Best Pet-Friendly Cafes in Guwahati Where Your Dog Is as Welcome as You

Photo by  蔡 世宏

14 min read · Guwahati, India · pet friendly cafes ·

Best Pet-Friendly Cafes in Guwahati Where Your Dog Is as Welcome as You

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Akshita Sharma

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Best Pet-Friendly Cafes in Guwahati: Where Your Dog Is as Welcome as You

I have spent the better part of two years dragging my Labrador, Chai, to every corner of Guwahati. What I found is a small but growing network of coffee shops and eateries that do not just tolerate dogs, they genuinely make them feel at home. Whether you are a traveler passing through on the way to Kaziranga or a long-term Guwahati resident looking for spots to spend a lazy afternoon with a furry companion, these are the best pet friendly cafes in Guwahati that deserve your time and loyalty.

1. Cafe Coffee Day, GS Road

The Granddaddy of Dog-Friendly Seating in City Center

GS Road is the commercial spine of Guwahati, and the Cafe Coffee Day outlet near the Beltola junction has been quietly welcoming dogs for years. I took Chai there on a Tuesday afternoon last month, and the staff knew exactly how to handle a large dog at their small outdoor tables. They brought out a ceramic bowl of water before I even asked. The menu is familiar, but their Cold Coffee with ice cream remains one of the best in Assam, and the garlic bread is a reliable companion to a glass of fresh lime soda during peak humid hours.

Local Insider Tip: "Sit at the corner table closest to the potted plants. The shade from the neem tree overhead keeps that spot cool even at 2 PM in July, and dogs tend to settle there because the foot traffic is the lowest in that corner."

If you are visiting on a Saturday afternoon, expect a wait for outdoor seating because the college crowd from nearby Cotton University floods this outlet after 4 PM. The staff does not always enforce the leash rule consistently, so keep your dog close when it gets crowded. This cafe connects to Guwahati's identity as Assam's first city to embrace the national cafe culture wave in the early 2000s. Every young professional in this city has a GS Road CCD memory, and it feels right that dogs are part of that story now.

2. Jalsa Restaurant and Cafe, Khanapark

Khanapark's Quiet Corner for Dog Owners

Khanapark is a neighborhood that most tourists skip entirely, which is exactly why I love it. Jalsa sits on a side street off the main Khanapark junction, and the cafe has a small front patio with enough space for four tables. I started coming here after a friend in the veterinary department at Assam Agricultural University mentioned it. Their mutton biryani is the real draw, but owner truthfully told me during my third visit that most dog owners come for the chana chaat and the chai. Both are excellent. The chai here is brewed the old way, strong and dark with a decent amount of elaichi.

Local Insider Tip: "If you get there before 3 PM on a weekday, ask for the table right by the owner's office window. He keeps a stash of dog biscuits behind the counter and will bring them out if you mention it."

Service slows down badly during the lunch rush between 12:30 and 2 PM because a good portion of the kitchen staff also handles delivery orders through Swiggy and Zomato. Come after 3 and you will get a much smoother experience. Khanapark itself is a working residential neighborhood with zero tourist infrastructure, which gives Jalsa an authenticity that polished places in the city center lack.

3. Caravan Ambiance, Zoo Road Tiniali

Where Guwahati's Art Crowd Meets Four-Legged Friends

Zoo Road Tiniali is one of Guwahati's cultural crossroads, within walking distance of Rabindra Bhawan and the State Zoo. Caravan Ambiance opened a few years back and quickly became a hangout for students from Gauhati University's fine arts department. The cafe has a semi-open rooftop space where dogs are welcome, and the view of the Nilachal hills in the distance is the kind of thing that makes you forget you are in a city of over a million people. I ordered their chicken club sandwich and a plate of french fries on my last visit, and both were well above average for a standalone cafe in Guwahati.

Local Insider Tip: "Go up to the rooftop only on days when the wind is low. On breezy evenings, napkins and light items blow everywhere, and dogs get spooked by fluttering tablecloths. Sunday mornings around 10 AM are the calmest."

Parking outside is a nightmare on weekends because Caravan shares its small lot with two neighboring clothing boutiques that draw weekend shoppers. Walking or taking an auto from Ganeshguri is your best bet. This place ties into Guwahati's emerging identity as a city where the arts and cafe culture are slowly merging, and it is encouraging to see dogs included in that evolution.

