List of LGBT bars
An LGBT bar is a drinking establishment that caters to an exclusively or predominantly lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer (LGBTQ+) clientele. Bars and nightclubs have historically served as centers of gay culture due to their role as some of the few places people with same-sex orientations and gender-variant identities could openly socialize.
While many LGBT bars have historically catered specifically to men, lesbian bars cater exclusively or predominantly to lesbian women. Some bars of both types are now considered "queer" bars, welcoming LGBTQ+ people of all genders.
This is a list of notable LGBT bars worldwide. This is not a complete list.
Africa
| Bar | City | Country | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Asia
| Bar | City | Country | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aiiro Cafe | Tokyo | Japan | |||
| Dragon Men | Tokyo | Japan | |||
| Sunee Plaza | Pattaya | Thailand | 1996 | Area known for LGBT nightlife, including more than 50 institutions[1][2] Opened in 1996 as Crazy Pub. | |
| Video Pub | Jerusalem | Israel | 2012 |
Australia
| Bar | City | Country | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capriccio's | Sydney | Australia | 1969 | 2008 | |
| Connections Nightclub | Perth, Northbridge | Australia | 1975 | Known colloquially as Connies |
Europe
| Bar | City | Country | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Admiral Duncan | London | England | c. 1832 (possibly earlier) | One of the oldest gay pubs in Soho[3][4] | |
| The Backstreet | London | England | 1985 | 2022 | |
| The Black Cap | London | England | 1751 (as Mother Black Cap) | 2015 | Known for drag cabaret[5][6] |
| Café 't Mandje | Amsterdam | Netherlands | 1927 | 1982 | One of the first gay bars in the Netherlands. Closed in 1982 and reopened in 2007[7] |
| 2007 | |||||
| The Coleherne | London | England | 1866 | 2008 | Known as a popular landmark leather bar during the 1970s and 1980s[8][9] |
| Comptons of Soho | London | England | 1986 | Known as "The Grand Dame of Queer Street"[10] | |
| Cruz 101 | Manchester | England | 1992 | One of the most popular and longest-running gay clubs in Greater Manchester[11] | |
| DTM | Helsinki | Finland | 1992 | 2025 | Formerly the largest gay club in Northern Europe[12] |
| Eldorado | Berlin | Germany | c. 1848 | 1932 | Name of multiple early queer and gay clubs in Berlin, closed by the Nazi's |
| The George | Dublin | Ireland | 1985 | One of Ireland's oldest and largest gay bars, and the most popular in Dublin[13] | |
| The George and Dragon | London | England | 1716 | Historic venue[14] | |
| Heaven | London | England | 1979 | Superclub with major influence in the development of London's LGBT scene[15] | |
| Hercules | Helsinki | Finland | 2000 | Most popular gay club in Helsinki[12] | |
| The Joiners Arms | London | England | 1997 | 2015 | Central to the East London gay scene[16] |
| London Astoria | London | England | 1976 | 2009 | Home to G-A-Y until 2008[17] |
| Le Queen | Paris | France | 1991 | c. 2019 | |
| The New Penny | Leeds | England | 1953 | First gay venue in the UK to open outside London[18] | |
| The Queen Adelaide | Hackney, London | England | 1834 | Inherited furnishings from the closure of the George and Dragon in 2015[19][20] | |
| The Queen's Head | Amsterdam | Netherlands | 1998 | [21][22] | |
| Pan Club Copenhagen | Copenhagen | Denmark | 1970 | 2007 | One of Europe's largest gay clubs and the biggest in Copenhagen[23][24] |
| Pantibar | Dublin | Ireland | 2007 | Run by drag queen and activist Rory O'Neill[25] | |
| Royal Vauxhall Tavern | London | England | 1862 | South London's oldest surviving queer venue[26] | |
| Tom's Bar | Berlin, Schöneberg | Germany | 1982 | 2024 | |
| Trade | London | England | 1990 | 2008 | |
| The WayOut Club | London | England | 1993 | One of London's best known transgender venues[27] | |
| XXL | London and Birmingham | England | 2000 | 2019 | Nightclub catering to the bear sub-group[28][29][30] |
North America
| Bar | City | State | Country | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 Dollar Bill | New York City | New York | United States | 2018 | ||
| The 19 Bar | Minneapolis | Minnesota | United States | 1952 | Oldest gay bar in Minneapolis | |
| Atlantic House | Provincetown | Massachusetts | United States | 1798 | Contender for oldest gay bar in the United States[31][32] | |
| Axis Nightclub | Columbus | Ohio | United States | c. 2001 | Staple of Columbus nightlife[33] | |
| The Abbey | West Hollywood | California | United States | 1991 | Called the "Los Angeles equivalent to the Stonewall Inn", central to LGBT culture in Los Angeles[34] | |
| Badlands | Portland | Oregon | United States | 2024 | Operating in the former location of Embers Avenue | |
| Black Banana | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania | United States | 1971 | 1990s (early) | European-style nightclub[35] |
| Black Cat Bar | San Francisco | California | United States | 1906 | 1921 | At center of early legal fight establishing protections for gay people in the United States[36] |
| 1933 | 1964 | |||||
| Black Cat Tavern | Los Angeles, Silver Lake | California | United States | 1939 | Site of one of the first demonstrations in the United States protesting police brutality against LGBT people[37] | |
| Cafe Lafitte in Exile | New Orleans | Louisiana | United States | 1933 | Claims to be the oldest continuously operating gay bar in the United States[38][39][40][41] | |
| CC Slaughters | Portland | Oregon | United States | 1981 | Two locations in Portland, OR, USA[42] and Puerto Vallarta, Mexico[43] | |
