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Bars and Pubs in Honolulu

Beautiful
views, beautiful drinks and beautiful people are heaven to haoles.
As every good tourist knows, Waikiki
is the centerpiece of activity on Honolulu. It has all the tacky tourist
shops, overpriced stores and enough high-rise hotels (all seemingly
called the "Outrigger") to provide lodging for the millions who come here seeking sunshine and tiki torches.
It's also quite easy to find a cocktail here. But it's hardly the only
place in town that provides fun, lively environment. We, of course,
have them all. This section focuses on the pubs and bars. For dance
spots and upscale clubs, click on the Clubs link at the bottom
of this page. Here's a breakdown of the different drinking areas of
Honolulu:

The PubClubettes hang loose at Lulu's, a true Hawaiian-style bar.
Waikiki Beach and Vicinity Tourists and tropical drinks
Aloha Towers
A mini-hotbed of bars
Locals' Pubs Places few tourists
ever see
Restaurant/bars
Eat, rink and be merry
Also make note that on the first Friday of each month, Honolulu hosts a downtown block party that is the toast of the town. Learn more about First Friday.

Waikiki Beach and Vicinity

Enjoying the best
mai tais in the entire South Pacific.
One could spend their entire PubClubbing
experience in Honolulu and never make it out of Duke's Canoe Club.
Can't think of any place to go for a drink? Head to Duke's. If nothing
is happening when you arrive, chances are something will be happening
before you leave.
Situated
in the heart of Waikiki Beach at the Outrigger Waikiki Hotel, Duke's
is named after the legendary "Father of Surfing." The wave
master would certainly have approved of his namesake (his wife, certainly
did, spending much of her Sunday afternoons here until her passing).
This is the centerpiece of Honolulu's bar activity. It's an interesting
combination, offering the friendliness and comfort of a casual dive
bar in a clean, modern environment. On the one side, it's the stereotypical
Hawaiian lounge with palm fronds over the bar, rum drinks served
with umbrellas. staff outfitted in Aloha
attire, an ocean-air patio (lanai) right on Waikiki Beach with a
view of Diamond Head and tiki torches burning at night and

The PubClubettes hang loose during the Pro Bowl.
This
gives it all the makings of a geeky tourist trap but pleasantly it isn't.
Duke's doesn't gouge customers with insane prices, either.

Another day at Waikiki's beach hangout.
The "passion-style"
rum drinks hover around a very reasonable $6.50 we recommend
the Mickey Goon which blends in 151 rum and "may alter your personality."
These prices, plus an assortment of tasty pupus, can keep one happily
at Duke's for hours.
Duke's attracts its share of locals as well as tourists. It's best
in the late afternoons as people come in casually off the beach. Sundays,
it's a prime party destination. There's a band in the afternoon and the outdoor patio is packed.
As is the case in Hawaii, it's not an insane scene nobody is
standing on tables twirling their tops, for example but it's
definitely energetic.
A few sand steps away (or was; keep reading) is the Mai Tai Bar at the
Royal Hawaiian Hotel, which serves the best Mai Tais
on the island and, in fact, quite probably the entire South Pacific. Have any more than two and it may be difficult to walk to Duke's.
This is the perfect place to welcome oneself to Hawaii. Long-time mai
tai patrons opt for the Original, which is not on the menu and contains
151 rum! The Sunday brunch ($60) is a perfect warmup for Duke's later
that afternoon.
Please note however, that the Royal Hawaiian is undergoing renovation thru December, a move that affects the Mai Tai bar. We do have an alternative, however. How about a bar at the beach with 101 rums!? It's called RumFire at the Sheraton. And come December, Jimmy
Buffett is opening up Jimmy Buffett's at the Beachcomber in the Ohana Waikiki Beachcomber. It will be a restaurant with nightly entertainment in the hotel lobby.
Both Duke's and the Mai Tai Bar are within easy reach of the beach's booze cruises. For $25, you get a catamaran with all
the rum, beer, mai tais and whatever else might be on board one can
consume in 90 minutes. The yellow boat in front of Duke's and the catamaran
that launches from the Shorebird are the best ones. Sunset cruises are
the most popular.

PubClubbers enjoy
the sunset booze cruise.
After the sunset booze cruise and the obligatory walk-through at Duke's,
Honolulu nights shine under the maluna.
Just down the street from Duke's, a few blocks
toward Diamond Head, sits LuLu's Waikiki Surf
Club and the Tiki Bar, second-story hangouts with elevated, open-air views of the
beach.

