the card reader at the smaller spots sometimes decides it's done for the night before the café is. Tipping is not mandatory but rounding up or leaving 10 percent is standard and appreciated. If you're planning to work on a laptop, bring your own power bank. Outlets are not guaranteed, and the ones that exist are often claimed by people who arrived two hours before you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are there good 24/7 or late-night co-working spaces available in Tbilisi?

True 24/7 co-working spaces are rare in Tbilisi. Most co-working venues operate from around 8 AM to 10 or 11 PM. The Fabrika complex offers extended hours for some of its work-friendly cafés, and a few spots in the Vake district stay open until midnight on weekdays. For genuine overnight work, most remote workers in Tbilisi rely on their accommodation or hotel lobbies rather than dedicated co-working facilities.

Is Tbilisi expensive to visit? Give a realistic daily budget breakdown for mid-tier travelers.

A mid-tier daily budget in Tbilisi runs approximately 80 to 120 GEL (roughly 30 to 45 USD). This covers a decent hotel or Airbnb at 40 to 60 GEL, meals at local restaurants for 25 to 40 GEL, transportation by metro or taxi for 5 to 15 GEL, and coffee or drinks for 10 to 20 GEL. Museum entry fees are generally low, often under 5 GEL. Tbilisi remains one of the more affordable capitals in the region.

What are the average internet download and upload speeds in Tbilisi's central cafes and workspaces?

Central Tbilisi cafés typically offer download speeds between 20 and 50 Mbps on Wi-Fi, with upload speeds ranging from 10 to 25 Mbps. Dedicated co-working spaces in areas like Vake and Saburtalo can reach 80 to 100 Mbps download. Speeds drop noticeably during peak evening hours, especially in the Old Town and around Fabrika, where network congestion is common.

What is the most reliable neighborhood in Tbilisi for digital nomads and remote workers?

Vake is widely considered the most reliable neighborhood for digital nomads in Tbilisi. It has the highest concentration of cafés with stable Wi-Fi, ample seating, and a work-friendly atmosphere. Chavchavadze Avenue and its side streets offer multiple options within walking distance. Saburtalo is a quieter alternative with fewer tourists and lower prices, though the café selection is more limited.

How easy is it to find cafes with ample charging sockets and reliable power backups in Tbilisi?

Finding cafés with abundant charging sockets is moderately easy in central Tbilisi. Newer specialty coffee shops in Vake and around Fabrika typically have outlets at most tables. Older cafés in the Old Town and Marjanishvili district often have fewer sockets, sometimes only two or three for the entire space. Power outages are infrequent in central Tbilisi but do occur, and not all cafés have backup generators. Carrying a portable charger is a practical precaution.

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