Nashville's 9 Best Bars That Aren't Crowded Tourist Traps
- Chase Gillmore

- May 1
- 17 min read

The best Nashville bars and entertainment Nashville, TN has to offer aren't on every tour bus itinerary. Nashville welcomed 17.39 million total visitors in 2026, according to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, and a significant portion of them never made it past Lower Broadway. That's not entirely their fault. Broadway is loud, bright, and impossible to ignore. But if you ask any bartender in this city where they actually drink on their nights off, the answer is almost never "32 Bridge" or "Jason Aldean's." It's a converted boiler room near Vanderbilt, a tiki bar in East Nashville that appeared on Netflix, or a jazz lounge tucked into Printer's Alley that's been running since 1948.
This guide gives you the bars those bartenders recommend, with specific drinks to order, the best nights to visit, and honest notes on what each place does well and where it falls short.
TL;DR: Nashville's Best Bars Beyond Broadway
Nashville's craft cocktail scene has expanded well beyond Lower Broadway, with standout venues in East Nashville, Midtown, Wedgewood-Houston, and Printer's Alley
The Fox Bar + Cocktail Club on Gallatin Pike and The Patterson House on Division Street are the two venues most consistently named by Nashville bartenders as their personal favorites
Skull's Rainbow Room in Printer's Alley has operated since 1948 and hosts live jazz nightly from 7:30pm with a $20 cover starting at 9pm on weekends
Old Glory, housed in a former boiler room near Vanderbilt, charges a flat $13 per cocktail and draws a graduate-student-and-professional crowd rather than a tourist one
For groups who want a private pre-game before heading out, Underwood Manor's speakeasy game room offers a pool table, darts, and a whiskey barrel bar just 5 minutes from Broadway
The best nights to avoid tourist crowds at off-Broadway bars are Tuesday through Thursday; January and February are Nashville's quietest months overall, per Visit Music City
Table of Contents
What Bars Are a Must in Nashville?
Nashville's must-visit bars are a mix of historically significant venues and newer cocktail destinations that reflect the city's evolution from honky-tonk capital to a serious drinking city. Specifically, the venues that every bartender in town references fall into three categories: historic speakeasies with live music pedigree, craft cocktail bars that helped pioneer Nashville's cocktail culture after 2009, and dive bars with genuine neighborhood credibility.
First, Skull's Rainbow Room at 222 Printer's Alley. This jazz lounge has operated since 1948, predating most of Nashville's current entertainment industry. Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Bob Dylan, and Patsy Cline all performed here. Live jazz starts nightly at 7:30pm, and a $20 cover kicks in at 9pm on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays when burlesque shows run at 11pm. Cocktails run $13 to $17. For two blocks north of Broadway, it punches far above its tourist-zone location in terms of atmosphere.
Second, The Patterson House at 1711 Division Street. It opened in 2009 and genuinely helped build Nashville's craft cocktail reputation from scratch. No standing room, no waiting at the bar: you only enter if a seat is available, which keeps the experience intentional. Open Sunday through Thursday from 4pm to 1am, Friday and Saturday until 2am. The cocktail menu is organized by base spirit rather than flavor profile, which is worth noting before you order.
Additionally, Dino's Bar at 411 Gallatin Avenue in East Nashville earns its place as a must-visit for anyone who saw Anthony Bourdain's No Reservations Nashville episode. Draft Tennessee beer is $5, the cheeseburger is legitimately good, and the bar skews heavily local. It's not a craft cocktail destination. It's a neighborhood bar that has survived Nashville's transformation without selling out.

What Is Not to Be Missed in Nashville?
Nashville's entertainment scene extends well beyond the Lower Broadway honky-tonk corridor, and the experiences most worth your time are the ones most visitors skip entirely. According to Visit Music City, Nashville's bar and live music scene spans more than 250 live entertainment venues across the city. The Broadway strip accounts for maybe a dozen of them. Here is what actually deserves your limited evenings.
Chopper at 1100 B Stratton Ave is one of the most genuinely original bars in any American city. Opened in 2019, it bills itself as a robot-fueled tiki bar and appeared on Netflix's Somebody Feed Phil, which gave it a national audience without turning it into a tourist destination. The Robo Zombie features Jamaican rum and cinnamon set on fire tableside. A Maiz de la Vida food truck serves tacos outside on weekends. It's loud, colorful, and entirely unlike anything on Broadway.
