The New Paltz Coffee Crawl: Six Cafés That Punch Way Above a Seven-Thousand-Person Town |
This village has more good coffee per capita than most Brooklyn neighborhoods. Here's where to drink your way through it. |
I shouldn't have to defend a town of 7,000 people for having six genuinely excellent coffee shops, but I do it anyway, every time an out-of-towner shows up, takes a sip of something at Dry Fly, and says, "Wait, what?" with that particular combination of surprise and gratitude. New Paltz doesn't just have coffee. It has a coffee scene, and it's been building it for years.
Here are seven places I'd actually walk to on a Saturday morning, roughly in the order you could hit them if you decided to make a day of it.
1. The Ridge Café (70 Main St)
The new kid on the block — opened in fall 2024 — and it already feels like it's always been here. Small, warm, beautifully designed without trying too hard. They take their coffee seriously ("cool coffee" is their thing) and the room invites you to sit. I go here when I want to start the day somewhere quiet.
2. Dry Fly Coffee Company (87 N Chestnut St.)
If New Paltz coffee has a flagship, Dry Fly is it. They roast in-house, they bake in-house, and they're open 8 to 4 except Tuesdays. The small-batch roast program means whatever you order was probably pulled from a bag that didn't exist a week ago. I've watched friends come here for the first time, take one sip, and look at me like I'd been holding out on them.
3. Underground Coffee and Ales (36 Main St.)
Coffee all day, craft beer all night — and they don't phone in either half. They opened the New Paltz location in spring 2024 and already have a third spot in Ellenville. The coffee alone is worth the trip; reviewers call it the best in town, and I wouldn't argue. But it's the dual identity that makes the place special — the kind of room where you can show up at 9 AM for a pour-over or at 9 PM for a hazy IPA and feel equally at home.
4. Little Loaf Bakeshop (218 Main St.)
A 4.9-star rating with the kind of local following that only comes from being consistently, reliably good. This is where I go when I want a pastry-forward morning — a still-warm cinnamon thing, a good drip coffee, and fifteen minutes of people-watching through the window. The line moves fast because the people in it know what they're getting.
5. Village Grind (139 Main St.)
Sitting right in downtown on the main drag, Village Grind does the things you want a neighborhood café to do — organic, fair-trade beans, fresh-baked treats, a staff that remembers your order after two visits. It's especially good if you're coming off the Rail Trail and need a coffee that's earned.
6. Bangkok Café (119 Main St.)
Not a coffee shop in the traditional sense, but it's on this list because sometimes what you actually want at 3 PM isn't espresso, it's a Thai iced tea that hits different in the Hudson Valley heat. The atmosphere is warm and unhurried. It's where I go in the afternoon when the coffee has worn off and I need something else entirely.
Hit three of them in a single morning and you'll start to understand why people plan weekends around this town's caffeine. Hit all seven and you'll need a nap — but you'll have earned it. |

