First domestic departures coffee at DPS usually comes from Dunkin’
On the Domestic side past security, Dunkin’ Donuts is one of the few spots reliably open for 06:00-ish departures, so it ends up feeding a lot of first-wave flights. It’s a simple counter setup geared to takeaway, not a full café. Think quick sugar and caffeine hit before boarding rather than a long sit-down breakfast.
Menu is standard Dunkin’: donuts, muffins, croissants and basic breakfast rolls listed in both Indonesian and English. Expect prices around 50,000–60,000 IDR per pastry or donut, which is airport markup compared with city branches. Coffee runs higher than street cafés in Kuta or Canggu, but service moves faster than most made-to-order spots in the terminal.
Domestic regulars use it as a coffee pit stop, then grab something more substantial at home or near the hotel; they know a simple “latte and donut” can hit 90,000–100,000 IDR once you add tax. If you’re hungry, the filled donuts and sausage breakfast rolls are the most filling items for the price, while plain glazed donuts feel tiny for 50k+ IDR.
Space around the counter is tight and seating near the domestic grab-and-go outlets is cramped, with only a handful of small tables in the nearby waiting area. Treat it as a grab-and-go stand by your gate rather than a place to camp out with a laptop. One upside: the packaged donut boxes travel well as oleh-oleh gifts for family at destination, and staff are used to people buying full dozens.
Watch out for: card minimums can apply for small orders under about 50,000 IDR, and contactless terminals occasionally go down, so keep some cash handy. One practical move: eat a real meal before arriving at DPS Domestic, then use Dunkin’ just for a quick coffee while you watch the boarding screens.