Bar in New York City, United States
The Queensboro
100ptsQueens neighbourhood bar, Manhattan prices won't apply.

About The Queensboro
The Queensboro sits on Northern Blvd in Jackson Heights, Queens, offering a genuine neighbourhood alternative to Manhattan's more crowded bar scene. Walk-ins are easy, pricing likely runs below Manhattan equivalents, and the surrounding block gives you strong food options if you want to make a full evening of it. Best visited on a weekday early evening, or during summer for any outdoor seating.
The Queensboro, Jackson Heights: Quick Verdict
The Queensboro sits at 80-02 Northern Blvd in Jackson Heights, one of Queens' most food-dense corridors, and that address alone tells you something useful: you are trading Manhattan convenience for neighbourhood character and, almost certainly, better value per dollar. If you are the kind of drinker or diner who actively seeks out spots that feel earned rather than handed to you, this neighbourhood is worth the 7 train ride. If you need a polished Midtown address for a client dinner, look elsewhere.
Jackson Heights is a practical argument for leaving the island. The neighbourhood around Northern Blvd runs dense with independent operators across South Asian, Latin American, and pan-regional cuisines, which means The Queensboro is competing for your attention in a block radius that already has strong options. That context matters: a bar or restaurant here has to offer something specific to pull repeat visitors away from the surrounding blocks.
On the outdoor and terrace question, which is the right question to ask about any New York bar with an exterior component: the optimal window for any rooftop or terrace space in Queens runs from late May through September, with the sweet spot being early June and the first half of September when humidity drops and the evenings stay warm without the August heat. If outdoor seating is your primary reason to visit, a weekday early evening from around 5 PM to 7 PM gives you the leading combination of available space and comfortable temperature. Weekend afternoons draw a local crowd and fill faster.
For the explorer type doing a Queens bar crawl, The Queensboro makes sense as an anchor point. Jackson Heights is accessible directly from Midtown via the E, F, M, or 7 trains, and the neighbourhood is walkable enough that you can pair a stop here with the food options along 74th Street or Roosevelt Avenue without needing a car. Compare that logistics profile to a Manhattan bar like Angel's Share in the East Village or Attaboy NYC on the Lower East Side: both require the same subway effort from Midtown, but neither puts you inside a neighbourhood with the same density of adjacent food culture.
Booking here is easy by New York standards. The area does not draw the same reservation pressure as Manhattan cocktail bars, so walk-in availability is generally higher, particularly on weeknights. That makes The Queensboro a realistic option when you want a drink without planning three weeks in advance, which is a meaningful practical advantage over tightly booked spots like Amor y Amargo.
For broader context on where this fits in the city's bar scene, see our full New York City bars guide, or if you are building a fuller trip, consult our New York City restaurants guide and our New York City hotels guide for the complete picture.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 80-02 Northern Blvd, Jackson Heights, NY 11372
- Neighbourhood: Jackson Heights, Queens
- Transit: E, F, M, or 7 train to Jackson Heights-Roosevelt Ave
- Booking difficulty: Easy — walk-ins generally available, especially weeknights
- Leading timing: Early evening on weekdays, or late May through September for outdoor seating
- Price range: Not confirmed — expect Queens-neighbourhood pricing, typically below Manhattan equivalents
- Hours: Not confirmed , check directly before visiting
- Phone/website: Not listed , search directly or check Google Maps for current info
How It Compares
See the comparison section below.
FAQ: The Queensboro
What's the crowd like at The Queensboro?
Jackson Heights draws a genuinely local Queens crowd: multi-generational, neighbourhood-rooted, and less scene-conscious than what you find at Manhattan cocktail bars. Expect fewer tourists and industry workers, more regulars. That makes The Queensboro a lower-pressure environment than spots like Superbueno in Manhattan, which skews younger and more trend-aware.
Does The Queensboro have happy hour deals?
Specific happy hour details are not confirmed in our data. Queens neighbourhood bars in this corridor frequently run weekday specials, so it is worth checking directly. If a deal is your priority and you are already in Manhattan, Amor y Amargo has a clearly published program and easier walk-in access from the East Village.
Is The Queensboro good for groups?
Jackson Heights as a destination works well for groups who want to eat and drink across multiple stops, since the neighbourhood has strong options within walking distance. The Queensboro as a group anchor depends on capacity details we do not currently have confirmed. For large groups in New York who want a confirmed private or semi-private option, Angel's Share or Jewel of the South in New Orleans (if you are travelling) offer more structured group arrangements.
Is The Queensboro good for a date?
Jackson Heights is a credible date destination if your date responds well to neighbourhood character over polish. The 7 train ride sets a casual, exploratory tone that works in your favour if you frame it correctly. For a higher-stakes date where ambiance needs to carry more weight, Angel's Share in the East Village is a stronger call: quieter, more intimate, and easier to dress for.
Is the food good at The Queensboro?
We do not have confirmed cuisine details for The Queensboro specifically, so we will not speculate on the menu. What we can say: the surrounding block on Northern Blvd has strong independent food options, so if the bar itself disappoints on food, you have immediate alternatives within a short walk. For a bar with a confirmed food program worth the trip, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu or Julep in Houston give you a sense of what a strong bar kitchen looks like at this tier.
What's the signature drink at The Queensboro?
No confirmed cocktail menu data is available. Given the Queens neighbourhood context, expect pricing below Manhattan equivalents and a program that likely reflects the area's diverse cultural influences. Until we have verified menu details, we would hold off on making a specific cocktail recommendation here.
Do I need a reservation at The Queensboro?
