Bar in Athens, Greece
Baba au Rum
1,080ptsRum-Led Cocktail Authority

About Baba au Rum
Eleven consecutive appearances on the World's 50 Best Bars list — most recently ranked #17 in 2024 — position Baba au Rum as one of the most consistently recognised bars in Europe. Located at Klitiou 6 in central Athens, the bar's back bar holds more than 400 rums, and its rum-and-cocktail-society format has drawn a devoted local and international following for over 15 years.
Fifteen Years and Still Pouring: Baba au Rum in Athens
On a narrow street in central Athens, Klitiou 6 has been the address of one of the city's most consequential bars since 2009. The room carries the weight of that history without showing strain: modernist-inspired design, carefully chosen music at a volume that still permits conversation, and a back bar stacked with more than 400 rums that functions as both working inventory and quiet argument about what a serious drinks program should look like. Baba au Rum Athens, Greece entered the scene at a moment when contemporary cocktail culture was still finding its footing in the city, and the intervening years have cemented rather than complicated its position.
The Bar That Built Athens Cocktail Culture
When Baba au Rum opened, it arrived alongside a handful of other venues attempting to shift Athens away from direct pours and tourist-facing operations. The city's bar scene in 2009 was not the recognised circuit it has since become, and the gamble of positioning a rum-specialist operation with serious cocktail credentials in the heart of the capital was not a small one. The fact that Athens now appears regularly on global bar rankings owes something to what happened on Klitiou Street in those early years.
The bar bills itself as a rum and cocktail society, a framing that matters. It signals a commitment to sugarcane spirits as a category rather than a novelty, and it positioned Baba au Rum in a different peer set from the generalist cocktail bars emerging across European capitals at the time. For context, the other Athens bars earning international recognition, including The Clumsies and Barro Negro, tend toward broader modern spirits programs. Baba au Rum's specificity around rum has been both a differentiator and a consistent identity marker across fifteen-plus years.
The World's 50 Best Bars: An Eleven-Year Presence
The rankings record for Baba au Rum is worth reading as a timeline rather than a single data point. The bar first appeared on the World's 50 Best Bars list in 2013 at number 48. By 2018 it had climbed to 22, dropped to 31 across 2019 and 2020, returned to 14 in 2021, then tracked at 25 in 2023 before reaching 17 in 2024. The 2025 Top 500 Bars ranking places it at 20. Eleven consecutive years on that list represents something the rankings industry calls a consistent presence, which in practice means the bar has survived multiple format changes to the list, the disruption of the pandemic years, and the substantial expansion of serious cocktail programs across European cities without being displaced.
For reference, The Clumsies and Line are among the Athens bars that have also earned international recognition, and the city's appearance across multiple global lists in the same cycle as Baba au Rum suggests a broader scene maturation rather than an isolated outlier result. Baba au Rum's Google rating of 4.6 across more than 4,300 reviews adds a volume dimension to those trade credentials: peer-facing awards and consumer satisfaction are, in this case, aligned.
The Rum Program and What It Actually Means
A back bar of over 400 rums is not assembled for visual effect. It represents a curatorial position about the category: that rum, more than almost any other spirit, rewards geographic specificity, age differentiation, and production-method transparency. Caribbean agricole, aged Barbadian column-still, Jamaican pot-still funk, Spanish-style sweetened expressions, and continental European blends occupy very different sensory and price registers, and a collection of this depth requires someone to know the difference and care about explaining it.
The cocktail program treats classic rum builds as reference points rather than endpoints. The Supremus n°58, an inventive riff on the Ti Punch, incorporates a rum blend alongside falernum, tea, and summer fruits. The Ti Punch itself is a drink with a near-zero tolerance for intervention in its Martinican homeland; a thoughtful adaptation for an international bar context is the kind of move that either reads as creative respect or overclaiming, depending on execution. That the bar has maintained its ranking position for over a decade suggests the former. The program also extends beyond rum: the Beatnik Paloma combines tequila, mezcal, beetroot, and black cardamom in a take on one of the most widely served long drinks in the world, which is another way of saying the bar's creative range is not limited to sugarcane.
Evolution Without Drift
The editorial angle on Baba au Rum is the one most bars cannot sustain: staying relevant without reinventing. The bars that opened in the same wave as Baba au Rum and have since closed or lost their rankings position typically fell into one of two patterns. Either they chased trend cycles too aggressively and lost their founding identity, or they held their original format so rigidly that newer, more technically sophisticated programs overtook them. Baba au Rum appears to have done neither. The rum-and-cocktail-society framing has remained consistent, while the cocktail program itself has absorbed influences from the broader evolution of the category, from the clarification and fat-washing techniques that spread across the industry post-2015 to the ingredient sourcing specificity that defines the current tier of internationally ranked bars.
