Bar in Nashville, United States
The Crying Wolf
100Pearl PointsEast Nashville dive bar, no fuss required.

About The Crying Wolf
The Crying Wolf sits in East Nashville's Five Points area — a neighborhood bar that draws locals rather than tourists and offers a lower-key alternative to the downtown honky-tonk strip. Pricing and hours aren't confirmed in Pearl's database, so verify before visiting. Walk-ins are generally easy, and the area typically offers better value per round than The Gulch or Midtown.
The Crying Wolf, Nashville: Pearl Verdict
If you're planning a first visit to The Crying Wolf on Woodland Street in East Nashville, the honest answer is that pricing details and hours aren't publicly confirmed in Pearl's database — which means you should check current information directly before committing your evening. What is confirmed: this is a neighborhood bar on a strip that has become one of Nashville's more interesting after-dark options outside downtown, and for a first-timer, East Nashville in general tends to offer better value per round than the Broadway honky-tonk corridor.
The address — 823 Woodland Street, Suite D , puts The Crying Wolf in the Five Points area of East Nashville, a part of the city where the bar scene skews local rather than tourist-heavy. The energy here is lower-key than Lower Broadway: expect conversation-friendly noise levels rather than the wall-of-sound atmosphere you get closer to downtown. If you're arriving from central Nashville for the first time, that shift in mood is the main thing to prepare for. This is a place to settle in, not to pass through.
For a first-timer weighing up where to spend a round, East Nashville bars in this bracket typically run $10–$16 per cocktail, which compares favorably to premium cocktail rooms in The Gulch or Midtown. Without confirmed pricing data from the venue, Pearl can't validate whether The Crying Wolf sits at the lower or upper end of that range , but the neighborhood positioning suggests it's not a high-cover, high-markup operation. That matters when you're deciding whether a cab ride across town is worth it versus staying closer to your hotel.
Booking difficulty is easy. East Nashville neighborhood bars at this profile level rarely require reservations for parties of two or three, and walk-in availability is generally strong except on weekend nights when local demand picks up. If you're planning a Friday or Saturday visit, arriving before 9 PM is the practical move. For groups larger than four, calling ahead is worth the effort even if formal reservations aren't required.
Pearl covers the wider Nashville bar scene in depth. For more options in the area, see our full Nashville bars guide, or if you're building a full evening, our full Nashville restaurants guide covers dining options across the city. Other East Nashville-adjacent spots worth comparing include 12 South Taproom and Grill and 417 Union for a different price-point and atmosphere read. If you're making a night of it, 5th & Taylor and 8th & Roast round out a useful comparison set across Nashville neighborhoods.
For context on how Nashville's craft cocktail bar scene sits relative to other Southern cities, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, Julep in Houston, and Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu each represent what a destination-level bar program looks like in their respective markets , useful benchmarks if you're calibrating expectations. Nashville's East Side scene is developing in that direction, though most venues including this one are still building toward that tier rather than operating squarely within it.
Also worth bookmarking as you plan: our full Nashville hotels guide, our full Nashville wineries guide, and our full Nashville experiences guide for broader trip planning.
Quick reference: East Nashville neighborhood bar, 823 Woodland St Suite D , walk-ins generally available, arrive before 9 PM on weekends, verify current hours before visiting.
FAQ: The Crying Wolf, Nashville
Does The Crying Wolf have happy hour deals?
- Happy hour details are not confirmed in Pearl's database. East Nashville bars in this category commonly run happy hour specials from around 4–7 PM on weekdays, but you should verify current offers directly with the venue before planning around it. Check social media channels or call ahead for up-to-date pricing.
Is The Crying Wolf good for a date?
- East Nashville's Five Points area generally works well for a date , lower noise levels than downtown, more relaxed pacing, and a neighborhood crowd rather than a bachelorette-party mix. If the atmosphere at The Crying Wolf matches the area's general character, it's a reasonable first-date call. For higher-stakes date nights with more confirmed ambiance data, Skull's Rainbow Room offers a more established setting with live jazz.
Do I need a reservation at The Crying Wolf?
- Booking difficulty is rated easy. Reservations are unlikely to be required for small groups on weeknights. On Friday and Saturday nights, arriving before 9 PM is the practical hedge. Phone number is not publicly listed in Pearl's database , check the venue's social channels for the most current contact details.
What's the signature drink at The Crying Wolf?
- Specific menu items and signature cocktails are not confirmed in Pearl's database. Without verified data, Pearl won't guess at dish or drink names. For a bar in this neighborhood and price tier, expect a cocktail list that leans creative rather than classic-focused, but confirm the current menu directly before visiting if that distinction matters to your choice.