Lyra at 935 West Eastland Avenue pairs Middle Eastern cuisine with cocktails that use za'atar, lemongrass, and tiki bitters in ways that would seem gimmicky anywhere else but work because the kitchen understands the flavor logic. The Evil Monkey features Diplomatico rum, banana, dry curaçao, za'tar, lime, and tiki bitters. Open Monday through Saturday from 5pm to 10pm, closed Sundays. Rated 5.0 for both hospitality and atmosphere by Cocktails Away reviewers who visited multiple times.
For a broader look at live music venues beyond the tourist corridor, the Nashville Live Music Venues Guide covering 15 local favorites beyond Broadway is worth reading before you plan your evenings. The spread across neighborhoods matters more than most visitors realize.
The 9 Best Nashville Bars Locals Actually Drink At
Nashville's best bars, by local consensus, share a few qualities: they're difficult to find from a tour bus, they require some effort to reach, and they reward that effort with serious drinks and crowds that are actually from here. Here is the list, organized by neighborhood, with what to order at each.
1. The Fox Bar + Cocktail Club (East Nashville, 2905B Gallatin Pike)
The Fox Bar is the place that every Nashville bartender mentions when asked where they drink. The entrance is at the back of the building, adjacent to Mickey's Tavern, which filters out anyone who isn't looking for it specifically. Open Sunday through Thursday from 5pm to midnight, Friday and Saturday until 2am. The cocktail menu uses a drink key that rates each drink on a scale from "refreshing to spiritous" and "comforting to adventurous." Order the Fox Daiquiri, made with Appleton Reserve, Rhum Clement, El Dorado 5 Rums, lime stock, pineapple skins, sea salt, sugar, and lime oil. The Fox Old Fashioned No. 5 features Buffalo Trace X House Bourbon, Amaro Montenegro, Demerara, Angostura bitters, orange bitters, and lemon oil. Visit The Fox Bar's official website for parking instructions before you go, since the entrance situation trips up first-timers. Tuesday nights here are significantly quieter than weekends.
2. Skull's Rainbow Room (Downtown Adjacent, 222 Printer's Alley)
Skull's Rainbow Room is a historically significant jazz lounge operating since 1948, two blocks north of Broadway in Printer's Alley. The building itself carries the weight of Nashville music history: every major country and rock figure of the 20th century passed through here. Live jazz runs nightly from 7:30pm. The $20 cover begins at 9pm on weekends. Cocktails range from $13 to $17. Skip it on a Friday night if you want to avoid the Broadway overflow crowd. Wednesday and Thursday evenings offer the same quality music with a noticeably calmer atmosphere.
3. Old Glory (Midtown/Music Row Area, 1200 Villa Pl 103rd)
Old Glory was opened in March 2016 by sisters Alexis and Britt Soler inside a former boiler room, complete with a 60-foot-high ceiling and an original smokestack. The building's industrial bones make it feel like a different city entirely. All cocktails are a flat $13. The Second Base features Ford's gin, lavender, cucumber, Thai basil, Aperol, and lime. The 5-6-7-8 combines vodka, roasted green tea, lemongrass, wasabi, citrus, and sake. Located near Vanderbilt, the crowd skews toward graduate students and neighborhood professionals rather than tourists. Check the Fable Lounge Nashville website if you want a second stop in the same general area, since Fable is nearby in the West End.
4. Chopper (East Nashville, 1100 B Stratton Ave)
Chopper opened in 2019 and earned national attention via Netflix's Somebody Feed Phil without ever compromising for a tourist crowd. The tiki concept is executed with technical precision: the Milk Punch XIV is a clarified milk punch using basil-infused gin, mozzarella water, cantaloupe, lemon, and dry vermouth, and it tastes exactly as interesting as that sounds. The Maiz de la Vida food truck outside serves tacos until late. This is a genuine East Nashville neighborhood bar that happens to make exceptional drinks.
5. Dino's Bar (East Nashville, 411 Gallatin Ave)
Dino's Bar is East Nashville's definitive dive bar. Anthony Bourdain featured it on No Reservations, which gave it credibility without changing what it is. Draft Tennessee beer is $5. The cheeseburger is simple and reliably good. The Frito pie is $5. The bar's clientele is almost entirely local, which tells you everything. Order a cheap beer and the cheeseburger, find a spot near the jukebox, and stay out of the way of the regulars. Watch the Anthony Bourdain No Reservations Nashville episode before you go if you want context for what makes Dino's historically significant rather than just another East Nashville watering hole.
