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The 10 Best Bars in the United Kingdom 2026

The 10 best bars in the United Kingdom for 2026, from London's Connaught and Savoy to Edinburgh's Bramble and Liverpool's Philharmonic, reviewed in full.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Connaught Bar.

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

Best overallConnaught Bar
Third pickBramble

The United Kingdom has the most balanced cocktail and pub scene of any country in the world. London leads, with the Connaught and the Savoy holding the global gold standard, but Edinburgh's basements, Manchester's craft beer, Glasgow's whisky pubs, and Liverpool's Victorian gin palaces all earn their place. The 10 below run from a Mayfair martini trolley to a Liverpool gin palace, and every one of them justifies the journey.

The 10 best bars in the United Kingdom

Editor's №1

Connaught Bar

The Connaught wheels a martini trolley to your table and mixes it to order, gin or vodka, bitters your call. It topped the World's 50 Best Bars list twice. Drinks run past 20 pounds and the Mayfair room is all hush and marble. Go early evening before the banquettes fill, book ahead, and dress sharp. Worth the splurge once.

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American Bar at the Savoy

The oldest surviving cocktail bar in Britain, open since the 1890s and the birthplace of the White Lady. A pianist plays nightly and the staff still wear white jackets. Cocktails clear 22 pounds. Get there when the doors open at noon for a quiet seat, because by 7pm the queue runs down the hall. Order a Hanky Panky and tip the band.

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Bramble

Bramble hides in a basement under a shop on Queen Street, no sign, easy to walk past. The drinks built its name, especially the bramble itself, gin and crushed ice and cassis. It seats maybe 50 and fills fast after 9pm with a young crowd. Go on a weeknight before 8 if you want the corner booth. Loud, tight, and worth the stairs.

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Nightjar

Nightjar runs live jazz seven nights and takes its cocktails seriously, garnishes stacked like sculpture, 16 to 18 pounds a glass. The original sits below street level near Old Street roundabout. Book a table, because walk-ins get turned away once the band starts around 9. The back seats near the stage are the ones to ask for. Smart-casual, no trainers.

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Speak in Code

Speak in Code is a tiny basement off Stevenson Square in the Northern Quarter, room for maybe 30. The bartenders know their stuff and the list changes often, drinks around 11 pounds. It packs out by 10 on weekends, so slide in early and grab a stool at the bar where the action is. Industry folks drink here after their own shifts. No frills, all craft.

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The Pot Still

The Pot Still has poured on Hope Street since the 1860s and stocks more than 700 whiskies behind the bar. Ask the staff for a steer, they pour honest measures and never upsell. A dram starts around 4 pounds and climbs fast for the rare stuff. Come midweek afternoon for elbow room and a pie. The worst seat here still beats most bars' best.

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Happiness Forgets

Happiness Forgets sits in a dim basement under Hoxton Square, low ceilings and lower lighting. It made the World's 50 Best list on tight, classic-leaning drinks around 12 pounds, cheap for the quality. Book ahead, the room holds maybe 40 and weekends sell out. Best early on a Tuesday when you can still hear your date. Cash goes far here.

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Panda & Sons

Panda & Sons fronts as a barbershop on Queen Street, then you push through to a basement speakeasy below. The drinks lean playful and theatrical, served in odd vessels, around 12 pounds. It draws a younger weekend crowd that queues by 9. Go on a weeknight and take a booth at the back. Fun over fussy, and the staff keep it moving.

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The Marble Arch

The Marble Arch on Rochdale Road opened in 1888 and still has the sloping mosaic floor and glazed-tile ceiling to prove it. This is a proper ale house, cask lines kept right, pints around 5 pounds. No cocktails, no pretense. Go on a quiet afternoon to read the tiled beer slogans on the walls. CAMRA regulars hold court here. A pub that earns the listing.

The Philharmonic Dining Rooms

The Phil is a Grade I listed gin palace on Hope Street, marble urinals and all, the only pub English Heritage protects at that level. Pints run around 5 pounds and the rooms are carved mahogany and stained glass. John Lennon drank here. Go midday to wander the snugs before the crowds. The bar's worst corner still out-pretties most cities' best room.

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Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.