Top 10 Nightlife Spots in Nashville
Top 10 Nightlife Spots in Nashville
Direct Answer
The Best Overall nightlife spot in Nashville is Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, the purple-walled honky-tonk on Lower Broadway where free live music runs across three floors and a rooftop until 2 or 3 a.m. — it remains the single most iconic night out in Music City. The Best Value pick is Robert's Western World, where the cover is free, the fried bologna "Recession Special" runs about $6, and the house band Brazilbilly plays some of the best traditional country on the strip.
This list is built for partygoers, live-music fans, bachelorette groups, and visitors who want an authentic Nashville night, whether you crave neon honky-tonks on Broadway or quieter craft cocktails in East Nashville and The Gulch. Every pick below is a real, currently-operating venue with no cover unless noted.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighed each venue against what people actually want from a Nashville night out, drawing on Eater Nashville, Thrillist, Time Out, The Infatuation, Yelp, and Google Reviews, plus on-the-ground reputation. The weighting:
- Atmosphere and vibe — 25%
- Music and entertainment — 20%
- Drinks and menu — 20%
- Crowd and service — 15%
- Value — 10%
- Location and access — 10%
A spot with a great band but watery drinks and a brutal cover drops fast. The winners balance all six and earn their reputation night after night.
1. Tootsie's Orchid Lounge 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Type: Honky-tonk / Live music | Price: $$ | Best for: First-timers who want the definitive Broadway experience
Painted its unmistakable orchid purple, Tootsie's sits at 422 Broadway, right behind the Ryman Auditorium, and it is the beating heart of Lower Broad. The legend is real: Willie Nelson, Patsy Cline, and Kris Kristofferson all passed through the back door from the Ryman, and autographed photos cover every wall.
Today the place stacks live bands across three floors plus a rooftop, all running simultaneously from late morning until 2 or 3 a.m. There is no cover — you tip the band — and the crowd is a loud, joyful mix of tourists, bachelorette parties, and locals avoiding the worst of the chaos by heading upstairs.
Order a cold domestic or a whiskey and squeeze toward the stage.
Pros:
- Free live music on three floors plus a rooftop
- The most historic and recognizable honky-tonk in Nashville
- Open late, every single night of the week
- Rooftop bar with skyline views over Broadway
Cons:
- Wall-to-wall crowds and long bar waits on weekends
- Drinks are basic and priced for tourists
Verdict: The definitive Nashville night out — loud, historic, and endlessly fun if you embrace the crowd.
2. Robert's Western World 💎 BEST VALUE
Type: Honky-tonk / Live music | Price: $ | Best for: Traditional country fans on a budget
A few doors down at 416 Broadway, Robert's Western World is where purists go. It started as a boot store — racks of cowboy boots still line one wall — and grew into the strip's best home for traditional, twangy country. The house band Brazilbilly is a Nashville institution, and the music leans honky-tonk and rockabilly rather than top-40 covers.
The famous fried bologna sandwich "Recession Special" (sandwich, chips, MoonPie, and a PBR) runs around $6, making this the best value on Broadway. No cover, wood floors, neon beer signs, and a crowd that genuinely knows the songs. Arrive early for a stool near the stage.
Pros:
- Free cover and a famous sub-$10 fried bologna combo
- Brazilbilly and the strip's most authentic country music
- Real honky-tonk character, not a tourist-trap karaoke bar
- Open late nightly with a tight, talented rotation of bands
Cons:
- Limited food menu beyond the sandwich classics
- Fills up fast and seating is first-come
Verdict: Unbeatable value — the most authentic country on Broadway for the price of a sandwich and a beer.
3. The Stage on Broadway
Type: Honky-tonk / Nightclub | Price: $$ | Best for: Groups who want a big dance floor and a party
The Stage at 412 Broadway is the rowdier, higher-energy neighbor — a cavernous room with a large dance floor, a big main stage, and bands that lean toward crowd-pleasing covers and Southern rock. This is where bachelorette and bachelor parties tend to land, and the energy stays cranked to closing.
There is usually no cover, the drinks pour fast, and the floor fills with people two-stepping (or attempting to). The rooftop adds another bar and a view. If Robert's is for listening, The Stage is for moving.
Pros:
- Big dance floor built for groups and parties
- High-energy cover bands and Southern rock
- Rooftop bar with Broadway views
- Typically no cover charge
Cons:
- Less authentic, more tourist-party than music purist
- Gets packed and rowdy late on weekends
Verdict: The party honky-tonk — pick it when your group wants to dance, not just watch.
4. Kid Rock's Big Ass Honky Tonk Rock N' Roll Steakhouse
Type: Honky-tonk / Live music / Restaurant | Price: $$$ | Best for: Big groups wanting a maximalist multi-level night
At 221 Broadway, Kid Rock's is exactly as over-the-top as the name promises: six floors, multiple stages, a steakhouse, and a rooftop bar plastered in neon and Americana. It is one of the largest celebrity-owned bars on Broadway, with live music running on several levels at once and a kitchen serving steaks, burgers, and Southern plates upstairs.
