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    Bar in New York City, United States

    Sunday In Brooklyn

    100pts

    Williamsburg brunch without the reservation stress.

    Sunday In Brooklyn, Bar in New York City

    About Sunday In Brooklyn

    Sunday In Brooklyn at 348 Wythe Ave is a low-key Williamsburg all-day spot with a local crowd, a conversational room, and no meaningful booking difficulty. It's the right call if you want a considered Brooklyn experience without the noise or the reservation sprint. Walk-ins are realistic most days; weekends before noon or after 2 PM are your smoothest windows.

    Is Sunday In Brooklyn worth booking?

    Yes, if you're after a laid-back Williamsburg spot with genuine neighborhood energy and a strong brunch-to-cocktail range. Sunday In Brooklyn at 348 Wythe Ave has built a following among locals and visitors who want something more grounded than a hotel bar but more considered than a dive. First-timers should know upfront: this is a casual, all-day kind of place, and the crowd reflects that.

    The Space and Who You'll Find There

    The room at Sunday In Brooklyn is warm and unhurried — exposed wood, natural light when the sun cooperates, and enough breathing room that you won't feel like you're eating on leading of strangers. The layout favors couples and small groups; the vibe skews toward people who live within walking distance, creatives on weekend schedules, and visitors who've done enough homework to make it across the bridge. You're unlikely to encounter large bachelorette parties or loud tourist groups here. That's a feature, not a coincidence.

    If you're visiting for the first time, the spatial setup rewards early arrivals. The room feels more intimate before it fills, and the staff have more bandwidth for questions. Come in expecting a relaxed, slightly curated Brooklyn aesthetic — this is Williamsburg, so the room reads design-conscious without being try-hard about it.

    The crowd is largely local on weekdays, with a heavier out-of-towner mix on weekends. Either way, the energy stays conversational rather than performative. If you're looking for a quieter room where you can actually talk, Sunday In Brooklyn delivers more consistently than many comparable spots in the neighborhood.

    First-Timer Practical Guide

    Booking here is direct , this is not a place where you're scrambling for a reservation three weeks out. Walk-ins are realistic, particularly on weekday mornings and early afternoons. Weekend brunch is predictably busier, so arriving before noon or after 2 PM gives you a smoother experience without the mid-rush wait.

    The address , 348 Wythe Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11249 , puts you squarely in south Williamsburg, a short walk from the Bedford Ave L train stop. If you're coming from Manhattan, factor in the transit time and give yourself a buffer; the neighborhood rewards arriving a little early and walking the block rather than rushing in.

    Dress is casual. No one is checking. The crowd wears what they wore to run errands or take a long walk, and you should too.

    For broader context on where Sunday In Brooklyn sits relative to New York's bar and dining scene, see our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City restaurants guide, and our full New York City experiences guide. If you're planning a full trip, our New York City hotels guide and our wineries guide round out the picture.

    FAQ

    • Do I need a reservation at Sunday In Brooklyn? For most visits, no. Walk-ins work on weekdays and outside peak weekend brunch hours. If you're bringing four or more people on a Saturday or Sunday, calling ahead is smart , not because it's hard to get in, but because managing a group without a heads-up gets messy in a room this size.
    • Does Sunday In Brooklyn have happy hour deals? Specific happy hour details aren't confirmed in our data. Check directly via their website or call before planning a visit specifically around a deal , hours and pricing structures shift, and we won't guess at them.
    • What's the crowd like at Sunday In Brooklyn? Predominantly local, design-aware, and low-key. This is not a loud scene bar. Expect people who live in the neighborhood or have made a deliberate choice to come here rather than stumbling in. It's a good fit if you want to blend in rather than stand out.
    • What's the signature drink at Sunday In Brooklyn? We don't have confirmed menu data to call out a specific drink. Given the venue's positioning in Williamsburg's more thoughtful bar tier, the cocktail program is likely considered rather than generic , but we won't invent specifics. Ask the bartender when you arrive; that's always the better answer anyway.
    • Is Sunday In Brooklyn good for groups? Small groups of two to four work well here. Larger parties should check in advance about table configuration. The room isn't built for big group dining in the way some Brooklyn spots are, and you'll have a better time if expectations are set correctly before you arrive. For cocktail-forward group options in NYC, Superbueno and Attaboy NYC are worth considering depending on your priorities.

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I need a reservation at Sunday In Brooklyn?

    Walk-ins are realistic here, especially on weekdays or early on weekend mornings before the Williamsburg crowd arrives. This is not a place where tables book out weeks in advance, so you won't need to plan far ahead. That said, if you're coming with four or more people on a Sunday, a reservation removes the wait. For two, showing up is generally fine.

    Does Sunday In Brooklyn have happy hour deals?

    Sunday In Brooklyn has a cocktail program worth showing up for on its own terms, though specific happy hour pricing and hours aren't publicly confirmed. If discounted drinks are the priority, Amor y Amargo a few miles away structures its whole identity around aperitivo-style drinking and is more reliably deal-oriented. Sunday In Brooklyn is better suited to a long, unhurried session than a quick cheap round.

    What's the crowd like at Sunday In Brooklyn?

    Expect a Williamsburg mix: creative-industry locals, weekend visitors from Manhattan, and the occasional out-of-towner who found it on a list. The vibe at 348 Wythe Ave skews relaxed rather than sceney — people are here to eat and drink, not to be seen doing it. It gets fuller as the morning stretches toward afternoon, so earlier arrivals get a quieter room.

    What's the signature drink at Sunday In Brooklyn?

    Specific menu items aren't confirmed in available data, so naming a signature drink here would be guesswork. What's consistent in the venue's reputation is a cocktail list that takes the bar side of brunch seriously, rather than defaulting to bottomless mimosas. Ask the bartender what's current when you arrive — the list changes and staff tend to know it well.

    Is Sunday In Brooklyn good for groups?

    Manageable for groups up to six, less so for larger parties given the room layout and walk-in dynamics at 348 Wythe Ave. For a group brunch where everyone needs to sit together without coordinating in advance, book ahead. If the group is big and loud, Dirty French in Manhattan is built for that kind of energy and has the space to match. Sunday In Brooklyn works better for a tighter crew after a more relaxed morning.

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