The Top 11 Beer Bars Near The Whitley, Atlanta Buckhead
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Woofs relocated to a larger space on Plasters Avenue, where two dozen screens broadcast everything from Atlanta United matches to the Olympics across its bar. The kitchen turns out tacos and wings while regulars settle in for college football and Braves games, and the room doubles as a gathering place for local queer sports leagues and charity nights.
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A self-serve beer hall on Peachtree where eighty taps dispense everything from pilsner to pale ale while twenty screens flicker above—the operative word is *you* pour, *you* pay, no intermediary required. The wings and cheeseburgers arrive as expected; the point is the frictionless efficiency of a place built for watching sports without ceremony or markup.
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Rank 5. Brewhouse
Beer Bar
In Little Five Points, Brewhouse Cafe trains its screens on soccer matches and international sports with the intensity of a true partisan. The beer list spans continents, the wings arrive lemon-pepper or incendiary, and the Painkiller cocktail scales its proof to match the fervor of the crowd.
- The Infatuation The 18 Best Bars In Atlanta
- Eater The Best Sports Bars in Atlanta for Watching the World Cup and More
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This loungey sports bar in a reclaimed Parish building trades rowdiness for sleek comfort, its walls lined with screens and its kitchen turning out loaded nachos and warm crab dip without pretense. It is the sort of place where the game matters more than the décor, which is precisely the point.
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Dozens of televisions blanket the walls of this downtown sports bar, where a perpetual ticker feeds the hunger for live scores and results. A working brewery occupies the lower level, anchoring an ambitious beer program that extends across the tap list and up to a rooftop perch.
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A Nordic sports bar in downtown Atlanta where snow machines erupt at every touchdown, importing a Minnesota stadium ritual into the Georgia evening. The menu trades in pub standards and local beer, but the real draw is the axe-throwing station for when your team inevitably disappoints.
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In East Atlanta Village, this corner pub trains its gaze on soccer—especially during the World Cup—while the beer list ranges from local breweries to European imports. The kitchen leans Irish: fish and chips, bangers and mash, a brunch on weekends that feels built for the crowd that lingers over a pint.
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A brewery in the West End where massive screens broadcast games and a stone oven turns out pizzas with hot honey and pickled onions; the outdoor patio, ringed by fire pits, asks almost nothing of you but to settle in. Twenty taps deep in beer and built for the kind of watching that doesn't demand your full attention, it's a place where sports feel incidental to staying put.