Most people who live in Nashville do not drink on Broadway. That’s the honest starting point. But there are six bars on or one-block-off Broadway where locals actually do show up, mostly to see specific musicians or grab a drink before a Bridgestone show. Here’s the real list.
The default answer. Robert’s is the one Broadway bar that working Nashville musicians and East Side regulars will admit to. The Don Kelley Band has been the resident act for decades and players who sit in here go on to major touring careers. Fried bologna sandwich, a Pabst, the band — that’s the play. Full Robert’s guide →
Technically not on Broadway — it’s in Printers Alley, half a block north — but locals count it as Broadway-adjacent. Old-Nashville cocktail bar with a burlesque show, real food, and a curated jazz/swing music program. The crowd skews 35+. Not a tourist bar. Full Skull’s guide →
Karaoke. Real karaoke, not party-bus karaoke. Locals come specifically for the song list and the regulars who treat it like community theater. If you sing, you’ll have a story. If you don’t, you’ll have one anyway. Full Lonnie’s guide →
Under-the-radar honky-tonk that consistently books better house bands than its size would suggest. Locals will name-check Second Fiddle when they want a real listening experience without going to Robert’s. Full Second Fiddle guide →
The ground floor is fully tourist; the rooftop is where Nashville people end up on the rare occasion they’re on Broadway for an early-evening work thing. Views are real. Crowd skews young professional. Full Acme guide →
Smaller, dive-leaning, less-touristed than its neighbors. Bands are good. PBR is cold. Locals respect it. Full Layla’s guide →
The biggest celebrity multi-level venues — Luke’s 32 Bridge, Kid Rock’s, Aldean’s — see almost zero local foot traffic outside of work-related events. Tootsies, despite being legendary, is too crowded for most locals to deal with on weekends. Honky Tonk Central pulls almost entirely tourist crowds. None of this means these bars are bad. It means they’re not where locals choose to spend a Tuesday.
Weeknight early hours (5-8 PM). Pre-Bridgestone games or Ryman shows. Industry nights at specific bars (musicians get in free and tip their friends). And almost never on Friday or Saturday after 9 PM — that’s when the strip belongs to the tourists.
Best Rooftop Bars on Broadway · Celebrity Bars Ranked · Broadway vs Printers Alley · First Timer’s Guide.