The PubClubettes ham it up at LuLu's Surf Club.
LuLu's is like a Mexican Spring Break bar Hawaiian style. And that is to say it's always ready to happen. It has few locals but many young foreign tourists who
seem to seek it out as if it were a hostel with cocktails. It must be because
they can lean against the railing against the huge open-air windows
and soak up the sea breeze along with drinks and conversation. Or maybe
its that oversized flip-flop on the wall. There is a $5 cover on weekends.
The food is outstanding as well, so it's great for dinner and post-dinner drinks.
The Tiki doesn't look like a tiki bar because it's essentially
a concrete balcony with a bar (spot it from the street by the huge stainless-still
tiki torches along the railing). But it does have that Hawaiian-style
hang-loose atmosphere.

The pleasant Waikiki Beach Walk has entertainment inside and out.
The new Waikiki Beach Walk on Lewers has several spots, including Senior
Frogs. Yes, it's a bit odd to have a joint famous in many Mexican party
towns in the heart of Waikiki, but there you have it. Senior Frogs
is a pretty large place with a big dance floor, and it's more of a
casual club than a tequila-slamming cantina. At least by Mexican standards.
Across the street is The Yard House, which anyone from the mainlnd
will recognize as a nice sports bar witih good food and plenty of draught
selections.
Irish lads and lasses can't pass up at least a couple of pints at Kelley O'Neills,
a couple of doors down from the Yard House.
Away from Waikiki in the Ala Moana Shopping Center is the Mai Tai
Bar. Well, not THE Mai Tai bar as in the Royal Hawaiian, but an
open-air version that's a pretty happy Happy Hour spot for locals. Occassionally,
there's a battle of the bands and it's packed.
Below it is Pearl, a lounge-style bar that's a real gem on Tuesdays
when it has Ladies Night. This is a little more dress-up of a place,
which means slacks and shoes for dudes.
Hard Rock Cafes are usually too touristy for our taste, but
the Honolulu location is a very cool place to hang out. It is a place
to meet people, isn't cheesy and and has the atmosphere of aloha in
a big-bar feeling. The Hard Rock is large with a big tiki lanai and lots of surf boards, the bartenders are excellent and on weekends
it has the island's local best bands, plus mainstream musicians that
play when big-name concerts are in town.
Aloha Towers
Located "ewa" of Waikiki (toward
the Ewa Plantation, or the opposite direction of Diamond Head) is a
shopping/entertainment area known as the Aloha Tower. It's easy to spot
because of its large clock tower. It sits right on a marina and is a
favorite hangout of locals who want a waterside cluster of bars without
having to fight the traffic and parking of Waikiki.
One of the first stops is Gordon Biersch. For preparty drinks,
dinner or both, it has a large outdoor patio, microbrewed beer and tasty
food. Weekends can be especially crowded, which can make getting a table
after about 8 a challenge. Gordon Biersch is also known locally for
its terrific theme parties: Mardi Gras, Cinco De Mayo, etc.
After warming up at GBs, many people walk the few steps over to
Don Ho's. Yes, Tiny Bubbles Himself. Yet this is not the geeky tourist
attraction that was the pun of Johnny Carson jokes, but instead a clean,
quaint bar that is a favorite hangout for locals. A main attraction
is the great local bands. It has a nice sunset over the marina and, yes, Don Ho on the video screens.
Locals' Bars & Pubs


