Reservations · Takeout · Outdoor seating
Open-air bar and grill with lively live music, solid fried/grilled staples, happy-hour deals, and friendly vibe; service and waits can lag when packed.
My Friends Place delivers solid casual dining with reliable comfort-food execution and appealing open-air Caribbean atmosphere, supported by fair pricing and happy hour value. However, service and speed fluctuate under crowd load, and the straightforward menu lacks distinction. The grade reflects what most diners experience: a fun, unpretentious night out where live music and friendly vibes matter more than culinary ambition.
Open-air nights at My Friends Place feel warm and bustling, with breezy tables, karaoke, and live singers who keep the crowd smiling. Reviewers gush that the vibe is "a perfect way to wrap up the night," though some note waits when it is booming. Happy hour brings 2-for-1 drinks and a friendly staff presence even on busy evenings. The cooking leans classic bar-and-grill: fried or grilled chicken, fish, wraps, and coconut shrimp. It is comfort-first cooking rather than cheffy theater, which suits the music-forward scene. Portions are decent, prices fair for the Gap, and the fish and chicken strips draw steady praise. Expect straightforward plates over flashy presentations, and arrive patient on peak music nights. Families do fine here thanks to simple crowd-pleasers like fries, chicken, and burgers. Seating is open-air and casual, so it is easy with kids, though volume can spike near the speakers. Veggie choices exist but are basic (salads and sides), so plan accordingly if you need more variety.
Area: Touristy beachfront strip known for nightlife, bars, karaoke, and casual eateries drawing visitors and locals.
Safety: Generally safe, lively at night with steady foot traffic; typical nightlife bustle and occasional noise.
Nearby: Near hotels like Infinity on the Beach; steps from nightlife, beaches, and other restaurants on the Gap.
Available: Reservations, Takeout, Outdoor seating
View full analysis on Seemor →