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The 8 Best Sports Bars in Manchester 2026

The 8 best sports bars in Manchester for 2026, from the Piccadilly Tap to Shooters in the Printworks. Where to watch the match, by neighbourhood.

The short answer

Our editors' №1 is The Piccadilly Tap.

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

Best overallThe Piccadilly Tap
Third pickCity Arms

Manchester is two Premier League giants and a hundred pubs that know it. The eight rooms below are where the city actually watches sport, from the Printworks screen barns to the Portland Street cask houses that put the match on without making a circus of it. James Harlow ranked them on the test that matters: what the game looks like from the worst seat in the house.

The 8 best sports bars in Manchester

Editor's №1

The Piccadilly Tap

The Piccadilly Tap clings to Gateway House right at the station approach, and it runs on beer more than screens. Eighteen kegs, eight casks, fresh pizza from 11:30, and a ground floor that goes standing room when a derby is on. CAMRA drinkers rate it. Watch the match upstairs where the terrace gives you a seat and a clear line. Catch a game before your train out.

The Castle Hotel

The Castle Hotel has held the corner of Oldham Street for over two hundred years, a Grade II room that doubles as a Northern Quarter music venue. It is small, so a big match fills it fast. Craft taps, well kept cask, and a back room for the band later. Manchester regulars treat it as a local, not a screen barn. Get in early or you watch standing by the door.

City Arms

The City Arms on Kennedy Street is a beer pub first, named Central Manchester CAMRA Pub of the Year in both 2024 and 2025. Eight handpumps, rotating cask, and Sky Sports on the screens. For a City match they sometimes roll out a projector, though that is the exception. Go for the ale and the pre-match talk. It is two narrow rooms, so claim a stool before kickoff.

The Old Monkey

The Old Monkey pours Joseph Holt cask across two floors at the bottom of Portland Street, a plain honest boozer that opened in 1993. It is cheap by city centre standards and steady on a matchday. Screens are modest, so this is a steady pint watch rather than a wall of TVs. Head upstairs for a seat. Good for a quiet first half before the Printworks crowds get loud.

Shooters

Shooters in the Printworks is the volume option: over twenty screens, pool tables, table football, and every live sport from the Premier League to NFL. It runs to midnight and fills with stag groups and casual fans. Do not come for cask ale or quiet. Come for a guaranteed seat in front of a screen and a loud room when the goal goes in. Book ahead for a big fight night.

The Grey Horse

The Grey Horse is reckoned one of the smallest pubs in the city, a single Hydes room on Portland Street that has sold beer since 1851. It carries TNT Sports, so a Champions League night packs it shoulder to shoulder. There is no space to hide here; the worst seat is also the best. Get a pint of cask, wedge in by the window, and enjoy the squeeze.

Crown & Kettle

The Crown and Kettle guards the corner of Great Ancoats Street, a Grade II room famous for its vaulted ceiling and 27 keg and cask lines. It reopened after years dark and now runs as a fully independent house. Sport is not the headline, but it shows the big games and the beer range is the real draw. Go for the ceiling and a rotating cask, match optional.

The Bridgewater

The Bridgewater sits canalside in Worsley, a Greene King pub on the western edge of Greater Manchester that earns its place on screens. It carries Sky Sports and TNT Sports across the Premier League, EFL and European football, with darts and a pool table alongside. Parking is easy, the food runs till nine, and dogs are welcome. A solid local watch if you are out past the ring road.

Weekly picks

The bars worth going to, weekly.