6. Geist Bar + Restaurant (Germantown, 311 Jefferson Street)
Geist operates in a building originally constructed in 1886 as the John Geist and Sons Blacksmith Shop, listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. The restaurant opened in 2018, making the space feel like a renovation that respected the original structure rather than erased it. Cocktails here rate 5.0 from multiple independent reviewers. Open Monday through Thursday from 5pm to 10pm, Friday and Saturday until 10:30pm, with brunch Saturday and Sunday from 10am to 2:30pm. Germantown is a quieter, more residential alternative to East Nashville, and the Underwood Manor property sits about 1.5 miles from this neighborhood, making it an easy rideshare stop on any evening itinerary.
7. Lyra (East Nashville, 935 West Eastland Avenue)
Lyra is a Middle Eastern restaurant with a bar program serious enough to earn its place on any bartender's recommendation list. The ingredient combinations sound aggressive on paper but work in practice because the kitchen trained the bar team. The Evil Monkey, featuring Diplomatico rum, banana, dry curaçao, za'tar, lime, and tiki bitters, is the drink to order on a first visit. Closed Sundays. The room is intimate at around 50 seats, so arriving early on a Friday is advisable.
8. Fable Lounge (West End, 114 28th Avenue North)
Fable Lounge opened in January 2020, steps from Centennial Park in the West End, and occupies two stories with a cigar bar, an outdoor patio with fire features, a piano lounge, and two full bars. It's the most complete bar experience in the city outside of Broadway's mega-venues, and it draws a significantly older, more settled crowd. Open Monday through Sunday from 5pm to 11pm. The story-driven cocktail menu changes seasonally. The outdoor patio fills up on mild evenings, so arrive by 6:30pm if you want a fire feature seat.
9. Urban Cowboy Public House (East Nashville, 1603 Woodland Street)
Urban Cowboy Public House is the bar component of a boutique hotel concept with sister properties in Brooklyn and the New York Catskills. Open Friday and Saturday from 4pm to midnight, Sunday through Thursday from 4pm to 11pm. Roberta's Pizza from Brooklyn is served here, which is either a selling point or an offense depending on how you feel about New York pizza in Nashville. The outdoor fire pits and quiet residential Woodland Street setting make this the best option for groups who want a bar with genuine outdoor atmosphere without competing for space with 500 tourists. Rated 5.0 for hospitality, 4.8 for atmosphere, and 4.8 for drinks.

What Is the Most Popular Bar on Broadway in Nashville?
The most popular bar on Broadway in Nashville is a genuinely contested title among the 28+ venues on Lower Broadway, but Luke Bryan's 32 Bridge consistently draws the largest crowds due to its size and layout. The venue spans 30,000 square feet across 6 levels with 8 bars, 3 stages, and 2 restaurants. The rooftop level, nicknamed "The Nut House," serves sushi alongside a bird's-eye view of Broadway. For scale, each floor holds more people than most entire bars in other cities.
Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville is the newer entry on Broadway worth noting. It features four stories, the highest rooftop deck on Broadway, and a third-floor reservable cocktail lounge called Buddy's Backroom that operates in a speakeasy style. If you want a Broadway experience with some breathing room, Buddy's Backroom with a reservation is the most comfortable option in the tourist corridor.
Robert's Western World on Broadway deserves separate mention because it serves a different crowd than the celebrity-owned mega-venues. Known as the preserver of traditional country music, it serves the "Recession Special" for $6: a fried bologna sandwich, a bag of chips, a Moon Pie, and a cold PBR. The bands are authentic. The pricing is honest. Most of the regulars would rather this not appear in articles like this one, but it's the one Broadway bar that locals still defend.
The honest assessment: if you're arriving in Nashville for the first time and want to understand what Lower Broadway is, spend one evening there. Walk the strip, have a drink at Robert's, grab the Recession Special. Then spend your remaining evenings at the bars in the previous section. The Broadway tourist corridor is worth experiencing once. It is not worth experiencing three nights in a row.
For groups who prefer to pre-game with a proper cocktail hour before hitting Broadway, the speakeasy game room at Underwood Manor includes a pool table, darts, and a whiskey barrel bar, giving groups a way to start the evening on their own terms before heading toward the tourist corridor. Underwood Manor is about 7 minutes from Broadway by car.
