The interior of Nauticus pub in Edinburgh
Photograph: Till Britze Photography
Photograph: Till Britze Photography

The 24 best pubs in Edinburgh

Fancy a pint with pals? These are the absolute best pubs in Edinburgh for drinks, food and just generally hanging out

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Edinburgh has plenty of cracking pubs to warm up in. From fancy booxzers with 350 beers to choose from to low-key local hangs with excellent live music, this city boasts an abundance of cherished traditional boozers and ever-emerging new establisments. So, whether it be a casual catch-up, a sophisticated date night or an all-out celebration, there’s a boozer here for you. 

Plus, there’s more to a good pub than just it’s liquid offerings. Our carefully curated selection features venues with intriguing histories, warm and knowledgable staff, charming beer gardens, cult film screenings and live traditional Scottish music. 

So, ready to decide your destination for the evening? Our list of Edinburgh’s best pubs should have you covered.

RECOMMENDED: Full guide to the best bars in Edinburgh

This guide was last updated by Time Out’s features editor Chiara Wilkinson, who is originally from Edinburgh. At Time Out, all of our travel guides are written by local writers who know their cities inside out. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines

Best pubs in Edinburgh

With more than 250 bottled beers and 14 rotating drafts, the Salt Horse drinks list would take a lifetime to get through (or one concentrated, particularly mad year). The bar crew are knowledgeable, the burgers and fries decent, and the clientele’s mainly locals. You can get wine if you ask nicely, but really, it’s all about the brews. 

2. The Argyle and Cellar Bar

This friendly Marchmont pub is a favourite of locals and students alike. It’s got local cask ales and a real family feel, not to mention a selection of excellent events happening every week. Don’t miss the La Beat Soul Club – a vinyl soul night taking place in the basement on the first Friday of every month. 

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One room, dried hops hanging from the ceiling beams, eight ales on tap from all over the British Isles, one working fireplace and the Water of Leith flowing by outside. And crisps. If you’re looking for hipsterism, schooners, pulled pork on brioche or tasting paddles you’re very much in the wrong place. The Malt & Hops sits in the historic centre of Leith, still a working port, where quality has been a watchword in terms of food and drink since the area’s 1980s renaissance. 

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A proper local, The Blue Blazer is highly regarded among Edinburgh natives for its no-nonsense demeanour and its wide range of whiskies ('way more than we sensibly have room for') rums and real ales. It’s small, but that only increases the likelihood of meeting your new best friend as they squeeze up on the wooden bench next to you.

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5. The Dog House

The OG Dog House pub on Clerk Street, near Edinburgh uni, is a real hidden gem which offers a sweet student discount and all-round good vibe. The interiors are wacky, to say the least: you could spend all night boggling over them, though you’d probably rather spend your time wetting your whistle. If you’re a Harry Potter fan, make sure to buy a pint of Butter Beer from the bar. 

This village pub by Duddingston Loch used to be ‘a firm favourite among past monarchs and poets’ according to its website. Now it’s a firm favourite among climbers of Arthur’s Seat in need of refreshment, students keen on Scotland’s oldest skittle alley and Sunday-roast-hunters.

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Nestled round the back of popular Edinburgh arts venue Summerhall, The Royal Dick takes up residence in what was once the Small Animal Hospital of the Dick Vet School. So while you’re sitting waiting for your pint, you can marvel at some unique bits of artwork and veterinary artefacts which decorate the interior of the pub. The bar has a diverse selection on offer, including Barney’s Beer and Pickerings Gin, both of which are brewed and distilled in the Summerhall complex.

Hector’s has been helping well-heeled shoppers put their feet up and dishing out hairs of the dog to locals for more than 25 years. Although it’s open every day, for many people, it’s filed in the part of their brain under ‘places to flop about on a Sunday’ – they mix a good bloody mary, have a tall stack of board games and the roast’s good too.

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This little old-school basement pub is tucked down a side street just around the corner from Edinburgh Castle. Its proximity to the tourist-friendly Royal Mile means it fills up quickly, but despite all that, it still manages to maintain a friendly, local atmosphere. On a cold evening, a pint or malt whisky by the roaring log fire is highly recommended. 

The sister pub of cocktail bars Hoot the Redeemer and Panda and Sons, Nauticus puts a maritime spin on the traditional Scottish boozer. The Scots theme runs through their drinks list, with Edinburgh’s best local brews and spirits featuring heavily. Paying homage to the area’s trading heritage, Nauticus pulls Leith’s past into the thrilling, boozy present.

