Best-of list · Hidden Gems

The 7 Best Hidden Gem Bars in New York 2026

The best hidden gem bars in New York for 2026: Attaboy, PDT, The Back Room, Angel's Share and more, verified open. The speakeasy list on barsforKings.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is Attaboy.

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

Best overallAttaboy
Third pickThe Back Room

New York hides its best bars behind phone booths, barbershops, and unmarked steel doors. Behind every gimmick, the drinks still have to deliver. The seven below are verified open, each one a serious room. We removed three venues that have closed or rebranded since the last edit.

The 7 best hidden gem bars in NYC

Editor's №1

Attaboy

Attaboy holds the old Milk and Honey room at 134 Eldridge Street, marked only by an "AB" on a gray steel door. There is no menu; you name a spirit and a mood, and the bartender builds to it. It placed No. 37 on North America's 50 Best Bars 2026 and runs seven nights until 3 AM. Go late and midweek for the cleanest seat.

Full listing & hours →

Please Don't Tell (PDT)

You reach PDT through a vintage phone booth inside Crif Dogs on St. Marks Place, the room that helped start the modern speakeasy in 2007. The cocktails stay disciplined, and the hot dogs cross over from next door. Book on Resy up to seven days out, since walk-ins rarely land a seat. Best on a weeknight, early, before the booth backs up.

Full listing & hours →

The Back Room

One of only two Prohibition-era speakeasies still trading in New York, The Back Room hides behind a Norfolk Street gate marked "Lower East Side Toy Company." Drinks arrive in teacups and beer in paper bags, a holdover from the bar's bootleg years. The cocktails read simple rather than cerebral. Go for the history and the hidden staircase on a quieter weeknight.

Full listing & hours →

Angel's Share

Angel's Share returned in 2024 at 45 Grove Street in the West Village, run by Erina Yoshida, daughter of the original owner. The Japanese service ethic survived the move: seated guests only, no standing, no large groups, and stirred drinks built with quiet precision. Order a spirit-forward classic and watch the technique. Best early evening, before the short row of seats is gone.

Full listing & hours →

Raines Law Room

Raines Law Room set the template for plush New York speakeasies when it opened in 2009: velvet banquettes, low lamps, and a button to summon table service. The Chelsea original at 48 West 17th sits alongside the Midtown room at The William, which stays open while Chelsea recovers from a building fire. Order a classic and let the bartender set the pace. Reserve ahead.

Full listing & hours →

The Up & Up

The Up & Up holds a below-street room on MacDougal Street, the former Gaslight Cafe where the Beat poets once read. The formula is small, precise, and unshowy, earning a Pearl Recommended nod for 2025 and a steady local crowd. The list favors balanced, spirit-driven drinks over spectacle. Best on a weeknight, when the narrow room keeps its calm.

Full listing & hours →

The Blind Barber

The Blind Barber runs a working barbershop out front in the East Village and a dim cocktail room behind it. The drinks are solid rather than showy, and the back lounge fills with DJs and leather booths as the night goes on. It is a place to settle in, not to study a menu. Best later in the evening, when the back room opens up.

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.