The crowd skews tourist and party, the drinks are strong and pricey, and the sheer scale means you can bar-hop floors without leaving the building. Expect a line at the door on weekends.
Pros:
- Six floors of bars, stages, and a rooftop
- Full steakhouse and Southern kitchen on site
- Live music on multiple levels simultaneously
- Massive capacity ideal for large groups
Cons:
- Pricey drinks and food for the strip
- Long entry lines and a heavy tourist crowd
Verdict: The maximalist Broadway megabar — great for a big group that wants everything under one roof.
5. Pinewood
Type: Cocktail bar / Lounge | Price: $$$ | Best for: Date night and a stylish break from the neon
A breather from Broadway's roar, Pinewood (formerly Pinewood Social) sits near the Gulch/SoBro area and blends a craft-cocktail bar, restaurant, vintage bowling lanes, and even a bocce court and pool. The vibe is design-forward and grown-up — leather booths, good coffee by day, serious cocktails by night.
It is a favorite for dates and creative-industry locals who want a polished drink and a conversation they can actually hear. Reservations help for the lanes and dinner, and the cocktail program is genuinely strong.
Pros:
- Craft cocktails in a stylish, grown-up room
- Vintage bowling lanes and bocce on site
- Quiet enough for conversation and dates
- Strong food menu alongside the bar
Cons:
- Pricier than the honky-tonks
- Lanes book up and need reservations
Verdict: The date-night and design-lover's pick — a refined alternative to Broadway's chaos.
6. Attaboy Nashville
Type: Cocktail bar | Price: $$$ | Best for: Serious cocktail drinkers who want a hidden bar
The Nashville outpost of the lauded New York speakeasy, Attaboy sits in East Nashville with no menu and no sign — you knock, you get seated when there's room, and the bartenders build a custom drink around your spirit and mood. It is small, dimly lit, and reverent about the craft, drawing cocktail nerds and date-night couples rather than the bachelorette crowd.
There can be a wait at the door since it is capacity-limited and reservation-light. The drinks are precise, balanced, and among the best in the city.
Pros:
- Bespoke, made-to-order cocktails with no menu
- Intimate East Nashville speakeasy atmosphere
- Among the best cocktail craft in the city
- A genuine escape from the Broadway scene
Cons:
- Small room means a wait to get in
- Not for big groups or a party night
Verdict: The cocktail connoisseur's pick — quiet, expert, and worth the knock at the door.
7. The 5 Spot
Type: Live music / Dive | Price: $$ | Best for: Indie and roots-music fans who want the local scene
Tucked in East Nashville's Five Points, The 5 Spot is a beloved neighborhood music club that books indie, Americana, soul, and roots acts far from the Broadway cover-band circuit. Its long-running "Motown Monday" dance night is a local legend, and the room has a friendly, unpretentious dive energy with affordable drinks.
This is where you go to hear bands locals actually follow, on a real stage with a real sound system, without a tourist markup. Covers are modest when charged.
Pros:
- Genuine local indie, roots, and soul bookings
- Famous Motown Monday dance night
- Affordable drinks and low or no cover
- Unpretentious East Nashville neighborhood vibe
Cons:
- Small room with limited sightlines when packed
- Cash-friendly dive, not a polished cocktail bar
Verdict: The local-music lover's pick — the antidote to Broadway, with real bands and a great dance night.
8. Acme Feed & Seed
Type: Live music / Rooftop / Restaurant | Price: $$ | Best for: A multi-floor night with a riverfront rooftop view
At the foot of Broadway near the river, Acme Feed & Seed occupies a restored four-story warehouse at 101 Broadway. The ground floor is a buzzing bar and Southern-comfort kitchen with live music, while the rooftop delivers some of the best views in town — over the Cumberland River, the pedestrian bridge, and the skyline.
Floors mix live bands, a sushi-and-cocktail level, and event space, so a group can climb through several moods in one night. The crowd blends tourists and after-work locals.
Pros:
- Four floors with a standout riverfront rooftop
- Live music plus a full Southern kitchen
- Skyline and Cumberland River views up top
- At the quieter river end of Broadway
Cons:
- Rooftop gets crowded at sunset
- More food-and-view than serious music venue
Verdict: The rooftop-view pick — best when you want a multi-floor night and a skyline backdrop.
9. Bourbon Street Blues and Boogie Bar
Type: Live music / Blues club | Price: $$ | Best for: Blues, jazz, and New Orleans-style nights
On Printers Alley, the city's historic after-dark corridor, Bourbon Street Blues and Boogie Bar brings a New Orleans feel to Nashville with nightly blues, soul, and jazz. The basement-level room is dark, brick-walled, and intimate, and there is a small cover on weekends for the bands.
