The United States has a diverse racial and ethnic population, one that, according to the U.S. Census Bureau has grown significantly from 2010 to 2020. It is a country comprised of a myriad of cultures and nationalities that call almost every town and city home. From Italian, German, and Chinese to Cuban, Mexican, and Japanese, the nation has historically been called a melting pot, with a blend of societies found across the nation.
One of these cultures, which also makes up a significant portion of the population is Irish, with more than 31.5 million residents claiming to be descendants from the Emerald Isle. This is evidenced by the food offerings at many establishments, like Irish soda bread and the Irish-American creation of corned beef and cabbage, as well as the multitude of pubs scattered throughout, that likely offer the most Irish of beers, Guinness stout. There’s even a town dubbed the most Irish town in America – Scituate, Massachusetts. (It seems like many people are serious about their pubs, just like much of Europe is serious about their football where the UEFA Euro 2024 is currently underway.)
One place that is traditionally Irish is the pub, and while there are 67,501 bars alone found in the country, the pub isn’t just a bar but rather a culture, one that comes complete with traditional cuisine, sports, and music from the Emerald Isle. Out of the 7,000 Irish pubs in the world, 4,000 of them are located in America and have an undeniable appeal, often providing simple, comforting meals like shepherd’s pie and burgers alongside staples like corned beef and cabbage.
Irish pubs excel at offering excellent beer options, always stocking the famous Guinness Stout plus many other brews, and featuring a wide array of Irish whiskeys. But most of all, Irish pubs are cherished for their warm, welcoming atmosphere. Many even adopt the Gaelic motto “Céad míle fáilte,” meaning “a hundred thousand welcomes.” They aim to provide guests with good “craic” – an Irish term pronounced “crack” that represents fun, entertainment, and lively social interaction. (Here are some Irish slang and phrases Americans just don’t understand.)
To compile a list of the top Irish pubs in every state, 24/7 Tempo consulted sites including Irish Star, IrishCentral, and Ireland Calling, as well as numerous local and regional sources, making our final determination using editorial discretion. It is interesting to note that many Irish pub owners in America are either recent immigrants from Ireland or have ancestry tracing back to Irish immigrants from past generations. To boost authenticity, some have even had their interiors constructed in Ireland and then shipped to the U.S.
Alabama: Callaghan’s Irish Social Club
- Location: Mobile
- Founded: 1946
Callaghan’s is known today for its live music program and for what Southern Living hailed as “the near-mythical L.A. (Lower Alabama) Burger, featuring a house-ground patty made with Conecuh sausage.”
Alaska: Reilly’s Irish Pub
- Location: Anchorage
- Founded: 1970
This popular dive bar used to offer free food to drinkers, but the practice didn’t survive COVID for reasons both economic and health-related.
Arizona: Dubliner Irish Pub & Restaurant
- Location: Phoenix
- Founded: 1985
The oldest Irish pub in Phoenix, Dubliner was also the first bar to introduce Guinness to the area.
Arkansas: Cregeen’s
- Location: North Little Rock
- Founded: 1974
The entire interior of this pub was constructed in Dublin and shipped to Little Rock.
California: Tom Bergin’s Tavern
- Location: Los Angeles
- Founded: 1936
Tom Bergin’s tavern claims to have introduced Los Angeles to Irish coffee.
Colorado: Jack Quinn’s Irish Pub & Bar
- Location: Colorado Springs
- Founded: 1875
When the owners installed their pub more than a century ago, they imported artisans to install Irish woodwork and stained glass.
Connecticut: The Harp & Hound
- Location: Mystic
- Founded: 2002
The pub occupies one of the town’s oldest buildings, dating back to the early 1700s. All the furnishings are imported from Ireland.
Delaware: Catherine Rooney’s
- Location: Wilmington
- Founded: 2002
The McCoy family named their pub after their mothers and grandmothers, Catherine McCoy and Gerry Rooney-Hudecheck.
Florida: McGuire’s Irish Pub
- Location: Pensacola and Destin
- Founded: 1977
The Pensacola location, in the city’s 1927 vintage firehouse, is said to have more than $1 million worth of dollar bills hanging from the walls and ceilings.
Georgia: The Rail Pub
- Location: Savannah
- Founded: 1995
Although this pub is fairly recent, it’s in a building completed in 1890 — and according to some sources, it’s haunted.
