Bar in Washington DC, United States · Inside Willard InterContinental
Round Robin Bar
100Pearl PointsHistoric bar, serious cocktails, no hype needed.

About Round Robin Bar
Round Robin Bar, inside the historic Willard hotel one block from the White House, is worth booking for the room and the crowd rather than the cocktail program. Order the mint julep — the bar's drink of record since the 1850s — and arrive before 6 PM on weekdays for easy seating. Walk-ins only; no reservation required.
Round Robin Bar: Should You Go?
If you think of the Round Robin Bar as a hotel lobby bar you can skip, that is the misconception most worth correcting. Tucked inside the InterContinental The Willard Washington D.C. — one of the most storied hotels on Pennsylvania Avenue — this is a bar with genuine historical weight and a crowd to match. It draws a consistent mix of political operatives, lobbyists, out-of-town delegates, and hotel guests who know what they are walking into. If you are looking for a low-key craft cocktail den, go elsewhere. If you want a bar where the atmosphere does serious work, this one delivers.
The Willard has been hosting Washington's power set since the 1850s, and the Round Robin sits at the center of that legacy. The circular room format, which gives the bar its name, creates an unusually democratic seating arrangement, everyone faces inward, everyone can see everyone else, and that social visibility is half the point. For someone who has been once, the move on a return visit is to arrive between early evening and around 9 PM, before the post-event crowd thins out. That window is when the room functions at its finest: animated but not loud, full but not crowded.
The bar is associated with the mint julep in D.C. lore, Senator Henry Clay is said to have introduced the drink to Washingtonians here in the 19th century, making the julep the obvious order for a first or return visit. Beyond that, the cocktail list leans toward classics and American standards rather than avant-garde technique. Do not come expecting the kind of program you would find at Allegory or Silver Lyan. Come because the room, the clientele, and the historical backdrop create something those bars cannot replicate.
Booking is not required and walk-ins are easy to manage. The bar draws heavily from the hotel's guest roster and from the Pennsylvania Avenue professional corridor, so weekday evenings after 6 PM see the highest foot traffic. If you want a seat without waiting, arriving before 6 PM gives you the pick of the room. The dress code runs smart-casual at minimum, given the Willard's setting one block from the White House, the crowd skews toward business attire and you will feel underdressed in activewear. Prices reflect the hotel context, so expect to pay a premium over neighborhood bars, though not at the level of a tasting-menu cocktail bar.
For broader context on Washington D.C.'s bar scene, see our full Washington, D.C. bars guide. If you are also planning a stay in the city, our Washington, D.C. hotels guide and restaurants guide cover the full picture. For hotel bars with a similarly serious cocktail pedigree in other cities, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Jewel of the South in New Orleans are worth knowing. For classic American cocktail bars, Julep in Houston is a strong regional comparison on the julep specifically.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a reservation at Round Robin Bar?
Walk-ins are generally fine at the Round Robin Bar, and the bar counter seats are first-come. That said, during peak political or event seasons in D.C., the Willard fills up fast given its location on Pennsylvania Avenue NW. If you have a specific time in mind, calling ahead or asking the InterContinental front desk to hold a table is the safer move for groups of three or more.
What's the crowd like at Round Robin Bar?
Expect a mix of D.C. insiders, hotel guests, and visitors who know the Willard's history. This is not a scene bar — the pace is measured and the clientele skews professional. It draws political staffers, lobbyists, and tourists who have done their homework, which gives it a more purposeful atmosphere than most hotel bars on the corridor.
What's the signature drink at Round Robin Bar?
The Round Robin has a documented association with the Mint Julep, tied to the bar's 19th-century history at the Willard — Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky is credited with popularizing the drink there. That heritage makes the Mint Julep the obvious order, and it remains a reference point for first-time visitors. Beyond that, the bar program leans into classic American cocktails.
Does Round Robin Bar have happy hour deals?
Specific happy hour pricing is not confirmed in available venue data for Round Robin Bar. Given its location inside the InterContinental Willard at 1401 Pennsylvania Ave NW, pricing reflects a full-service hotel bar in one of D.C.'s higher-end properties. If value-led drinking is the priority, Service Bar on 14th Street will serve you better on price.
Does Round Robin Bar have outdoor seating?
No outdoor seating is documented for Round Robin Bar. The bar is an interior venue within the Willard Hotel, and the format is a classic enclosed bar room. If outdoor drinking is a priority, the Willard's lobby area or nearby Pennsylvania Avenue options are worth checking separately.
Is Round Robin Bar good for groups?
Small groups of two to four work well here; the bar counter and surrounding seating accommodate that format comfortably. Larger groups of six or more will find the space tight and the atmosphere not naturally suited to loud gatherings. For a bigger group with cocktail focus in D.C., Barmini's structured tasting format or a private booking elsewhere will serve you better.
Location
InterContinental the Willard Washington D.C. by IHG, 1401 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC 20004
Washington DC, United States
Compare Round Robin Bar
| Venue |
|---|
| Round Robin Bar |
| Allegory |
| Service Bar |
| Silver Lyan |
| Barmini |
| Press Club |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Allegory, Notable alternative
- Service Bar, Notable alternative
- Silver Lyan, Notable alternative
- Barmini, Notable alternative
- Press Club, Notable alternative
Round Robin Bar occupies a different category from most of Washington D.C.'s serious cocktail bars, and that distinction matters when deciding where to go. Allegory and Silver Lyan are the stronger choices if you are prioritising cocktail craft and original programming, both run ambitious, technically precise menus that Round Robin does not try to match. Barmini sits further along that spectrum toward the experimental end. If cocktail quality is your primary criterion, those three outrank Round Robin on that metric alone.
Where Round Robin wins is atmosphere and historical credibility. Press Club offers a similarly D.C.-insider crowd in a different setting, and is worth comparing if the political-professional atmosphere is what you are after. Service Bar is the better pick for a casual, accessible room with serious cocktails at a lower price point. Round Robin costs more than Service Bar and delivers less on cocktail innovation, but it delivers something those bars cannot: a room with genuine historical weight that shapes who shows up and how the evening feels.
The straightforward booking logic: choose Round Robin if the Willard setting and D.C. insider crowd are the draw, and you want a classic rather than creative cocktail. Choose Allegory or Silver Lyan if the drink in your hand matters more than the room around it. For D.C. bar planning across all categories, our full Washington, D.C. bars guide and Washington, D.C. wineries guide cover the wider options.
Explore Washington DC
Save or rate Round Robin Bar on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