Why Do Certain Bars Stay Off the Tourist Radar?
Nashville bars that avoid tourist crowds do so through a combination of intentional design choices, geographic separation from Broadway, and format decisions that simply don't work for large groups moving through quickly. Understanding these mechanisms helps you find them and keeps the experience intact once you do.
The Fox Bar is the clearest example of intentional obscurity. The entrance is at the back of a building on Gallatin Pike, accessible only through a parking lot and adjacent to a different bar. Nothing on the street identifies it. First-time visitors without a local recommendation almost never find it by accident. This is a design choice, not an oversight.
The Patterson House operates on a different principle: strict capacity management. You only enter if a seat is available. No standing, no waiting at the bar. Groups larger than four often can't be accommodated on weekend evenings without patience. This format is hostile to the large bachelorette groups and bar crawl packages that define Broadway, which is precisely why the regulars prefer it.
Reservation-only or intentionally limited-seating formats work as tourist filters because organized Nashville nightlife tours don't work around 45-minute waits or capacity limits. Bars like Old Glory and Lyra operate in neighborhoods that don't appear on most Nashville tourism maps. Specifically, the Music Row area and East Nashville's Gallatin corridor are residential enough that only people who live nearby or researched specifically end up there.
Additionally, no social media signage or photo-wall installations in these venues is a deliberate choice. Venues that have built their reputations on cocktail quality rather than Instagram moments draw a different crowd from the start. The Patterson House has no neon signs. Dino's has no photo ops. The Fox Bar's cocktail menu prioritizes flavor logic over visual presentation. These are signals to the right customers and deterrents to the wrong ones.
Groups staying at properties like The Herman Haven, located 2.1 miles from Downtown Nashville, have a useful advantage here: they're positioned in a residential neighborhood that's genuinely closer to several of these off-Broadway bars than they are to the Broadway tourist strip. That proximity makes the East Nashville cocktail circuit a practical choice for any evening when Broadway feels overwhelming.
What to Order: Bartender Picks by Venue
Nashville bartenders recommend specific drinks at each venue rather than leaving you to scan an unfamiliar menu alone. These picks reflect the drinks that best represent each bar's program and are the ones staff most frequently suggest to first-timers.
Venue | Drink to Order | Key Ingredients | Price Range |
The Fox Bar + Cocktail Club | Fox Daiquiri | Appleton Reserve, Rhum Clement, El Dorado 5 Rums, lime stock, pineapple skins, sea salt | Not published; comparable to $14-16 range |
The Patterson House | Ask the bartender for a spirit-forward recommendation | Menu organized by base spirit; bartender-guided orders produce best results | Typically $14-18 |
Old Glory | Second Base or 5-6-7-8 | Second Base: Ford's gin, lavender, cucumber, Thai basil, Aperol, lime; 5-6-7-8: vodka, roasted green tea, lemongrass, wasabi, citrus, sake | Flat $13 |
Chopper | Milk Punch XIV | Basil-infused gin, mozzarella water, cantaloupe, lemon, dry vermouth (clarified) | Tiki pricing, typically $14-17 |
Lyra | Evil Monkey | Diplomatico rum, banana, dry curaçao, za'tar, lime, tiki bitters | Typically $14-16 |
Skull's Rainbow Room | Classic highball or house Old Fashioned | Classic builds; cocktails range $13-17 | $13-17 |
Robert's Western World | Recession Special | Fried bologna sandwich, chips, Moon Pie, cold PBR | $6 |
One consistent note across these venues: if you ask the bartender what they'd order tonight, you'll get a better drink than whatever you select independently. These are working bartenders with opinions. At The Patterson House specifically, the menu's organization by spirit is intentionally designed to facilitate a conversation about what you actually want, not just what sounds appealing on paper. Take the prompt.
For Nashville visitors who also want to explore the broader dining scene, the Nashville restaurant guide at Stay Nashville covers the best food stops to pair with an evening out. The city's bar and dining scenes have converged significantly in 2026, and the best experiences usually involve both.
Where Are You Most Likely to See a Celebrity in Nashville?
