Best-of list · City Guide

The Complete Bar Guide to London

Nine verified London bars across the city, from the 1772 Lamb and Flag to Callooh Callay's hidden wardrobe bar, each re-checked and open in 2026.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Lamb and Flag.

9 ranked rooms follow. How we picked is at the end of this guide.

Best overallLamb and Flag
Runner-upThe Gantry

London's bar scene operates at a scale and depth that most cities can't match. It spans centuries of drinking culture, from historic pubs that predate the modern state to bars that opened last month. It crosses continents of influence: you can drink Japanese whisky at a Shoreditch speakeasy, take a Negroni in a converted warehouse in Peckham, or sit in a 400-year-old ale house where nothing has changed except the clientele. London doesn't just have bars. It has entire drinking cultures, each with its own geography, rules, and reasons to exist.

What makes London's bar scene different from other major cities isn't the number of venues, though there are thousands. It's the consistency of craft, the respect for tradition, and the willingness to reinvent. The bars in this guide represent that balance. They're established institutions and emerging spaces, historic pubs and new cocktail labs, places that have earned their reputation and places that are just beginning to. All of them matter, and all of them are worth traveling across the city to reach.

Soho & Central London

Editor's №1

Lamb and Flag

The Lamb and Flag has poured on Rose Street since 1772, a Covent Garden survivor once nicknamed the Bucket of Blood for the bare-knuckle bouts upstairs. Dickens drank here. Now it runs Fuller's ales, fish and chips, and live jazz on the last Sunday of the month. Best for a pint with some history in the wood. Go early; the snug fills by six.

The Gantry

The Gantry rises over Stratford near the Olympic Park, a Curio Collection hotel whose rooftop is billed as the highest in East London. The draw is the view east across the park, with cocktails up top and a coffee bar below. Best for a sundown drink before a show at the nearby venues. Take the lift up and aim for golden hour.

The Breakfast Club

Ask to see the Mayor at The Breakfast Club on Artillery Lane and a Smeg fridge opens onto a basement speakeasy, twice crowned a London bar of the year. Below the cafe, the room runs to exposed brick, vintage furniture and cocktails poured till midnight, with food sent down from the kitchen upstairs. Best for the theatre of the entrance. Weekends fill early.

Full listing & hours →

Dalston Roof Park

Dalston Roof Park crowns the Print House on Ashwin Street, a rooftop that runs DJ sets, drag brunch and yoga over Hackney's rooftops. It is seasonal but covered and heated through the colder months, with cocktails, draught beer and spritzes. Best for a summer evening when the skyline does the work. Check the events calendar; the program changes week to week.

Brewdog

Brewdog brought Scottish craft beer to London at scale, and its Camden and Shoreditch taprooms still pour the widest range of its own and guest beers in the city. The rooms are loud, large and built for groups, with food to match. Best for a beer-led night with a crowd that wants choice over quiet. Start with a flight to find your range.

Full listing & hours →

The Chesham Arms

The Chesham Arms is a Hackney victory: closed in 2012, saved by locals, reopened in 2015 as a community asset. The Mehetabel Road pub pours real ales and local beer, with a big garden for summer and fireplaces for winter, and CAMRA named it a cider pub of the year in 2025. Bring in pizza from Yard Sale next door. Best for a proper neighborhood pint.

The Churchill Arms

The Churchill Arms on Kensington Church Street wears more than 100 flower pots and 40 hanging baskets, a 25,000-pound-a-year display that stops the street. Inside, it was the first London pub to serve Thai food, still cooked in the conservatory beside Fuller's ales and Churchill memorabilia. Best for a curry and a pint in a room with two centuries behind it. Book the conservatory for dinner.

Full listing & hours →

Hurricane Room

The Hurricane Room sits near King's Cross, a low-lit basement built around the green baize: American pool, English pool and snooker on well-kept tables, open late with pizza and drinks alongside. It runs tournaments and stays busy past midnight. Best for a late night that wants a game in its hands, not just a glass. Book a table at weekends.

Callooh Callay

Callooh Callay has worked Rivington Street in Shoreditch since 2008, a Lewis Carroll fever dream where a wardrobe door opens onto a secret back bar. The cocktails are inventive and award-laden, with past turns in the World's 50 Best Bars. Open from 6pm to 1am. Best for a playful night that rewards curiosity. Find the wardrobe and see where it leads.

Full listing & hours →

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.