Manchester
The best of Manchester's collection of beautiful Victorian pubs. Check out the gorgeous glazed tilework outside.
Manchester
The best of Manchester's collection of beautiful Victorian pubs. Check out the gorgeous glazed tilework outside.
Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Gay and all-welcoming Eazy Street draws a crowd for its nightly feast of cabaret drag shows, karaoke and DJs.
Belfast
Belfast's homegrown answer to Starbucks. Other branches include Donegall Sq West, Rosemary St and Royal Ave.
The Midlands & the Marches
On the main shopping street, this tiny pub has a big selection of real ales and an old piano at the back.
Northeast England
A series of low-ceilinged rooms make this village-centre tavern dating from 1755 a cosy spot to hole up.
Exeter
A students' late-night favourite, with nights devoted to indie, electro, house and cheesy club classics.
Plymouth
DJs at Plymouth's two-storey gay club keep the dance floor filled with crowd-pleasing tunes.
Torquay
A heavily beamed Tardis-like boozer with a tiny terrace; an atmospheric spot for a pint.
Brighton & Hove
Extremely hip bar and sauna in the Amsterdam Hotel; its sun terrace is a particular hit.
Brighton & Hove
Located beneath the Legends Hotel this is arguably the best gay bar and club in town.
Oxford
Usually packed with students hunched over their laptops, this busy central coffee bar was inspired by Australia’s independent cafe scene, and benefits…
Oxford
Three miles northwest along the Thames from Oxford – a wonderful walk– this old-world pub has been drawing drinkers for around four centuries, and was…
Oxford
Affectionately nicknamed the ‘Bird & Baby’, and a favourite haunt of JRR Tolkien, CS Lewis and their fellow Inklings, this quirky, rambling pub dates from…
Glasgow
Chilled out vibes and cocktails bring a young crowd to this lane hideaway where the cosy, contemporary interior is complemented by DJs regularly spinning…
Glasgow
One of the city's oldest pubs, Sloans' major draw is its Friday night ceilidh where kilted Glaswegians and visitors dance together to the beat of…
London
At the central crossroads of Victorian iron-trussed Leadenhall Market, the Lamb Tavern is an old-school boozer owned by the Young's pub chain. There's an…
Glasgow
With a fair claim to being Scotland's smallest pub, there's also a strong case for the Wee Pub to be one of the country's most charming. As soon as you…
Clerkenwell, Shoreditch & Spitalfields
This industrial-chic bar has a games room, basement and varied music nights (including oddballs such as hip-hop karaoke and ukulele jamming sessions), but…
Leeds
A down-at-heel boozer with a well-worn atmosphere, a pub piano, pork pie and mushy peas on the menu, and a dozen or so hand-pulled real ales to choose…
Glasgow
Venture down the graffiti-splashed stairs to this bohemian basement space, where there's a sociable studenty vibe, vegan comfort food and regular bands or…
The West End
Quite possibly the oldest wine bar in London (it opened in 1890), cavernous, candlelit and atmospheric Gordon’s is a victim of its own success – it's…
The West End
With around 60 different Polish spirits on offer – from hazelnut- and wheat-flavoured vodkas to slivowica (plum brandy) – every devotee of strong liquor…
Parc Cenedlaethol Bannau Brycheiniog
If you need to escape the festival crush for a quiet glass in an unfussy rural pub, the Baskerville in Clyro, just a mile from Hay, fits the bill. Known…
London
Rebuilt in 1667 after the Great Fire, this is one of London’s most famous – and most crowded – pubs. It has strong literary connections, with Mark Twain,…
Oxford
For some of the best (and cheapest!) real ale in town, head to this old-fashioned split-level pub, which exclusively serves beer from Sam Smith’s brewery…
Oxford
This fresh, sophisticated wine bar is popular with laptop-toting students and the after-work crowd. Choose from a fantastic array of world-spanning wines…
Swansea, The Gower & Carmarthenshire
The centre of Llangennith's social life is the 16th-century King's Head, which serves real ales – some courtesy of the Gower Brewery in nearby Oldwalls –…
Southeast Wales
Almost a tourist attraction in its own right, the Robin Hood has been providing sustenance for weary travellers since medieval times. The door itself…
The West End
In the years before and after WWII, the Fitzroy was a hangout of literary giants like George Orwell and Dylan Thomas and the sculptor Jacob Epstein. Since…
The West End
As welcome (and unexpected) as sunshine in November, this secluded little pub from 1938 in the heart of Bloomsbury is like a step back in time to the…
North London
Egg has a superb layout with two vast exposed-concrete rooms, a wooden loft space, a garden and a roof terrace in an old Victorian warehouse. It…
London
Prices at this decidedly average rooftop bar are a little on the steep side (spirits from £9.50; beers from £6), but it's got the best views in the…
The West End
This quiet, friendly pub in London’s most exclusive neighbourhood has something of a gentlemen’s club feel about it, with shiny brass fittings, heavy…
The West End
Once famous as the unreconstructed boozer where Spectator columnist Jeffrey Bernard drank himself to death amid a regular clientele of soaks, writers,…
North London
Named after the old hansom cabs (horse-drawn carriages) that once waited in this very place to pick up distinguished guests of the hotel, this elegant…
Booking Office Bar & Restaurant
North London
As the name suggests, in a former life this was the booking office of St Pancras train station. The space has been transformed into a show-stopping bar,…
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