Is the food good at The Crying Wolf?
- Food quality details and menu specifics are not confirmed in Pearl's database. If food is a deciding factor for your visit, verify the current kitchen offering before booking. For a reliable food-forward bar experience in Nashville with confirmed quality signals, 5th & Taylor is a stronger guaranteed bet.
What's the crowd like at The Crying Wolf?
- The Five Points, East Nashville location strongly suggests a local rather than tourist-heavy crowd. This part of the city draws Nashville residents, creative-industry workers, and people specifically seeking an alternative to the Broadway strip. Expect a younger-to-mid-thirties demographic on most nights, with weekend energy picking up after 9 PM. If you're visiting Nashville primarily as a tourist and want to see the local side of the city's bar scene, this neighborhood is a reasonable place to look.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does The Crying Wolf have happy hour deals?
Happy hour details for The Crying Wolf aren't confirmed in current venue data, which is common for East Nashville neighborhood bars that rotate specials informally. Your best move is to call ahead or check their social media before going. If deal-hunting is the priority, Green Hour Cocktail & Absinthe Lounge publishes its specials more consistently.
Is The Crying Wolf good for a date?
It works well for a low-key first or second date — East Nashville dive bars tend to reward conversation over spectacle, and 823 Woodland St has that unpretentious neighborhood feel. Skip it if your date expects a polished cocktail lounge; The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club on that front is a stronger call. The Crying Wolf suits people who'd rather talk than perform.
Do I need a reservation at The Crying Wolf?
No reservation is needed. The Crying Wolf operates as a walk-in bar, typical for the East Nashville neighborhood format at this address. Showing up early on weekends is sensible if you want seating, but there's no booking system to worry about.
What's the signature drink at The Crying Wolf?
No specific signature cocktail is confirmed in available venue data. The Crying Wolf is a neighborhood bar rather than a high-concept cocktail program, so expect solid standards over elaborate house creations. If a standout cocktail menu is what you're after, Green Hour or The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club are better-suited options in Nashville.
Is the food good at The Crying Wolf?
The Crying Wolf has a kitchen, which puts it ahead of many East Nashville bars that run food trucks or nothing at all. Confirmed cuisine details aren't available, but the format at 823 Woodland St points to casual bar food rather than a destination dining program. Come for the drinks; treat the food as a bonus.
What's the crowd like at The Crying Wolf?
Expect a mix of East Nashville regulars and people who've crossed the river from downtown to avoid the Broadway tourist strip. The Woodland Street location puts it squarely in the neighborhood bar category — casual dress, no velvet rope, no dress code pressure. It's a different energy from Skull's Rainbow Room or Robert's Western World, both of which draw more visitors and have more defined character.
Location
823 Woodland St Suite D, Nashville, TN 37206
Nashville, United States
Compare The Crying Wolf
| Venue |
|---|
| The Crying Wolf |
| Attaboy Nashville |
| Green Hour Cocktail & Absinthe Lounge |
| Robert's Western World |
| Skull's Rainbow Room |
| The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Attaboy Nashville, Notable alternative
- Green Hour Cocktail & Absinthe Lounge, Notable alternative
- Robert's Western World, Notable alternative
- Skull's Rainbow Room, Notable alternative
- The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club, Notable alternative
Against Nashville's other notable bars, The Crying Wolf occupies a different lane from most of its peers. Attaboy Nashville is the stronger call if cocktail quality and technical precision are your priority, it's a destination-level program with a national reputation, and worth the effort for serious cocktail drinkers. The Crying Wolf's East Nashville positioning suggests a more casual, neighborhood-first experience rather than a craft cocktail destination, which makes it a better fit if you're after atmosphere over execution.
For value per round, Robert's Western World on Lower Broadway is unbeatable if you want live country music and cheap beer in a genuinely local institution, though the tourist-to-local ratio has shifted over the years. Green Hour Cocktail & Absinthe Lounge is worth considering if you want a more specialized bar concept with a clear point of view. The Fox Bar & Cocktail Club sits closer to The Crying Wolf's neighborhood-bar profile but with more confirmed data available for planning purposes.
The clearest decision logic: if you're staying downtown and want a single strong cocktail bar without crossing town, Skull's Rainbow Room gives you a more storied setting with live jazz and a confirmed track record. If you're already in East Nashville or actively want to avoid the downtown scene, The Crying Wolf's location makes it the natural local option, just go in with current hours verified and expectations calibrated to neighborhood bar rather than destination cocktail lounge.
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