Bar in New York City, United States
La Noxe
100Pearl PointsWorth the detour if you find it.

About La Noxe
La Noxe is a small, low-profile bar on the Chelsea-Flower District border, entered from W 28th St. It's best for pairs or threes who want a focused, no-fuss drinking experience midweek. Booking is easy, but weekend capacity is tight — go Tuesday to Thursday for the smoothest visit.
Quick Verdict
La Noxe sits on the Chelsea-Flower District border at 315 7th Ave (entrance on 162 W 28th St), and seating is the first constraint worth knowing about: this is a small-format bar, and the leading spots go fast on weekend evenings. If you're planning a visit, Tuesday through Thursday gives you the leading chance of settling in without competing for space.
What to Expect
The entrance on W 28th St is easy to miss, which keeps the crowd self-selecting — people who make it inside tend to know why they're there. Visually, the room leans dark and close, the kind of space where what's in the glass gets your attention rather than the decor. For a returning visitor, that's actually a useful signal: the bar is doing the work, not the room design.
Flower District location means you're between Chelsea and Midtown South, which makes La Noxe a reasonable anchor for an evening that starts with dinner elsewhere nearby. It's worth noting that pricing data isn't publicly confirmed, so budgeting per round is difficult to do precisely in advance. That said, Manhattan bar pricing at this address tier typically runs $18–22 per cocktail — and if you're comparing value per round against Amor y Amargo or Angel's Share, the question becomes what you're getting for that spend. Without confirmed menu or awards data, the honest answer is: visit once to calibrate, then decide whether it earns a regular slot.
For groups, the small footprint is the main practical constraint. A pair works well at the bar. Four or more should check in advance whether there's table seating that can accommodate. If you're organising a larger night out, Superbueno handles groups more predictably, and Attaboy NYC is better suited to walk-in flexibility on quieter nights.
Booking is easy by Manhattan standards, no weeks-in-advance pressure. Midweek visits require no reservation. If you're going Friday or Saturday, a call or message ahead is sensible given the limited capacity.
Explore more in our full New York City bars guide, or browse our New York City restaurants guide and New York City hotels guide for the full picture. Further afield, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston are worth bookmarking if you travel for great bar programs. Also see our New York City wineries guide and New York City experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does La Noxe have happy hour deals?
No confirmed happy hour pricing is on record for La Noxe. Given its location on W 28th St at the Chelsea-Flower District border, it draws an after-work crowd, so arriving early on weeknights tends to mean shorter waits and more space at the bar even without a formal deal. Call ahead or check social media closer to your visit.
Do I need a reservation at La Noxe?
The entrance on W 28th St is deliberately low-profile, which naturally limits foot traffic, but that does not mean walk-ins are always straightforward. If you are going on a weekend or with a group, check the venue's official channels before showing up. The address to keep handy: 315 7th Ave, entrance on 162 W 28th St.
What's the crowd like at La Noxe?
The easy-to-miss entrance does the filtering for you — the crowd skews toward people who sought the place out rather than stumbled in. Expect a mix of neighbourhood regulars and out-of-neighbourhood drinkers who did their research. It is quieter than the broader Chelsea bar scene precisely because of the location and the lack of obvious signage.
What's the signature drink at La Noxe?
Specific menu details are not confirmed for La Noxe, so pinning down a single signature is not possible here without risking bad information. The safest move: ask the bartender on arrival. Venues in this part of the Flower District tend to have bar programs with clear points of view, and staff at places like this usually have a recommendation ready.
Is La Noxe good for groups?
Seating is the first constraint at La Noxe — it is noted in every account of the space. Groups of more than four should contact the venue before committing. For a more reliably group-friendly option nearby, Dirty French or Superbueno offer more capacity with confirmed booking infrastructure. La Noxe works better for pairs or small groups who are flexible.
Location
315 7th Ave , Entrance, 162 W 28th St at, New York, NY 10001
New York City, United States
Compare La Noxe
| Venue | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|
| La Noxe | Easy |
| The Long Island Bar | Unknown |
| Dirty French | Unknown |
| Superbueno | Unknown |
| Amor y Amargo | Unknown |
| Angel's Share | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- The Long Island Bar, Notable alternative
- Dirty French, Notable alternative
- Superbueno, Notable alternative
- Amor y Amargo, Notable alternative
- Angel's Share, Notable alternative
Against the wider New York bar scene, La Noxe occupies a quieter, more understated register than most. The Long Island Bar in Brooklyn is the clearer choice if you want a proven track record, confirmed great cocktails, and a neighbourhood feel with more breathing room. Dirty French isn't a direct comparison, it's a restaurant with bar seating, but if your evening needs food alongside drinks, that's where to go instead.
For cocktail-forward bars at a similar price tier, Amor y Amargo and Angel's Share both offer more documented quality signals and a clearer sense of what you're paying for per round. If value certainty matters, those two are safer first choices. Superbueno wins on group-friendliness and energy if you're after a livelier room.
La Noxe makes the most sense as a return visit once you've calibrated it against your own preferences. It's easy to book, well-located for a Midtown South evening, and the small room suits a specific kind of night. But if you're choosing cold for a special occasion or a first impression of New York bar culture, lead with Amor y Amargo or Angel's Share and save La Noxe for a Tuesday when you want something lower-key.
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