Reservations
Stunning Art Deco banking hall with live music and polished cocktails; great atmosphere but pricey drinks, auto service charge, and occasional service and access frustrations.
The Nickel Bar delivers a compelling cocktail and live music experience anchored by its spectacular restored banking hall, earning a solid grade B+ performance. Exceptional setting appeal and strong destination appeal are genuine strengths, but inconsistent execution during busy periods—including variable service speed and crowding—prevents a higher grade. Best experienced off-peak when the glamorous atmosphere and polished cocktails shine without the service friction.
Set in The Ned’s restored banking hall, The Nickel Bar delivers a glamorous, buzzing scene with a live band at the center and cocktails flowing. Reviewers rave about the room’s Art Deco grandeur and call it a must-see space, offering lines like, "the hall alone is worth the visit." Service is often warm, though when it is heaving the experience can shift to crowded and loud, with queues and slower rounds. Pricing reflects the setting, and an automatic service charge on drinks is a recurring talking point. The culinary approach leans elevated traditional: classic cocktails, British desserts, and occasional sets like the £70 three-course menu rather than avant-garde flourishes. Guests highlight well-made drinks and a Sunday buffet that over-delivers for a hotel bar, tempered by occasional notes about cocktails skewing sweet and band quality varying by night. If you are here for the atmosphere and music, the package is compelling; for a quiet conversation, consider off-peak times. Families can stop by earlier in the day, but this is ultimately an adult-oriented venue. Under-18s are reportedly allowed until the evening, yet the loud band, limited kid-friendly dishes, and focus on drinks mean picky eaters will be happier elsewhere. From the current menu, simpler items like soup with cheese straws or a classic dessert might land, but there is no clear kids’ menu and seating can be scarce during prime hours.
Area: Financial district with grand architecture and upscale hotels and bars; weekday professional crowd, more mixed on evenings and weekends.
Safety: Well-lit, high foot traffic during business hours, generally safe and well-maintained.
Nearby: Inside The Ned hotel’s historic former bank hall with multiple restaurants and a central performance stage.
Available: Reservations
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