Best-of list · Pubs

The 10 Best Pubs in Manchester 2026

The 10 best pubs in Manchester for 2026, from the Marble Arch to the Castle Hotel and the tiny Circus Tavern. Ranked and verified by our editors.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is The Marble Arch.

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

Manchester drinks in its pubs, not around them. These ten run from tiled Victorian survivors to Northern Quarter craft rooms and corridor-width curiosities, the kind of places where the pour, the room and the regulars all matter. We checked each against current listings and venue records in June 2026 and kept only the pubs still trading. A couple have changed hands recently, which we note where it counts.

The 10 best pubs in Manchester

Editor's №1

The Marble Arch

The Marble Arch on Rochdale Road has poured since 1888, a glazed-brick Victorian room with a sloping mosaic floor and a barrel-vaulted ceiling. It was long tied to the Marble Brewery, so the cask list runs deep and local. Order a Marble pint and a plate from the kitchen. Best on a quiet afternoon when the tilework catches the light. For drinkers who want heritage and serious beer.

The Briton's Protection

The Briton's Protection near the Bridgewater Hall is a snug, tiled survivor with battle murals and one of the city's longest whisky lists. It closed briefly in January 2025 and reopened within days under new management. Order a dram and settle into the back rooms. Best before a concert at the hall next door. For drinkers who want whisky and history in a small, warm space.

The Peveril of the Peak

The Peveril of the Peak is unmissable, a free-standing Victorian pub wrapped in glossy green and amber tiles near the city centre. Inside, three small rooms keep a vintage bar football table and decades of regulars. Order a cask ale and a packet of crisps. Best on a weekend afternoon. For drinkers who want one of Manchester's most photographed and most loved old boozers.

The Sandbar

The Sandbar on Grosvenor Street sits in a converted Georgian townhouse near the universities, a low-key room of mismatched furniture and local art. The cask and craft list rotates, the crowd skews student and creative, and live music and quiz nights fill the week. Order whatever guest ale is on. Best midweek for a quiet pint. For drinkers who want an unpretentious neighbourhood local.

The Castle Hotel

The Castle Hotel has stood on Oldham Street since 1776, a narrow Northern Quarter pub with an 80-capacity music room at the back. Robinsons cask sits on the bar and the gig calendar runs most nights. Order a pint and stay for whoever is playing. Best on a band night when the back room fills. For drinkers who want a proper pub wired into Manchester's music scene.

Port Street Beer House

Port Street Beer House in the Northern Quarter helped lead Manchester's craft beer turn, a stripped-back two-floor bar with seven cask lines and a wall of taps. The fridges run hundreds of bottles deep. Order a third-of-a-pint flight to range across the board. Best early evening before it fills. For drinkers who treat beer as the main event.

Common

Common on Edge Street is a Northern Quarter fixture, a bright, art-filled bar that helped set the template for the area. The taps lean craft, the kitchen runs all day, and the walls change with rotating illustrators. Order a craft pint and a plate of wings. Best for a long, lazy afternoon. For drinkers who want a bar that doubles as a gallery.

The Grey Horse

The Grey Horse on Portland Street is one of the smallest pubs in the city centre, a single narrow Hydes room barely wider than its bar. Regulars pack it, the cask is well kept, and there is no music to talk over. Order a Hydes bitter and find a corner. Best on a weekday when you can get a stool. For drinkers who want a tiny, traditional local.

The Circus Tavern

The Circus Tavern on Portland Street claims to be one of the smallest pubs in Europe, a corridor-width room with a bar that seats only a handful. The beer is poured from the cellar and conversation is the entertainment. Order a cask bitter and squeeze in. Best early before the few seats go. For drinkers who want a genuine curiosity.

The Old Monkey

The Old Monkey on Portland Street is a Holts pub on a busy corner, a two-floor room known for some of the cheapest well-kept cask in the centre. It draws an unfussy after-work crowd. Order a Holts bitter and grab a window seat upstairs. Best at the end of a workday. For drinkers who want honest beer at honest prices.

Beyond the 10

Also worth knowing

11

The Bay Horse Tavern

Northern Quarter

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