Nashville celebrity sightings in 2026 cluster in specific neighborhoods and venue types that skew away from the tourist corridor rather than toward it. Celebrities who live in Nashville or visit for recording sessions typically avoid Lower Broadway specifically because the tourist density makes a quiet dinner impossible. The neighborhoods and venues where sightings happen most frequently are 12 South, Germantown, East Nashville, and the Music Row area.
The Listening Room Cafe at its original location and the more intimate venues around Music Row draw working musicians on a regular basis because these are venues built around the craft rather than the commerce of country music. The Listening Room Cafe official website lists current performance schedules, and the smaller rooms draw industry professionals as much as tourists.
Notably, the Wedgewood-Houston neighborhood has developed a reputation as Nashville's most genuinely creative district, with Bastion serving as its anchor bar. Bastion draws a design-forward, industry-insider crowd. The bar's name references Bastian from The Neverending Story, which tells you something about the clientele's sensibility. You're unlikely to encounter tour buses here.
For the Broadway celebrity-owned bars, sightings of the actual owners are occasional and unpredictable. Luke Bryan, Blake Shelton, and other celebrity investors make periodic appearances at their respective venues, but there's no reliable schedule. Treating a celebrity bar as a place to spot its owner is a low-probability strategy. Treating it as a live music venue with expensive drinks and excellent production values is a more realistic framing.
The complete 2026 guide to Nashville's rooftop bars also covers several celebrity-adjacent venues with better sightline-to-crowd ratios than the Broadway honky-tonks.
Best Time to Visit Each Neighborhood for a Local Experience
Nashville's neighborhood bar scene operates on a predictable crowd calendar that most visitor guides ignore entirely. Timing your visits around this calendar produces a noticeably different experience at even the most popular off-Broadway venues.
East Nashville: Tuesday and Wednesday Evenings
East Nashville's Gallatin Pike corridor, which includes The Fox Bar and Dino's Bar, peaks on Thursday through Saturday nights when the bachelorette-party overflow from Broadway arrives via Uber. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings attract the neighborhood regulars and working bartenders on their nights off. The Fox Bar on a Tuesday is a fundamentally different experience from The Fox Bar on a Saturday. Arrive by 7pm for a seat at the bar without competition.
Midtown and Music Row: Any Weeknight Before 8pm
Old Glory and Fable Lounge both benefit from early arrival on weeknights. The Vanderbilt and Belmont University crowd arrives later in the evening, typically after 9pm on weekends. Arriving at opening on a weeknight gives you the best service, the most attentive bartenders, and the quietest room. The Patterson House operates on a first-available-seat basis, so weeknight arrivals at 4pm or 5pm almost always get seated immediately.
January and February Citywide
Visit Music City data consistently shows January and February as Nashville's lowest-volume tourism months. Every venue in this list operates at roughly 40 to 60 percent of its peak-season capacity during these months. The trade-off is that some venues reduce staff or hours in January, so confirming hours before visiting is advisable. For groups staying at properties like Underwood Manor who want a local-feeling Nashville experience, a January or February visit is the single most effective crowd-avoidance strategy available.
Avoiding CMA Fest and Major Events
Nashville hosted 17.39 million total visitors in 2026, with event weekends accounting for a disproportionate share of the peak crowds. CMA Fest, typically held in June, fills every bar in the city to capacity. The week of the NFL Draft, large convention weekends, and New Year's Eve produce similar effects. If your goal is a local bar experience, these weekends are the opposite of what you want. Plan accordingly or lean into the energy of the event rather than fighting it.

Frequently Asked Questions About Nashville Bars and Entertainment
What is the difference between Lower Broadway bars and off-Broadway Nashville bars?
Lower Broadway bars are large-format entertainment venues, typically spanning multiple floors with live music 16 or more hours daily, cover charges on weekends, and tourist-focused pricing. Off-Broadway Nashville bars refer to smaller, neighborhood-focused venues in East Nashville, Midtown, Wedgewood-Houston, and the West End that prioritize cocktail quality, regular customers, and intimate capacity. The primary difference is audience: Broadway bars serve the 17.39 million annual Nashville visitors, while off-Broadway spots serve the people who actually live here.
Do Nashville bars have cover charges?
Lower Broadway honky-tonks generally do not charge a cover during daytime hours but may add one on Friday and Saturday nights. Skull's Rainbow Room charges a $20 cover at 9pm on Thursdays, Fridays, and Saturdays. Most craft cocktail bars in East Nashville and Midtown, including The Fox Bar and Old Glory, have no cover charge. Venues with live jazz or burlesque performances are the most likely to charge entry fees.
