Bar in New Orleans, United States · Inside Walt Disney World Dolphin Resort
Bourbon St
100Pearl PointsGo once. Go loose. Go prepared.

About Bourbon St
Bourbon Street is New Orleans' most famous strip and the city's definitive late-night social experience, best visited for the atmosphere and the occasion rather than the food. No reservations, no cover, legal open containers. For serious cocktails or food, use it as a warm-up and head to better-equipped bars nearby.
Who Should Go, and When
Bourbon Street is the right call if you want New Orleans in its most unfiltered form: open containers, live brass bands spilling out of doorways, and a crowd that runs from bachelorette parties to seasoned locals who've been doing this for decades. If you're visiting New Orleans for the first time and want to understand what the city's reputation is built on, a walk down Bourbon Street is a practical orientation. If you're after a quiet dinner or a focused cocktail experience, go somewhere else first and come back here after 11 PM when the occasion fits the energy.
The Space
Bourbon Street is a public thoroughfare in the French Quarter, not a single venue, which matters for planning. The street itself is roughly 13 blocks long, running from Canal Street through the heart of the Quarter. The section between Canal and St. Ann is where most of the action concentrates: daiquiri shops with open windows, bars with balconies overlooking the street, and music venues with no cover and wide-open doors. The spatial experience is dense and loud. Balcony seating at the bars that have it gives you a better vantage point and slightly more breathing room than the street-level crush, especially during Mardi Gras or Jazz Fest.
Is the Food Worth Taking Seriously?
Mostly no, but with exceptions. The food options along Bourbon Street skew toward late-night convenience: po'boys, fried seafood, and bar snacks designed to absorb what you're drinking. A handful of sit-down spots along or just off Bourbon serve food that's worth ordering on its own merits, but for serious eating, you're better positioned two or three blocks away. If food quality is your priority, Bourbon Street is a detour, not a destination. The street earns its place as a social experience, not a culinary one. For food-forward bar programs in New Orleans, Jewel of the South is the stronger choice.
Practical Details
No reservations needed. The street is open and walkable at all hours. Drinking open containers in the street is legal in New Orleans, which is the governing logic of most of what happens here. Peak crowds run from Thursday through Sunday nights and spike dramatically during festival periods. If you're visiting during Mardi Gras, plan for the street to be nearly impassable by mid-evening. Explore our full New Orleans bars guide and our full New Orleans restaurants guide to plan around Bourbon Street rather than anchoring your whole trip to it.
Quick reference: Walk-in only, open 24 hours, legal open containers, leading visited Thursday–Sunday nights or during festival season.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Bourbon St have outdoor seating?
The entire street is the outdoor seating. Bourbon Street is a public thoroughfare in New Orleans' French Quarter where open containers are legal, so most people drink while walking. A handful of bars have balconies overlooking the street, which are worth claiming if you want to watch the crowd rather than be swallowed by it.
What's the crowd like at Bourbon St?
Loud, dense, and mixed in every sense: tourists on bachelorette runs, locals passing through, and first-timers who underestimated the noise. Weekend nights from around 10pm onward are the most chaotic. If that energy is what you came to New Orleans for, you'll fit right in. If you want the city's more local side, Frenchmen Street draws a different crowd entirely.
Is Bourbon St good for groups?
Yes, provided your group wants the same thing: drinks in hand, no reservations, and no plan. It handles large groups well precisely because there's no venue to coordinate. The open-container policy means you can keep moving, which suits groups that would struggle to agree on a single bar anyway. For a more curated group night, Cane & Table or The Carousel Bar give you a defined space and a reason to stay put.
Is Bourbon St good for a date?
Not unless the date specifically wants the spectacle. The noise level makes conversation difficult, and the vibe skews toward group revelry rather than anything intimate. For a first date or a night you want to remember clearly, Cure in Uptown or Jewel of the South in the Quarter offer a far better setting. Bourbon Street works as a late-night detour after dinner, not as the main event.
Is the food good at Bourbon St?
Mostly it's functional: po'boys, fried seafood, and bar snacks built for people who have been drinking. That's not a condemnation, it's just accurate. If you want a meal worth planning around, Bourbon Street is the wrong street. Jewel of the South and Cane & Table, both in the French Quarter, are short walks away and a significant step up in quality.
Location
New Orleans, LA
New Orleans, United States
Compare Bourbon St
| Venue | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|
| Bourbon St | Easy |
| Jewel of the South | Unknown |
| Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 | Unknown |
| Cure | Unknown |
| Cane & Table | Unknown |
| The Carousel Bar | Unknown |
How Bourbon St stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Jewel of the South, Notable alternative
- Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29, Notable alternative
- Cure, Notable alternative
- Cane & Table, Notable alternative
- The Carousel Bar, Notable alternative
Bourbon Street and New Orleans' serious cocktail bars exist in almost entirely separate categories, which makes comparison practical rather than harsh. If you want a genuinely considered drink program, Cure in the Uptown neighbourhood is the most technically accomplished option in the city, with a focused menu and a room that rewards a slower pace. Jewel of the South in the French Quarter splits the difference: it's close enough to the Quarter energy to feel connected, but the cocktail program is a real reason to show up rather than a backdrop to the street outside.
For something thematically immersive without the chaos, Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 and Cane & Table both deliver a strong sense of place with drinks to match. The Carousel Bar at the Hotel Monteleone, see The Carousel Bar, is the one French Quarter option that overlaps meaningfully with Bourbon Street's tourist draw while still offering a genuinely good Manhattan. It's the easiest recommendation if your group is split between wanting an experience and wanting a quality drink.
Bourbon Street wins on accessibility, scale, and the specific occasion it serves. None of the above alternatives replace it for a first-time visitor who wants to understand New Orleans at full volume. But if food quality or cocktail craft is your measure, any of the four named bars above will deliver more per dollar. Check our full New Orleans bars guide to map out a night that starts on Bourbon and ends somewhere worth the tab.
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