Booking here is rated easy. Walk-ins are realistic, particularly on weeknights. No phone or website is currently listed in our data, so your leading route is checking Google Maps directly for current hours and any reservation options before you go. This is a meaningful contrast to Manhattan spots like Attaboy NYC, where walk-ins are harder to count on.
Compare The Queensboro
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| The Queensboro | — | |
| The Long Island Bar | — | |
| Dirty French | — | |
| Superbueno | — | |
| Amor y Amargo | — | |
| Angel's Share | — |
What to weigh when choosing between The Queensboro and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the crowd like at The Queensboro?
Expect a genuinely local Queens crowd: neighbourhood regulars, multi-generational, and far less scene-conscious than anything you'd find along Manhattan's bar corridors. Jackson Heights at this address on Northern Blvd draws people who actually live here, which gives the room a different energy than a bar optimised for Instagram or out-of-towners.
Does The Queensboro have happy hour deals?
No confirmed happy hour details are in our data, so call ahead or check in person before planning around it. That said, Queens neighbourhood bars along Northern Blvd routinely run weekday specials, and baseline pricing here will already run below what you'd pay for the same drink in Midtown or the West Village.
Is The Queensboro good for groups?
Jackson Heights works well for groups precisely because you're not locked into one venue — the Northern Blvd corridor gives you strong options for moving between stops across the evening. The Queensboro fits that format well as a drinks anchor, and walk-in access means you're not coordinating reservations for the whole group in advance.
Is The Queensboro good for a date?
Yes, if your date is up for a neighbourhood feel over a polished setting. The 7 train ride into Jackson Heights sets a casual, exploratory tone, and a bar on Northern Blvd that isn't trying to impress anyone tends to produce better conversation than somewhere with a two-month waitlist. If you need to guarantee atmosphere over authenticity, look elsewhere.
Is the food good at The Queensboro?
Cuisine details for The Queensboro specifically aren't confirmed in our data, so we won't speculate on the menu. What is confirmed: the surrounding Jackson Heights blocks on Northern Blvd rank among the most food-dense corridors in Queens, so eating well before or after your visit here is not a problem regardless of what the kitchen is running.
What's the signature drink at The Queensboro?
No confirmed cocktail menu data is available for The Queensboro. Given the Queens neighbourhood context and the address at 80-02 Northern Blvd, expect pricing that undercuts Manhattan equivalents by a meaningful margin — that alone makes experimentation lower-stakes than it would be at a comparable Manhattan bar.
Do I need a reservation at The Queensboro?
Walk-ins are realistic here, particularly on weeknights — booking difficulty is rated easy. No phone or website is currently listed in our data, so your best approach is to show up or check Google for current contact details before going out of your way. For weekend evenings, arriving earlier in the night gives you more options.
More bars in New York City
- (SUB)MERCER(SUB)MERCER occupies a basement address on Mercer Street in SoHo, positioning it as a deliberate destination rather than a drop-in. The subterranean format tends to keep ambient noise lower than street-level alternatives, making it a reasonable call for groups of four or more. Book ahead for weekends and confirm group capacity directly with the venue.
- 1 OR 81 OR 8 on DeKalb Avenue is a low-key Fort Greene bar that works best for two people on a weeknight when the room is quiet enough for conversation. Walk-ins are easy, no advance planning required. If a specialist cocktail program is your priority, Attaboy or Amor y Amargo offer more defined experiences — but for a neighbourhood drink without the fuss, this delivers.
- 230 Fifth Rooftop Bar230 Fifth is the easiest rooftop bar in Midtown to walk into, and the Empire State Building views justify the trip. The crowd skews groups and tourists, and the drinks are solid rather than craft-focused. Go early on a weekday for the best version of the experience; after 9 PM on weekends it tips firmly into party-group territory.
- 4 Charles Prime Rib4 Charles Prime Rib is a compact, reservation-required West Village dining room built around a focused prime rib format. It works well for dates and pairs but is too small for groups of four or more. Booking is easy relative to Manhattan peers, and the narrow menu signals a kitchen that executes one thing consistently well.
- 44 & X Hell's KitchenA low-key Hell's Kitchen neighborhood bar-restaurant that earns its place for easy weeknight dates and pre-theatre dinners. Booking is simple, the room is intimate enough for conversation, and there's no dress pressure. Not a cocktail destination, but a reliable, pressure-free option in Midtown West when you want comfort over spectacle.
- 58-22 Myrtle Ave58-22 Myrtle Ave is a low-key Ridgewood neighborhood spot that rewards return visits more than first impressions. Easy to get into, with no reservation headaches, it suits regulars looking for an unpretentious room rather than a structured cocktail program. If a strong drinks list or kitchen ambition matters to you, look to Attaboy or Amor y Amargo instead.
Related editorial
- Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026: The Chairman and Wing Go 1-2 from the Same BuildingThe Chairman takes No. 1 and Wing climbs to No. 2 at Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026. Both operate from the same Hong Kong building. Here's what it means.
- Four Seasons Yachts Debut: 95 Suites, 11 Restaurants, and a March 2026 Maiden VoyageFour Seasons I launches March 20, 2026, with 95 suites, a one-to-one staff ratio, and 11 onboard restaurants. Worth tracking if you want hotel-grade service at sea.
- LA Michelin Guide 2026: Seven New Restaurants from Tlayudas to Uzbek DumplingsMichelin's March 2026 California Guide update adds six LA restaurants and one Montecito newcomer, spanning Oaxacan tlayudas, Uzbek manti, and Korean-Italian pasta.
Save or rate The Queensboro on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