Cajun-leaning bites and strong drinks round out a night that feels worlds away from Broadway's country churn. It draws a slightly older, music-focused crowd that comes for the players, not the scene.
Pros:
- Nightly blues, soul, and jazz in historic Printers Alley
- Intimate New Orleans-style basement room
- Cajun bites and a music-first crowd
- A different genre from Broadway's country circuit
Cons:
- Weekend cover charge for the bands
- Tight space with limited seating
Verdict: The blues-and-jazz pick — head here when you want soul and a Printers Alley vibe.
10. Skull's Rainbow Room
Type: Cocktail bar / Supper club | Price: $$$ | Best for: A dressed-up supper-club night with live jazz
Also in Printers Alley, Skull's Rainbow Room is a restored 1948 supper club with white tablecloths, red booths, live jazz and burlesque, and a proper cocktail program. It is the most dressed-up option on this list — a place for an anniversary, a special date, or a martini before the bands start.
Reservations are recommended for dinner, and the room rewards anyone who wants the old-Nashville glamour of the Alley's heyday. The steaks and seafood are well regarded, and the music sets a low, elegant mood.
Pros:
- Vintage supper-club glamour with live jazz
- Burlesque and entertainment most nights
- Strong cocktail and dinner program
- The dressiest, most special-occasion pick on Broadway's fringe
Cons:
- Higher prices and a dinner-reservation expectation
- Not for a casual, jeans-and-beer crowd
Verdict: The special-occasion pick — old-school Printers Alley elegance with live jazz and real cocktails.
Where Should You Go Out?
What to Look For in a Night Out in Nashville
- Free live music — On Broadway, the bands play for tips, so a great night rarely needs a cover. Tootsie's, Robert's, and The Stage all run free music nightly.
- Honky-tonk vs craft cocktail — Decide early: Broadway is loud neon and country covers; East Nashville and the Gulch (Attaboy, Pinewood) are quieter and drink-focused.
- Rooftops and views — Acme Feed & Seed, Tootsie's, and Kid Rock's all offer rooftop bars; the river end of Broadway gives the best skyline.
- Crowd type — Bachelorette and bachelor parties dominate weekend Broadway; if that's not your scene, lean toward East Nashville or Printers Alley.
- Genre beyond country — Nashville has world-class blues, jazz, soul, and indie at spots like Bourbon Street Blues, Skull's, and The 5 Spot.
- Timing — Lower Broadway peaks 9 p.m. To close; arrive earlier for a stool and to beat the worst lines.
What matters less than the hype: the celebrity name on the sign. A famous owner does not guarantee the best band — some of the city's finest music is at no-name dives and historic rooms, not the splashiest megabar.
FAQ
What is the best nightlife spot in Nashville overall? Tootsie's Orchid Lounge is our top pick — three floors plus a rooftop of free live music until 2 or 3 a.m., and the most historic honky-tonk on Lower Broadway.
What is the best value night out in Nashville? Robert's Western World wins value: no cover, the best traditional country on the strip via Brazilbilly, and a famous fried bologna "Recession Special" combo for about $6.
Where should I go in Nashville if I hate the Broadway crowds? Head to East Nashville for Attaboy and The 5 Spot, or Printers Alley for Skull's Rainbow Room and Bourbon Street Blues — quieter, more local, and music- or cocktail-focused.
Which Nashville bars have the best rooftops? Acme Feed & Seed has the best riverfront skyline view, while Tootsie's and Kid Rock's both feature lively rooftop bars over Broadway.
Where do bachelorette parties go in Nashville? The party honky-tonks — The Stage and Kid Rock's — plus Tootsie's are the classic bachelorette landing spots on Broadway, with big dance floors and high energy.
Is there a cover charge on Broadway in Nashville? Most Broadway honky-tonks like Tootsie's and Robert's charge no cover — you tip the band. Music clubs such as Bourbon Street Blues may add a small weekend cover.
Bottom Line
For a night out in Music City, Tootsie's Orchid Lounge is our Best Overall — three floors and a rooftop of free, historic, nonstop live music. Robert's Western World is our Best Value, with no cover, the strip's most authentic country, and a sub-$10 sandwich combo.
If you want to escape the neon, the decision tree above points you to Attaboy, Pinewood, The 5 Spot, or Printers Alley instead. Embrace the crowd on Broadway or seek out the quieter rooms — either way, Nashville delivers one of the best live-music nights in America.
Sources
- Eater Nashville — bars and nightlife guides
- Thrillist — Nashville bars and nightlife
- Time Out — best bars in Nashville
- The Infatuation — Nashville bar guides
- Yelp — Nashville nightlife
- Visit Music City — official Nashville nightlife guide
- Tootsie's Orchid Lounge — official site
- Robert's Western World — official site
- Pinewood — official site
- Skull's Rainbow Room — official site
*best nightlife in Nashville review — best bars and clubs, where to go out, ratings, and a review of the top nightlife spots.*