Boadas

Cocktail Bars $$

Boadas is walk-in only. Arrive before 9pm on weekends to secure a spot at the bar. After midnight on Fridays it fills quickly with Barcelona's late-night crowd.

When Miguel Boadas opened this wedge-shaped bar on the corner of Carrer dels Tallers in 1933, he brought back more than recipes from Havana. He brought a philosophy: that a properly made cocktail, served at the right speed, is a civilised act. Ninety years on, nothing fundamental has changed. The white-jacketed bartenders still work with practiced economy, the bar still fits perhaps 30 people, and the daiquiris still taste like they were invented here.

Boadas sits at the top of Las Ramblas, technically in the Gothic Quarter, but spiritually in a different era entirely. The triangular room, all dark wood and glass shelving, is a study in useful restraint. There are no cocktail menus laminated in plastic, no QR codes. You tell the bartender what you like and they make something for you, or you name a classic and watch a master execute it. We recommend the latter.

The crowd skews older in the early evening, younger as midnight approaches. Barcelona's cocktail bar scene has expanded dramatically over the past decade, with places like Paradiso pushing into molecular territory, but Boadas remains the scene's anchor. If you want to understand what Barcelona's drinking culture is built on, start here.

"The daiquiris still taste like they were invented here. In a city that loves novelty, Boadas is proof that some things should stay exactly as they are."

Visitors to Barcelona often make the mistake of treating it as a quick tick before moving to newer venues. We'd argue the opposite: come here first, get oriented, drink something cold and well-made, and let the city show itself from the right angle. The bar opens at noon, which makes it one of the few serious cocktail bars you can visit before the working day is done.

6pm to 9pm on weekdays for the authentic pre-dinner crowd. Saturdays after 10pm if you want to feel the full energy of the room, though you will likely be standing.

Cocktail traditionalists, solo travellers who want to sit at a real bar and drink well, and anyone who finds the theatrical end of the Barcelona cocktail scene slightly exhausting.

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