What is the best neighborhood for bars in Nashville?
East Nashville's Gallatin Pike corridor is the most consistently recommended neighborhood for authentic local bar culture, featuring The Fox Bar + Cocktail Club, Dino's Bar, Chopper, Urban Cowboy Public House, and Lyra within a short geographic range. Midtown and Music Row offer Old Glory and The Patterson House for serious cocktail drinkers. Printer's Alley, two blocks from Broadway, provides the Skull's Rainbow Room for jazz and history. The best neighborhood depends on whether you prioritize cocktail craft, dive bar character, or live music.
How late do Nashville bars stay open?
Nashville bars typically close at 3am, which is later than most U.S. cities. Lower Broadway honky-tonks offer live music 16 or more hours daily, 365 days a year. Craft cocktail venues in East Nashville and Midtown generally close between midnight and 2am on weekends. Lyra closes at 10pm even on Fridays, which is worth noting if you're planning an evening itinerary around it. Always confirm current hours before visiting, as individual venues adjust seasonally.
Where should bachelorette parties drink in Nashville beyond Broadway?
Bachelorette groups wanting a local Nashville bar experience should target the East Nashville corridor on a weeknight, specifically Chopper for tiki drinks and the outdoor food truck, Urban Cowboy Public House for fire pit seating, and The Fox Bar for the best cocktail program in the city. For a private pre-night-out experience, a property with its own bar setup, like Underwood Manor's speakeasy game room with pool table and whiskey barrel bar, allows groups to start the evening on their own schedule before heading out.
Are Nashville's best craft cocktail bars walking distance from Broadway?
Most of Nashville's best craft cocktail bars are not walking distance from Broadway. The Patterson House is on Division Street, about a 10-minute drive from Broadway. The Fox Bar + Cocktail Club is in East Nashville, 15 to 20 minutes by car. Old Glory is near Vanderbilt, also 10 to 15 minutes from Broadway. Skull's Rainbow Room in Printer's Alley is the only serious cocktail-culture venue within a short walk of Lower Broadway. A rideshare is the practical solution for most of these destinations, and Uber and Lyft are both consistently available in Nashville.
What should I budget per person for a Nashville bar night?
A responsible Nashville bar night budget runs $60 to $100 per person for a craft cocktail venue evening, including 3 to 4 drinks at $13 to $17 each plus tips. A Broadway honky-tonk evening can run lower on drinks but higher on cover charges, merchandise, and impulse purchases. Dino's Bar is the outlier: $5 draft beers and a $5 cheeseburger make it the most affordable legitimate bar experience in the city. Groups who cook or stock their own drinks at a vacation rental for the first hour of an evening can reduce the per-person spend considerably before heading out.
Planning Your Nashville Night Out in 2026
Nashville's best bars and entertainment in 2026 reward the visitors willing to look one neighborhood beyond Lower Broadway. The 9 venues in this guide represent the cocktail culture, dive bar credibility, and live music authenticity that define what Nashville is actually like for the people who live here. The Fox Bar on a Tuesday, Old Glory on a Wednesday, Skull's Rainbow Room on a Thursday for the 7:30pm jazz set before the weekend cover kicks in: these are the sequences that produce a genuinely Nashville experience rather than a tourist recreation of one.
The Broadway strip is worth one evening. Robert's Western World is worth stopping in for the Recession Special. But the bars that Nashville bartenders drink at on their nights off are the ones covered above, and they're accessible enough from any residential neighborhood that planning around them requires only a short rideshare and a willingness to find an unmarked back entrance.
For groups making this the centerpiece of a Nashville trip, timing matters as much as selection. January through early March offers the quietest version of every venue on this list. Weeknight visits to East Nashville beat any weekend by a significant margin. And starting the evening at your own property before heading out keeps the budget and the group's energy in better shape for a late night.

If you're building a Nashville trip around the bar and entertainment scene, Underwood Manor gives groups a 5-minute drive to Broadway and a speakeasy game room with a pool table, karaoke machine, and whiskey barrel bar for the hours before you head out. It's a useful home base when the bars you actually want to visit are spread across three neighborhoods. Browse all available Nashville properties at Stay Nashville to find the right fit for your group size and itinerary.




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