Editorial
Honesty first: Abu Dhabi keeps exactly one true speakeasy, and it is excellent. Around it, the capital hides a handful of rooms behind enough lobby, lift, and beach pavilion that finding them carries the same reward.
What's On's roundup of the city's secret bars confirms how short the genuine list runs. These five earn the hunt in 2026; the open door ranking lives in our Abu Dhabi cocktail guide.
The capital's one real hidden door sits inside Dai Pai Dong at the Rosewood: ask for the Tea Room and the wall opens into 1920s Shanghai. Time Out Abu Dhabi calls out the secretive atmosphere, the lacquered century old design, and a drinks list that crosses Chinese tradition with modern technique.
Order the Phoenix Rising and the steamed dumplings, and settle in. Hours run 6pm to 1am through the week, 2am on Friday and Saturday.
The Abu Dhabi EDITION buries ANNEX below its lobby, a late night den that shifts from cocktail room to club as the week ends. It is the loudest room on this list and the only one that asks you to dance.
"Abu Dhabi keeps exactly one true speakeasy, and it is excellent."
Ray's Bar hides in plain sight, 62 floors up the Conrad at Etihad Towers behind a dedicated lift. The ascent works as the reveal, and the room at the top outpours most ground floor competition in the Gulf.
Deep inside Emirates Palace, the bar at Hakkasan earns its hidden feel through sheer interior distance: corridors, screens, and blue light before the first drink lands. The reward is one of the city's most precise cocktail programs.
Buddha-Bar Beach tucks behind The St. Regis Saadiyat with no street presence at all; you commit to the resort before you ever see the bar. Golden hour there remains Saadiyat's best kept open secret.
Pair Dragon's Tooth and Ray's Bar in one night; the taxi between them runs 15 minutes. Save ANNEX for a Thursday, when the room earns its late license, and treat the beach pair as daytime reconnaissance.
For the full island floor around the Rosewood, use our Al Maryah Island guide. The city wide picture sits in Best Bars in Abu Dhabi and the speakeasy index.
Concealment theatre counts here, but only after drink quality clears the bar. Press corroboration from Time Out Abu Dhabi and What's On, plus the consistency regulars report, ordered the five.
The capital will add to this list; hidden rooms are the Gulf's favorite current format. We update this ranking as the doors appear.
Book where booking exists. The whole point of a small concealed room collapses when six people wait in a restaurant corridor, and Dragon's Tooth in particular runs too few seats to absorb optimism.
Dress one notch above the open bars: closed shoes, no shorts after dark, and collars for the men at the Rosewood and Emirates Palace addresses. Photography etiquette matters more in these rooms too; shoot your drink, not the bar.
Dubai plays hidden bars as spectacle, with queues that defeat the premise. Abu Dhabi's versions stay genuinely quiet, and a Tuesday at Dragon's Tooth can still feel like a private discovery.
The full contrast between the two scenes gets its own treatment in our Dubai versus Abu Dhabi comparison. The short version: come here for conversation, drive north for volume.
Walk into Dai Pai Dong at the Rosewood on Al Maryah Island and ask for the Tea Room. The staff handle the reveal from there, though a reservation spares you the wait on weekends.
Slightly. Signature cocktails at Dragon's Tooth and ANNEX run 75 to 110 dirhams, about a ten dirham premium over the open hotel bars, and both rooms justify it with showpiece builds.
Early week for conversation, Thursday and Friday for the scene. Dragon's Tooth pours from 6pm and the small room fills by 9pm on weekends, so book or arrive at opening.
Noa Aviv covers the Middle East and Mediterranean for barsforKings, from Tel Aviv rooftops to the Gulf's hotel lounges.
One email every week. The bars our editors are recommending right now, across 176 cities worldwide.