Hawaii: Murphy’s Bar & Grill
- Location: Honolulu
- Founded: 1987
Back in the 1860s, when it was the Royal Hotel, the premises scored one of Oahu’s first retail spirits licenses. After many owners and identities, it became an Irish pub.
Idaho: O’Michael’s Pub & Grill
- Location: Boise
- Founded: 1966
This pub has had three owners — all of them named Michael – and is touted as the North End’s oldest bar and restaruant.
Illinois: Shinnick’s
- Location: Chicago
- Founded: 1938
Owned by the Shinnick family, this location opened as a pub decades before that. It is believed that the ornate wooden back bar was once exhibited at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair.
Indiana: McGinley’s Golden Ace Inn
- Location: Indianapolis
- Founded: 1934
John and Ann McGinley opened the Golden Ace, and it is one of the oldest pubs in America that remains family-owned.
Iowa: Dublin Bay Irish Pub & Grill
- Location: Ames
- Founded: 2001
Dublin Bay claims to sell more Guinness than any other outlet in the state.
Kansas: Bailey’s Irish Pub
- Location: Leavenworth
- Founded: 1903
The building occupied by Baileys has housed a tavern since 1903. It originally had two doors, one for drinkers, and the other for teetotalers.
Kentucky: The Irish Rover
- Location: Louisville
- Founded: 1993
The pub occupies a 170-year-old building that was originally opened as a saloon with a grocery store and dry goods shop attached.
Louisiana: Finn McCool’s Irish Pub
- Location: New Orleans
- Founded: 2002
McCool’s is a serious sports pub, showing all U.S. major league games, plus international soccer, rugby, and more.
Maine: Leary’s Landing Irish Pub
- Location: Bar Harbor
- Founded: 2007
Leary’s claims to be geographically closer to Ireland than any other pub in America.
Maryland: Galway Bay
- Location: Annapolis
- Founded: 1998
There are no TVs here, which, say the owners, “has helped create an atmosphere for lively conversation; a place to gather and enjoy each others’ company.”
Massachusetts: The Burren
- Location: Somerville
- Founded: 1996
Husband-and-wife owners Tommy McCarthy and Louise Costello are traditional musicians and have made The Burren famous for its Celtic music.
Michigan: The Old Shillelagh
- Location: Detroit
- Founded: 1975
Uncharacteristically for an Irish Pub, this one has a menu based on regional products, including a large selection of plant-based choices.
Minnesota: O’Malley’s Irish Pub
- Location: Woodbury
- Founded: 2005
The owners of this pub just outside St. Paul declare that they are “proud to be a family-owned, non-chain Irish pub with a 95% handcrafted interior.” They are also, according to a sign in the window, a “husband daycare center”.
Mississippi: Fenian’s Pub
- Location: Jackson
- Founded: 1996
Fenian’s boasts an unusually long list of Irish whiskeys — blended, single male, single grain, and single pot still.
Missouri: John D. McGurk’s
- Location: St. Louis
- Founded: 1978
McGurk’s opened as a one-room pub but has blossomed into a 20,000-square-foot institution, complete with a garden.
Montana: The Thomas Meagher Bar
- Location: Missoula
- Founded: 2014/2015
This pub’s namesake was a brigadier general in the Union Army during the Civil War and later the Acting Governor of Montana Territory — before falling out of a boat and drowning in the Missouri River at the age of 44.
Nebraska: Barrett’s Barleycorn
- Location: Omaha
- Founded: 1987
Barrett’s offers something different that you aren’t likely to find at many pubs: sand volleyball games (outdoors) four days a week.
Nevada: McMullan’s Irish Pub
- Location: Las Vegas
- Founded: 2002
Because this is Vegas, McMullan’s has a gaming bar with 15 video gambling machines you don’t have to leave your stool for.
New Hampshire: J.L. Sullivan’s Irish Pub
- Location: Bristol
- Founded: 2009
According to the restaurant, they are a “Warm Irish pub featuring classic fare, beer & whiskey,” and is New Hampshire’s destination for Irish music, and live entertainment.
New Jersey: St. Stephen’s Green Publick House
- Location: Spring Lake
- Founded:
The founders of this pub note that they took inspiration from Sir Arthur Guinness’s preservation of the famed St. Stephen’s Green in the heart of Dublin.
New Mexico: O’Niell’s
- Location: Albuquerque
- Founded: 1994
With two locations in town, O’Niell’s is known not only for its richly accoutered Irish-themed interior but also for its attractive patios, covered over in winter.
