Editorial
Scotland is going to the World Cup for the first time since 1998, and Edinburgh has 28 years of waiting to spend. Group C hands the Tartan Army fixtures against Brazil, Morocco, and Haiti, every one of them landing in the city's evening and night.
This guide covers where Edinburgh's pubs will show the tournament, what the time difference does to kickoffs, and which rooms will hold the Brazil match.
Edinburgh's match day culture splits between the rugby pubs of the Grassmarket and the football rooms scattered from Frederick Street to Bruntsfield. A Scotland World Cup folds all of it into one crowd.
The four below cover every register, from snug to barn. Book whatever can be booked the moment the fixture list confirms.
The Frederick Street basement runs proper screens without surrendering its leather and whisky comfort. It suits the group stage evenings, when you want the match with a dram and a seat. For Scotland fixtures, book the snugs days ahead.
Edinburgh's big Irish sports pub is built for tournament chaos: a barn of screens, live music after full time, and a crowd that sings through the anthems. This is the room for Scotland against Brazil. The queue will start hours before doors.
The Bruntsfield Links institution, which traces its roots to 1456, handles a World Cup with practiced calm. Screens inside, putting greens outside, and a local crowd that treats extra time as a reason for another round.
Cold Town brews its own lager under the castle and shows sport across three floors plus a rooftop with the best view in the Grassmarket. Daytime kickoffs on the terrace, knockout nights inside. Book the rooftop early in the week.
"Twenty eight years is a long time to practice the songs. Edinburgh is ready for the exam."
British Summer Time puts North American kickoffs into Edinburgh's evening and night. Afternoon matches in the eastern host cities land around 8pm, while the late windows run past midnight into the small hours.
That makes late licenses the deciding factor for the night fixtures. The Grassmarket and Cowgate rooms hold theirs latest; check each pub's tournament hours before committing to a 2am kickoff.
The group stage ends in late June, which means the knockout rounds collide with Edinburgh's pre festival warm up. Rooms that show a quarterfinal at midnight will host comedy previews by August, and the city's late license culture handles both with the same shrug.
The practical effect is competition for space. Book tables where booking exists, and treat the Grassmarket on a Friday night fixture as a standing event. The New Town basements reward the organized; the Old Town barns reward the early.
If Scotland reach the knockouts, expect the city to improvise: extra screens in beer gardens, extended hours where licensing allows, and a level of communal nerve not seen since the Euros. Leith, with its own pub ecosystem along the Shore, becomes a second front entirely. The Diggers and the other westside locals will show every match to a crowd that remembers 1998 firsthand, and the student rooms around Bristo Square will carry the 2am games on energy alone.
And if the run ends early, Edinburgh has the consolation infrastructure of a city with five centuries of practice at drinking through disappointment. Either way, the pubs win.
For Scotland matches, book anything bookable and expect one in one out queues everywhere else in Edinburgh. Morocco and Haiti fixtures will fill rooms; Brazil will fill streets.
For the neutral matches, the city relaxes. That is the time to work through the sports bar map at leisure, one evening kickoff at a time.
Malones for Scotland against Brazil, The Queens Arms for a civilized group stage, The Golf Tavern for daylight kickoffs on the Links, Cold Town House for the rooftop. Book everything early.
Yes. Scotland reached the finals for the first time since 1998 and plays in Group C against Brazil, Morocco, and Haiti.
Most kickoffs land between early evening and the small hours on British Summer Time, with the marquee North American night matches starting around midnight or later.
Malones on Forrest Road and the bigger Grassmarket rooms will carry the loudest Scotland crowds. Our best sports bars in Edinburgh guide ranks the full list.
Sofia Reeves covers European bar culture for barsforKings, compiling guides from published reviews, local forums, and official venue information.
One email every week. The bars our editors are recommending right now, across 176 cities worldwide.
Screens, snugs, and late licenses, ranked by our editors.
How the other great pub city on this time zone plans its month.