4. Amsri Bakery and Fast Food, Sixmile

A No-Frills Dog-Friendly Spot Near the Highway

Sixmile sits along the NH 27 corridor, and Amsri Bakery occupies what looks like a converted ground-floor apartment facing the road. There is no fancy decor here. The charm is purely functional, a grab-and-go kind of place with a few plastic chairs outside where dog owners have been sitting quietly for years. Their vegetable puff is the single best pastry item I have eaten at any dog-friendly venue in Guwahati, flaky on the outside with a spiced potato filling peppery enough to make your eyes water in the best way. The cold coffee is passable but not worth a separate trip.

Local Insider Tip: "Stand at the counter facing the kitchen door. There is a small gap where you can watch them pull the puffs fresh from the oven, usually around 11 AM and 4 PM. Grab one within five minutes of baking while the shell is still shattering-crisp."

Amsri opens early, around 7 AM, making it one of the few places where you can bring your dog for a morning walk and still grab breakfast. By 9 AM the fast-food menu kicks in fully. Sixmile itself is an important junction for anyone heading toward Basistha Ashram or the northeastern hill states, so Amsri serves an oddly diverse crowd of truckers, pilgrims, and local office workers.

5. Chapter 2 Restaurant, Ulubari

A Pet-Friendly Restaurant With Guwahati Soul

Chapter 2 on Ulubari Main Road is technically a restaurant first and a cafe second, but it earns a place on this list because the owners are genuine animal lovers. I met a local dog rescue volunteer here who has been organizing monthly adoption drives in the parking lot since 2022. Their Assamese thali, rice, dal, fish tenga, and aloo pitika, is the most honest meal you will eat on this list. It costs around 150 to 200 rupees and fills you up completely. For drinks, order the khus sherbet. It cuts through oil and humidity simultaneously.

Local Insider Tip: "Tell them you are a dog owner when you walk in. They will seat you near the open section beside the kitchen ventilation, which has a breeze that your dog will appreciate. This section is not listed separately on any reservation system, so you just have to ask."

Ulubari has long been one of Guwahati's tightly knit residential pockets, the kind of place where shopkeepers remember your name after two visits. Chapter 2 fits perfectly into that character. The downside is that it closes by 10 PM, so plan accordingly if you are hoping for a late evening outing.

6. Brownout Bistro, GS Road

The Western-Style Cafe That Actually Welcomes Dogs

Brownout Bistro is the dog friendly cafe Guwahati needed years before it arrived. Sitting on the stretch of GS Road near ABC Point, it has a covered outdoor seating area where the staff does not flinch when a large dog walks in. I had their BBQ chicken pizza and a cold brew on my last visit, and both were satisfyingly good. The pizza crust is thin and properly blistered, and the cold brew is not just coffee with ice, an unusual attention to detail for Guwahati. Their brownies are dense, fudgy, and good enough to take home for later.

Local Insider Tip: "On weekdays after 4 PM, the first outdoor table from the entrance is always reserved mentally for regular dog owners. If you walk up and claim it even though it looks like it might be 'held' for someone, the staff will back you up."

The Wi-Fi drops out near the back tables, so stick to the front section if you need to work on a laptop while your dog naps under the chair. Brownout represents a newer wave of Guwahati dining, one that is consciously designed to be accessible and unpretentious, and the fact that dogs are part of the design philosophy rather than an afterthought says something optimistic about where this city is headed.

7. Aama Bheti, Chandmari

Home-Style Food and an Open Courtyard for Dogs

Chandmari is a neighborhood most visitors know only from passing through on the way to IIT Guwahati or the Assam Engineering College campus. Aama Bheti occupies a small house with an open courtyard where dogs roam freely among the tables. This is one of the pet cafes Guwahati regulars whisper about because it looks like someone's personal home more than a business. The khar, the most distinctly Assamese dish I have had outside a family home, is served here with a tenderness that suggests the cook learned it from her grandmother. Order it with plain rice and a side of tenga for the full experience.

Local Insider Tip: "Call the day before if you are visiting on a Sunday. They keep irregular hours on weekends and sometimes close without notice. A quick WhatsApp message to the number on their Facebook page will save you a wasted trip."

The courtyard gets uncomfortably warm during peak summer afternoons because there is no overhead shade beyond a few banana leaves and a tarp. Mornings before 11 AM are your sweet spot. Aama Bheti connects to Guwahati's deep tradition of community eating and home-cooked Assamese meals that rarely make it into restaurant settings. Bringing a dog here feels like being invited to eat at a friend's place.

