After 11 pm the tri-city narrows to a handful of counters. Knowing the station-side spots and roll carts is a small survival skill.

After 11 pm the tri-city narrows to a short list, and knowing it is a small survival skill, the kind that earns you friends when a group rolls in hungry after a late train or a long shift.
Warangal is not a 24-hour city, and that is fine. But the reliable late options cluster near the main junctions and the station side, where the demand never fully dies. Menus shrink after eleven, but biryani, rolls and chai usually survive the cut.
Station-side counters keep going for the rail crowd, which is your best bet for a real meal. Roll and shawarma carts near the busy junctions handle the quick-fix hunger, and there is almost always a chai and omelette point keeping the night crowd company.
Call ahead where you can, because late hours shift with the season and the crowd. Stick to high-turnover stalls so the food has not been sitting. And travel in a group late at night, the same as you would in any city. The reward for knowing this map is simple. While everyone else is stuck with a packet of biscuits, you are eating a hot plate of something and quietly looking like a local.