Bar in Miami, United States
The Stage
100Pearl PointsLow-key Wynwood-edge bar worth the detour.

About The Stage
The Stage occupies a Design District-adjacent address that puts it closer to Miami's creative neighborhood crowd than to the South Beach tourist circuit. Booking is easy, which makes it a lower-stakes option for an evening that combines drinks with serious bar food — though price and menu specifics should be confirmed before you commit.
Should You Book The Stage?
If you're comparing Miami bar-and-food options along the NE 38th Street corridor, The Stage sits in a different lane from the heavily branded, tourist-facing spots farther south. Where Mango's leans on spectacle and Broken Shaker leads with craft cocktail credentials, The Stage positions itself as a neighborhood-oriented venue in Miami's Design District fringe — the kind of place where the food program is meant to be taken seriously alongside the drinks. Whether that promise holds up in practice is the real question worth answering before you book.
The Space
The address — 170 NE 38th St , places The Stage in a pocket of Miami that's close enough to Wynwood and the Design District to draw a design-literate crowd, but removed enough from the main drags to feel less performative. Venues in this zone tend toward open-air or semi-industrial layouts, favoring spatial breathing room over the compressed energy of a South Beach room. If you're looking for a setting where conversation is possible and the layout doesn't force you into someone else's night, this neighborhood tier of Miami generally delivers that. The tradeoff is less foot traffic, which means a slightly lower-energy baseline compared to the Wynwood corridor.
The Food Question
Pearl's editorial angle here is direct: is the food at The Stage worth ordering seriously, or is it bar snacks dressed up? The honest answer, given the venue's positioning in the Design District-adjacent zone, is that the food program likely aims higher than standard bar fare , this area of Miami has seen a meaningful shift in recent years, with venues updating their kitchen ambitions to match the neighborhood's design and hospitality credentials. That said, without verified menu data in Pearl's database, the specific execution isn't something we can confirm. What the location and concept suggest is a venue that's trying to compete on more than drinks alone. If food quality is your deciding factor, treat this as a venue to verify on arrival rather than one to book specifically for a food-led evening , at least until more detail is on record.
Booking and Practical Details
Reservations: Booking difficulty is rated Easy , walk-ins are likely viable, particularly earlier in the evening. Dress: No dress code data on file; the Design District-adjacent crowd skews smart-casual. Budget: Price range is not confirmed in Pearl's database , budget for mid-tier Miami pricing as a baseline, and verify current figures directly with the venue. Getting there: 170 NE 38th St is driveable from both Wynwood and Brickell; street parking and nearby lots are the standard approach for this part of Miami.
How It Compares
See the full comparison section below for how The Stage stacks up against Bar Kaiju, Café La Trova, and others in Miami's bar scene. For broader context, the Pearl Miami bars guide covers the full range , from Wynwood to South Beach , including venues like Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and Jewel of the South in New Orleans if you want benchmarks from other serious bar markets. The Miami restaurants guide, Miami hotels guide, Miami wineries guide, and Miami experiences guide are useful if you're planning a full trip around this neighborhood. For cocktail bars with a similar low-key register, Julep in Houston is a useful comparison point for what a serious food-and-drink hybrid can look like when the kitchen is given equal billing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is The Stage known for?
The Stage is primarily known for its core concept and execution in Miami.
Where is The Stage located?
The Stage is located in Miami, at 170 NE 38th St, Miami, FL 33137.
How can I contact The Stage?
You can reach The Stage via the venue's official channels.
Location
170 NE 38th St, Miami, FL 33137
Miami, United States
Compare The Stage
| Venue | Awards |
|---|---|
| The Stage | |
| Bar Kaiju | World's 50 Best |
| Broken Shaker | World's 50 Best |
| Mango's | World's 50 Best |
| Sweet Liberty Drinks & Supply Company | World's 50 Best |
| Swizzle Rum Bar & Drinkery | World's 50 Best |
Comparing your options in Miami for this tier.
Also Consider
- Bar Kaiju, Notable alternative
- Broken Shaker, Notable alternative
- Mango's, Notable alternative
- Sweet Liberty Drinks & Supply Company, Notable alternative
- Swizzle Rum Bar & Drinkery, Notable alternative
Against Miami's better-known bar options, The Stage occupies a quieter position, and that's either a selling point or a drawback depending on what you're after. Broken Shaker remains the clearest benchmark for craft cocktail quality in Miami: the program is genuinely strong, the garden setting is distinct, and it's the right pick if the drink is the whole point of the evening. The Stage, by contrast, seems to pitch itself as a more complete venue where food carries equal weight, a different proposition, and one that suits a different kind of night out.
Bar Kaiju is worth considering if you want Wynwood energy with a more focused, genre-specific concept. Mango's is in an entirely separate category, high volume, tourist-oriented, built around spectacle rather than quality. If you're value-focused and want a bar that takes food seriously without the South Beach premium, The Stage's neighborhood positioning is genuinely useful: you're not paying for a famous address. Café La Trova is the stronger pick if Cuban-influenced cocktails and a more culturally specific atmosphere matter to you, it has verifiable credentials and a more documented food-and-drink program. For rum-forward drinking, Swizzle Rum Bar and Sweet Liberty both offer more confirmed depth in their respective specialties.
The honest recommendation: if you're optimizing for a known quantity, Broken Shaker or Café La Trova are safer bets with more documented quality signals. The Stage is worth a visit if you're already in the Design District area and want something lower-key and less booked-out, easy reservations mean no planning penalty, and the neighborhood itself is worth the trip regardless.
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