8. The Living Room, Fancy Bazaar

Fancy Bazaar's Unexpected Dog-Friendly Hangout

Fancy Bazaar is Guwahati's oldest commercial district, a chaotic web of cloth shops, street food stalls, and wholesale markets that has functioned as a trading center since the British colonial era. The Living Room sits on the second floor of a building above a hardware shop, and discovering it feels like finding a secret. The outdoor balcony overlooks the maze of rooftops and hanging laundry that defines this neighborhood. They have a pet policy posted at the entrance, dogs of all sizes welcome, water bowls provided, and the staff follows it. I ordered their maggi with extra cheese and a cup of masala chai during a rainy Thursday afternoon, and the combination with the drizzle and the city sounds below was one of my most memorable Guwahati experiences.

Local Insider Tip: "Take the stairs from the right side of the building, not the front. The front staircase is narrow and steep and is meant for the shop below. The right-side stairs are wider and your dog will not struggle on the turns."

Fancy Bazaar is not a neighborhood that caters to comfort. There is no parking, the streets are narrow, and foot traffic is relentless. But that rawness is precisely what makes it worth visiting, and The Living Room provides a calm perch from above. It ties into Guwahati's identity as a city built on trade and hustle, a place that has been absorbing travelers, goods, and ideas from across Northeast India for over two centuries.

When to Go and What to Know

Guwahati's climate should influence every decision you make about when to visit these spots. March through May is brutally hot and humid, with temperature readings regularly crossing 35 degrees Celsius. Dogs overheat fast on concrete and asphalt during these months, so morning visits before 10 AM or evening visits after 5 PM are strongly recommended. June through September brings heavy monsoon rains that can flood low-lying areas like Fancy Bazaar and Khanapark within minutes. Carry an umbrella at all times and waterproof gear for your dog if they are not fans of getting wet.

October through February is the ideal season if you have flexibility. Temperatures hover between 10 and 22 degrees Celsius, the air is clear, and the humidity drops to levels that both humans and dogs can tolerate comfortably for extended outdoor seating. Weekday afternoons are the golden window for nearly every venue on this list, roughly 2 PM to 5 PM, when crowds are light and staff have time to bring out that extra bowl of water or a biscuit from behind the counter.

Guwahati's auto-rickshaw drivers are generally accepting of dogs in the vehicle, especially if the dog is small enough to sit on your lap. For larger dogs, a private cab through Ola or Uber is more practical. Carry a basic cotton towel in your bag because the pre-monsoon dust will coat your dog's paws and nose within minutes of stepping outside. And always carry bottled water. Many of the venues on this list use filtered water for their own drinks, but mineral water for your dog is a safer bet given the variability in municipal water quality across different neighborhoods.

Frequently Asked Questions

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

Guwahati has virtually no dedicated 24/7 co-working spaces. A few cafes on GS Beltola and along Zoo Road stay open until 11 PM or midnight, but none operate around the clock. The city's work culture is largely daytime-oriented, and late-night infrastructure for professionals remains underdeveloped compared to cities like Bangalore or Pune.

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

GS Beltola and the Ganeshguri corridor are the most practical base for remote workers. Internet cafes, co-working setups, and cafes with Wi-Fi cluster in this stretch, and multiple SIM providers offer consistent 4G coverage. Rental rooms and service apartments in this belt are also reasonably priced, starting around 7,000 to 10,000 rupees per month for a basic furnished single room.

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

Most mid-range and premium outlets along GS Beltola, Zoo Beltola, and the六六 Beltola junction have charging points at some tables, though rarely at every seat. Power cuts remain frequent during monsoon months, and only a handful of cafes have inverter or generator backups that can sustain laptop charging. USB ports are still uncommon outside the most recently opened venues.

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

A mid-tier traveler can manage comfortably on 1,500 to 2,500 rupees per day excluding accommodation. This covers two decent cafe meals (500 to 800 rupees), local auto or cab transport (200 to 400 rupees), and miscellaneous expenses. A basic but clean hotel room in Beltola or Ganeshguri costs 800 to 1,200 rupees per night, bringing the total to roughly 2,500 to 3,700 rupees per day all inclusive. Eating at local dhabas instead of cafes can cut food costs by nearly half.

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

In central Guwahati's cafes and shared workspaces, average download speeds range from 15 to 30 Mbps on a good 4G connection through Jio or Airtel. Wi-Fi in cafes typically delivers 10 to 20 Mbps download, but speeds fluctuate heavily during evening peak hours. Upload speeds sit between 5 and 12 Mbps, which is adequate for video calls but occasionally drops during heavy rainfall.

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