It's cool and casual day and night at Honolulul's at right spots.
Dollar beers!? In the heart of Honolulu?
Well, almost! In the nautical-feeling Harbor Pub, located at
the edge of the marina where Gilligan, the Skipper, Maryann (ahh, Maryann)
and the other castaways set out to sail on their infamous "three-hour
cruise," draft beers are $1.25 from 4-7 weekdays. An old, wooden
bar with more character than the SS Minnow, it's a just-off-the-boat
kind of place, which is precisely what people do after a day of sailing
or cruising around the local waters. After the annual summer regatta
in August this place is packed! In addition to the beer, which
is still cheap even when it's not a buck twenty-five, it is known
to serve the best pizza in town on get this linen tablecloth
tables. Mixed drinks are cheap and strong pours.
The Harbor Pub is directly below the Chart House at Ala Wai
Marina, which features Honolulu's best food bargain. The bar area of
the Chart House has an incredible Happy Hour from 5-7 featuring huge
appetizers for $5-6, pints of local lager for $3 and a sunset view over
the harbor. A perfect Friday routine is to have a couple of drinks at
The Harbor Pub then go upstairs for dinner and sunset at the Chart House.
There are no Sunday bikini contests anymore, but the huge open windows
looking out to Waikiki Beach (closer to the Hilton than the Royal Hawaiian)
still make The Shorebird Beach Bar a local favorite. The menu
includes cook-your-own steaks but we prefer to sit at the bar and soak
in the breeze after sunset. When hunger hits, the pork sandwich
is the call and be sure and get it with the potato salad, good enough
to impress even a Southerner.
It's only open on Fridays and Saturdays, but the Fisherman's Wharf
(on Nimitz Blvd., on the Ewa side of Aloha Towers) is a longtime
locals' spot. It's home to local actors, big-time celebrities when they
are in town and "average" people just out for a few drinks
in a very Hawaiian setting.
Murphy's, located in the cracks of downtown (a block from Aloha
Tower) is a good place for Happy Hour and THE place to be on St. Patrick's Day. The Hawaiians do it
right for the Irish, a full block party three blocks to be exact
two Irish pubs (Murphy's & O'Tooles and several drink stands along the
street), lots of Irish beer and local bands. After the party closes,
it's over the Aloha Tower to Gordon Biersch or Don Ho's. One would think
it's a misplaced Ireland by the amount of people that turn out for this
event!
So much for Magoo's with it's cheap beer, but it's replacement is still popular among UH students. That's because The Varsity (NOT to be confused with the legendary Varsity by Georgia Tech in Atlanta) is close to the University of Hawaii dormitories. The $5 pitchers are now $14, though some pints are as low as $2.50 and there are 30 choices. Mixed drinks can be as low as $1 on some nights. Some say it's too "clean" for it's own good. But location location, location.
Restaurant/Bars
There's a movement among some Honolulu
restaurants to transform themselves into happening bars after the kitchen
slows down. Few, if any, tourists ever visit these places, so these
are good spots to see locals in action.
Hang
loose at Giovanni Pastrami, which appears to simply be a nice
resturant which it is, indeed but it has that comfortable
bar attitude that makes easy to wander into and hard to leave. This
may be the friendliest place in Waikiki. Certainly for sports it's the
place to be, with its many large plasma TVs. It has a daily Happy Hour
from 3-7 that includes free pizza on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. It also
serves a killer breakfast all day and night. Tell Bill, the GM, or the
waitress Amber, that PubClub sent you.
Compadres in the Ward Center is highly popular on Tuesdays for
its taco specials. The people go more for the mingling than the tacos,
of course. It's a similar situation but with different food on Thursdays
at Sansei at the Marriott. Here the meal attraction is the sushi
(which is half-price every night after 10), but more people come for
the cool crowd and deejay.
Also in the Ward Center is Brew Moon, a brewery that turns into
a crowded after-work bar weekdays (until about 8:30) and into a club
on Sunday nites. It also has dancing on Saturdays.
In East Honolulu, Uncle Bo's serves great pupus for $5-8 and
quickly built a reputation as one of this city's finest low-key restaurants.
But it's also a neighborhood bar, kind of a dive that's hardly a dive
with its cool decor. In fact, you expect it to be a dive, but
are treated to something that's more like a relaxed lounge.
Next
stop on the Party Bus: Honolulu Nightclubs
Nightlife in The North Shore
Honolulu
Bars and Restaurant/Bars Resource Guide
| Bar/Club |
Address |
Phone (808) |
| Brew Moon |
1200 Ala Moana Blvd |
593 0088 |
| Comprades |
1200 Ala Moana Blvd |
591 8307 |
| Chart House |
1765 Ala Moana Blvd. |
941-6660 |
| Don Ho's Island Grill |
Aloha Tower Drive |
528-0807 |
| Duke's Canoe Club |
Outrigger Waikiki Hotel |
922-2268 |
| Fisherman's Wharf |
1009 Ala Moana Blvd. |
538-3808 |
| Gordon Biersch |
Aloha Tower Drive |
599 4877 |
| Harbor Pub |
1765 Ala Moana Blvd. |
941-0985 |
| Hard Rock Cafe |
1837 Kapiolani Blvd |
955 7383 |
| Indigo |
1121 Nu'uanu Ave. |
521-2900 |
| Giovanni Pastrami |
227 Lewers St. |
923-2100 |
| LuLu's Surf Club |
2586 Kalakaua Ave |
926-5222 |
| Kelley O'Neill's |
311 Lewers St. |
926-1777 |
| Mai Tai Bar (Original) |
Royal Hawaiian Hotel |
923-7311 |
| Mai Tai Bar |
Ala Moana Shopping Center |
947-2900 |
| Murphy's Bar & Grill |
2 Merchant Street |
531-0422 |
| Pearl |
Ala Moana Shopping Center |
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| Magoo's Pizza |
1015 University Avenue |
949-5381 |
| Murphy's Bar & Grill |
2 Merchant Street |
531-0422 |
| Sansei |
2252 Kalakua Blvd. |
922-6611 |
| Shorebird Beach Bar |
Outrigger Reef Hotel |
922-2887 |
| Tiki's Grill & Bar |
2570 Kalakaua Ave. |
923-8454 |
| Uncle Bo's |
559 Kapahulu Ave. |
735-8310 |
| The Varsity |
1015 University Avenue |
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| Yard House |
226 Lewers St. |
923-9273 |
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