Hospitality model also reflects a deliberate choice. The bar describes its philosophy as unpretentious, and in a city where the gap between high-concept bar programs and accessible neighbourhood drinking has sometimes been wide, that positioning has commercial logic behind it. High-concept drinks made accessible through genuine service is a different market than high-concept drinks served with high-concept distance. The latter tends to produce strong initial press and softer long-term retention.
Athens in Context: Where Baba au Rum Sits
Athens has developed a cocktail bar circuit that now draws international visitors specifically for the drinking rather than as an afterthought to the Acropolis visit. The Bar in Front of the Bar, Barro Negro, Line, and The Clumsies represent the peer tier that has formed around and partly because of the groundwork Baba au Rum laid in the early 2010s. The city's bar geography is relatively concentrated, which means a serious two- or three-night Athens itinerary can cover multiple globally ranked programs without significant logistical effort.
Beyond the capital, Greece's bar and hospitality scene extends across distinct settings. Hope So in Kolokinthou and Alemagou Beach Bar and Restaurant in Mykonos represent the island end of the spectrum, while AVENUE Modern Cuisine in Thessaloniki anchors the northern mainland scene. For those extending beyond Greece entirely, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu offers an instructive comparison in terms of how specialist spirits programs build long-term identity in markets where rum and tropical traditions intersect with serious cocktail technique. Further afield, Mitilini in Mytilene, 1790 wine cave in Folegandros, and Galaxy Restaurant and Bar in Pagkpati round out the broader Greek drinking map for those planning extended time in the country. Our full Athens restaurants and bars guide covers the wider scene.
Planning a Visit
Baba au Rum is located at Klitiou 6, Athens 105 60, in the city centre. The address places it within easy reach of the main tourist and nightlife zones. The bar does not operate reservation-only, which reflects the original walk-in ethos, though peak hours in the latter part of the week will naturally mean competition for seats given the size of the space and the volume of visitors it now draws. Earlier evening visits, particularly on weekdays, offer more room to engage with the drinks program deliberately rather than under crowd pressure. The rum list's depth rewards a degree of conversation with the bar team, and that conversation is easier to have before the room fills.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do regulars order at Baba au Rum?
The bar's rum-first identity means the category anchors most orders. The Supremus n°58, a Ti Punch adaptation using a rum blend, falernum, tea, and summer fruits, is among the signature cocktails. The rum selection runs to over 400 bottles, covering the main producing regions and styles, which gives the bar team genuine flexibility in building both spirit-forward and longer serves. The Beatnik Paloma, built on tequila, mezcal, beetroot, and black cardamom, is the natural entry point for guests who want to see the bar's range beyond sugarcane.
What is the defining thing about Baba au Rum?
Eleven consecutive years on the World's 50 Best Bars list, reaching number 14 in 2021 and sitting at number 17 in 2024, is the most concrete answer. That kind of sustained recognition across a period when Athens grew from an emerging bar city to a recognised circuit is not common. The bar also carries a Google rating of 4.6 from over 4,300 reviews, which indicates the trade recognition and the general public verdict are aligned rather than divergent.
Is Baba au Rum reservation-only?
Based on the bar's longstanding walk-in ethos, reservations are not required. Athens bars at the ranked tier, including Baba au Rum, have generally maintained accessible formats rather than moving to the reservation-only model that some London and New York counterparts adopted as their profiles rose. That said, the bar's international profile means demand on busy nights is real, and timing a visit earlier in the evening reduces the chance of a lengthy wait for a seat.
What is Baba au Rum a strong choice for?
It is the most appropriate choice in Athens for anyone with a specific interest in rum as a category. The 400-plus bottle back bar puts it in a different position from the broader cocktail bars in the city's peer set. For visitors working through the Athens bar scene across multiple nights, Baba au Rum sits alongside The Clumsies and Barro Negro as one of the internationally recognised stops, but it is the one that rewards genuine engagement with the spirits program rather than treating cocktails as a secondary concern.
How long has Baba au Rum been on the World's 50 Best Bars list, and what does that streak mean for the Athens bar scene?
Baba au Rum first appeared on the World's 50 Best Bars list in 2013 and has maintained a presence for eleven consecutive years, reaching as high as number 14 in 2021 and placing at number 17 in 2024. That streak is significant not just as a measure of individual bar quality but as a marker of Athens' emergence as a serious drinking city: a bar cannot sustain a decade-plus of top-tier recognition in a vacuum, and Baba au Rum's trajectory has both reflected and contributed to the development of the wider Athens cocktail scene, which now includes multiple internationally ranked venues operating in the same tier.
Recognized By
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate Baba au Rum on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.