| Club Universe | San Francisco, South of Market | California | United States | 1994 | ||
| Diesel | Seattle | Washington | United States | 2011 | Bear bar | |
| The Double Header | Seattle | Washington | United States | 1934 | 2015 | Upon closing, one of the oldest operating gay bars in the United States[44][45] |
| Down the Street | Asbury Park | New Jersey | United States | 1988 | 1999 | At close, was the oldest and longest-operating gay disco in New Jersey[46][47] |
| Downtown Olly's | Indianapolis | Indiana | United States | 2002 | ||
| The Eagle's Nest | New York City | New York | United States | 1970 | First gay bar to operate under the name "The Eagle"[48] | |
| El Rio | San Francisco, Mission District | California | United States | 1978 | First gay bar to debut queer salsa in San Francisco[49] | |
| Embers Avenue | Portland | Oregon | United States | 1969 | 2017 | Former gay bar and nightclub[50][51] |
| Esta Noche | San Francisco, Mission District | California | United States | 1979 | 2014 | First Latino gay bar in San Francisco[52][53] |
| Hobo's | Portland | Oregon | United States | c. 2002 | 2020 | Restaurant, gay bar, and piano bar[54][55] |
| Hunters Palm Springs | Palm Springs | California | United States | 1998 | [56] | |
| Jewel's Catch One | Los Angeles | California | United States | 1973 | 2015 | Longest running black gay dance bar in Los Angeles[57] |
| Julius | New York City | New York | United States | c. 1867 | Oldest continuously operating gay bar in New York City and site of the 1966 Julius Sip-In[58] | |
| The Leather Stallion Saloon | Cleveland | Ohio | United States | 1970 | Oldest continuously operating gay bar in Ohio[59] | |
| Madison Pub | Seattle | Washington | United States | 1986 | Gay sports bar | |
| Neon Boots Dancehall & Saloon | Houston | Texas | United States | 1955 | 1995 | Largest LGBT country and western bar in Texas[60][61] Opened in 1955 as Esquire Ballroom |
| 2013 | ||||||
| Paco's Ranch | Puerto Vallarta | Jalisco | Mexico | |||
| The Paddock Club | Greenville | North Carolina | United States | 1973 | 2003 | At time of closing, oldest continuously operating LGBT club in North Carolina[62] |
| Pony | Seattle | Washington | United States | |||
| Pulse | Orlando | Florida | United States | 2004 | 2016 | Site of the Pulse nightclub shooting[63] |
| Purr Cocktail Lounge | Seattle | Washington | United States | 2005 | 2018 | |
| The Q | New York City | New York | United States | 2021 | 2023 | |
| Queer Bar | Seattle | Washington | United States | 2017 | ||
| Red Cap Garage | Portland | Oregon | United States | 1987 | 2012 | One of three interconnected bars[64][65][66] |
| San Francisco Eagle | San Francisco, South of Market | California | United States | 1981 | Formerly Eagle Tavern, a leather bar[67] | |
| Santé Bar | Portland | Oregon | United States | |||
| The Saloon | Minneapolis | Minnesota | United States | 1977 | ||
| Scandals | Portland | Oregon | United States | 1979 | Among Portland's longest-running LGBTQ+ bars[68][69] | |
| Silverado | Portland | Oregon | United States | 2000s | Portland's only gay bar and strip club until the opening of Stag PDX[70] | |
| The Silver Platter | Los Angeles, Westlake | California | United States | 1963 | [71][72] | |
| South Beach | Houston | Texas | United States | 2001 | Voted Houston's Best Gay Bar[73][74] | |
| Stag PDX | Portland | Oregon | United States | 2015 | Second all-nude gay strip club on the West Coast, after Silverado[75] | |
| Stonewall Inn | New York City | New York | United States | 1930 | Site of the 1969 Stonewall riots[76] | |
| This Is It! | Milwaukee | Wisconsin | United States | 1968 | 2025 | Prior to closing, oldest continually operating gay bar in Wisconsin[77][78][79] |
| Three Sisters Tavern | Portland | Oregon | United States | 1964 | 2004 | Hub of Portland's gay nightlife[80][81] |
| Toad Hall Bar | San Francisco, Castro District | California | United States | 1971 | 1979 | featured in the movie Milk (2008), the bar reopened at a nearby location in 2009[82] |
| 2009 | ||||||
| The Tool Box | San Francisco, South of Market | California | United States | 1962 | 1971 | Leather bar[83] |
| Twin Peaks Tavern | San Francisco, Castro District | California | United States | 1935 | ||
| Union | Seattle | Washington | United States | 2018 | ||
| White Horse Inn | Oakland | California | United States | 1933 | Said to be the oldest continuously operating gay bar in the United States[84] | |
| Woody's | Toronto | Ontario | Canada | 1989 | Featured in Queer as Folk[85][86][87] | |
| Ziegfeld's | Washington, D.C. | United States | 1980 | 2006 | Dual-themed nightclub with drag queens and male strippers. Closed in 2006 and reopened in a new location in 2009.[88][89] | |
| 2009 | 2020 |
South America
| Bar | City | Country | Year opened | Year closed | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amerika | Buenos Aires | Argentina | 2000 | Largest LGBT nightclub in Buenos Aires[90][91] | |
| Nueva Cero | San Miguel | Chile | 1998 | Formerly known as Paradise, and Cero | |
| Theatron | Bogotá | Colombia | 2002 | Complex of LGBT nightlife, the largest gay nightclub in Latin America[92][93][94] | |
| The Week International | São Paulo | Brazil | 2004 |
See also
- List of lesbian bars
- List of gay bars called The Eagle
- List of leather bars
- Leather bars and clubs
- LGBTQ-owned business
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Further reading
- Mattson, Gregor (2023). Who Needs Gay Bars? Bar-Hopping through America's Endangered LGBTQ+ Places. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9781503629202