New York: McSorley’s Old Ale House
- Location: New York City
- Founded: 1854
McSorley’s is the city’s oldest continuously operated saloon and serves only two kinds of beer: McSorley’s house ale, dark or light.
North Carolina: Rí Rá Irish Pub
- Location: Charlotte
- Founded: 1997
After this pub suffered a major fire in 2009, the owners had the interior rebuilt in Ireland and shipped over. There are other branches in Vermont, Nevada, and Maine.
North Dakota: EbeneeZer’s Eatery & Irish Pub
- Location: Minot
- Founded: circa 2000
Proprietor Wayne Whitty named his pub after a character in an Irish folk tale, one Ebeneezer Frog, who hid his gold from larcenous Leprechauns.
Ohio: The Harp
- Location: Cleveland
- Founded: 1999
The outdoor patio offers eaters and drinkers views of downtown Cleveland and Lake Erie.
Oklahoma: Kilkenny’s Irish Pub
- Location: Tulsa
- Founded: 2002
Kilkenny’s owners describe it as not just a restaurant, but a museum, jam-packed with Irish antiques, bric-a-brac, historic photographs, and more.
Oregon: T.C. O’Leary’s A Little Irish Pub
- Location: Portland
- Founded: 2017
Owner Thomas Christopher O’Leary had a featured role for six years in the long-running Irish TV soap opera “Fair City” and now hosts a weekly literary society meeting to discuss Irish novels.
Pennsylvania: McGillin’s Olde Ale House
- Location: Philadelphia
- Founded: 1860
This “olde” ale house opened in 1860, the year Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated, and the taps haven’t stopped flowing since.
Rhode Island: McBride’s Pub
- Location: Providence
- Founded: 2005
McBride’s occupies what used to be the nine-car garage for the Monahan, Drabble & Sherman Funeral Home.
South Carolina: Tommy Condon’s Irish Pub & Seafood Restaurant
- Location: Charleston
- Founded: 1984
After Hurricane Hugo swept through Charleston in 1989, owner Tommy Condon traveled to Ireland to collect antique mirrors and Irish memorabilia to upgrade the interior.
South Dakota: Dempsey’s Restaurant Brew + Pub
- Location: Watertown
- Founded: 1999
Proprietor Sean Dempsey’s father, Bill, is the official bagpiper for the state of South Dakota — and Sean himself is a member of the U.S. Pizza Team.
Tennessee: McNamara’s Irish Pub & Restaurant
- Location: Nashville
- Founded: 2010
Co-owner Sean McNamara (with his wife, Paula) is an Irish tenor who performs at the pub regularly with Nosey Flynn, Music City’s leading Irish musical group.
Texas: Shay McElroy’s
- Location: Houston
- Founded: 1994
The pub’s opulent furnishings are repurposed from the private Old Capitol Club in Houston’s Rice Hotel (which closed in 1977), once the preserve of the city’s power brokers.
Utah: Flanagan’s on Main
- Location: Park City
- Founded: 2009
Flanagan’s is named in honor of Father Edward J. Flanagan, founder of the Boys Town orphanage near Omaha, who took in pub owner John Kenworthy’s grandfather when he was a wayward young man.
Vermont: McGrath’s Irish Pub
- Location: Killington
- Founded: 1977
This pub, installed inside the Inn at Long Trail in Rutland County ski country, was the first place in Vermont to serve Guinness on draft. It should be noted that this is a cash-only establishment.
Virginia: O’Toole’s Restaurant & Pub
- Location: Richmond
- Founded: 1996
When O’Toole’s opened, it got Virginia’s first by-the-drink liquor license in modern times.
Washington: The Owl N’ Thistle
- Location: Seattle
- Founded: 1993
Many Irish pubs feature live music, but this one hosts performances — from jazz to funk to traditional Irish — every night but Wednesday and Sunday.
West Virginia: Meagher’s Irish Pub
- Location: Bridgeport
- Founded: 2014
This gastropub is known for its fish and chips, as well as serving the area’s largest craft beer selection.
Wisconsin: House of Guinness
- Location: Waukesha
- Founded: 2000
Guinness gave its Perfect Pint award to its namesake pub, known as “a talking bar,” according to a bartender.
Wyoming: O’Dwyer’s Public House
- Location: Laramie
- Founded: 2013
The pub sponsors a limerick contest every St. Patrick’s Day. This year’s winner could choose between a golf bag or a dart board, both Bushmills-branded.