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From the hanging baskets and beer garden outside to the warren of rooms inside with their simple, traditional decor, you can tell this is a highly civilised pub. But given the neighbourhood is one of Edinburgh’s swankiest and forms part of a World Heritage Site it’s no more than you’d expect. The beer is good, the wine list decent and the food menu offers everything from sandwiches and burgers to pan-fried hake fillet and caesar salad, with roast beef on Sundays.

Lothian Road’s The Hanging Bat stands unpretentiously amid a peculiar mix of tanning shops, bookies and bargain warehouses. It doesn’t look like much, but inside you’ll find a cavernous pub where sampling is encouraged and beer knowledge traded. The biggest glass is 2/3 of a pint and cocktail menus are forgone in favour of a traditional pub line-up.

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This bar’s more eye-catching Victorian features – curved dark wood shelves and large mirrored panels – have been tastefully merged with modern touches like rounded red leather banquettes and Ordnance Survey maps of Edinburgh and Scotland under glass-topped round tables. It’s earned a reputation for its selection of craft beers and real ales, and also stocks a wide range of single malt whiskies.

This highly popular pub is beloved by students, theatre-goers and locals who know where to find a good pint. Mingle in the bar area and enjoy the well-curated selection of drinks, or head to the backroom and partake of one of the regular cult film screenings on one of the massive emperor-sized ‘beds’. Note that there are three Brass Monkey venues in the city to check out (Drummond Street, Leith Walk and the Shore).

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Taking over the premises of popular but slightly dusty 1960s boozer Jenny Ha’s, The Kilderkin changed hands in 2011 and now draws a crowd of rum lovers, pizza fans and pub quiz regulars, who sit alongside the remaining hardcore punters propping up the bar from the old days.

Once a shop, Sandy Bell’s has been a pub since at least the 1920s and has played a key role in the Scottish folk music revival. Musicians regularly rock up to play together just for fun, so you may catch accordions, fiddles, guitars and more while you’re sitting down to enjoy a pint. Whether you’re up for a jig or not, the nightly music sessions are well worth sticking around for.

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The Bow is among Edinburgh’s finest whisky destinations, offering more than 400 ranging from familiar names to real rarities. And it does a fine line in cask ales and craft kegs too. It dates to the 1980s and has the look of a traditional Scottish pub: one room simply furnished with wooden fixtures and fittings, and old bar memorabilia on the walls. 

Moonwake Beer Co. is an independent microbrewery, founded in 2021 with its taproom opening by The Shore in September of the same year. As well as their own core range of beers and rotation of guest beers, Moonwake stock sustainable wines, local spirits and an array of alcohol-free, gluten-free and veggie/vegan choices too.

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Founded by two Italian brothers, Fabrizio and Simone Cioffi, Bittersweet is a buzzing new Leith spot offering food and drink inspired by Italy and the culture of Italian aperitivi. Enjoy beers on draught and in cans from local breweries, a classic and modern negroni and spritz section and in-house fermented products like mead wine and kombucha. If you get hungry, there are small plates with options like arancini and bruschetta as well as larger sharing boards for varied tastes.

The choice of cask ale in this traditional pub at the foot of Broughton Street is impressive, with brews from all over the British Isles: from Highland Brewing on Orkney to Dark Star in West Sussex. Some are permanent fixtures while others feature as guest ales. This is the kind of place where if you ask bar staff to remove the sparkler from the tap before they pour your pint, they know what you’re talking about. Basic bar meals available; popular for football and rugby.

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For more than 20 years Cloisters has been a haven of quality beer and decent pub grub, perched on the short stretch between Tollcross and the rolling green space of the Meadows. The beer choice is legendary – nine cask taps and ten keg – with eight of those rotating constantly. You could find anything here from a local IPA to a trenchant Orkney Porter – and others from much further afield. Whenever you go, there’ll be something new to try.

Alexander ‘Greek’ Thomson was a nineteenth-century Glaswegian architect now celebrated for sustainable building methods and his Greco-Egyptian aesthetic. The interior at Thomson’s in Morrison Street is a modern homage to the man and his style. With warm oak panelling, a beautifully detailed oak gantry, black and white checkered floor, old-school pub chairs and bar memorabilia it certainly looks the part – very Victorian – although the venue itself opened in 2000.

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An ornate drinking palace dating to 1863, the Café Royal Circle Bar is among the city’s most beautiful places to stop for a beer. The venue has been very well maintained, so its stained glass, decorated ceiling and cornicing all look good as new. There are usually a few cask ales available, plus a reasonable whisky selection.

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It may be small, but Dagda charms with its old-fashioned interior, stained glass and giant wooden barrels in the centre of the room. This Southside haunt is popular with locals and (fortunately) doesn’t overflow with students, despite being right by the university. There’s a great selection of rotating guest ales, plenty of whiskies and craft beer on tap, and the atmosphere here is friendly and relaxing every day of the week.

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