Restaurant in Austin, United States
Lao’d Bar
345Pearl PointsBold Lao cooking, house-party energy, book soon.

About Lao’d Bar
Chef Bob Somsith's Lao American restaurant in East Austin is the city's most convincing case for Laotian cooking right now. Opened April 2024 in a converted parking lot with garage doors and string lights, it delivers chile-forward, fish sauce-driven dishes — think rib-eye lahb and lemongrass smash burgers — in a house-party setting. Easy to book, casual dress, serious spice.
Verdict
Lao'd Bar is one of the most convincing arguments for Lao American cooking in Austin right now. Chef Bob Somsith opened this East Austin spot in April 2024, converting a former parking lot into a garage-door restaurant that feels more like a backyard cookout than a sit-down dinner. Pricing data isn't published, but the setup — outdoor string lights, colorful tablecloths, frozen guava cocktails — signals casual mid-range territory. If you want sharp, chile-forward cooking in a room with zero pretension, book this. If you need white-tablecloth service or a quiet conversation space, look elsewhere.
The Space and Experience
The physical setup at Lao'd Bar is the first thing to calibrate expectations around. This is a converted parking lot with garage doors that stay open, which means the Texas heat is part of the deal. String lights overhead, communal-ish tablecloths, a house-party atmosphere, it reads deliberately casual. That's not a criticism. The spatial choices reinforce the food: loud, generous, built for sharing. For food explorers who want a meal that feels alive rather than composed, the setting delivers. For anyone expecting the cool, curated dining room of, say, Hestia, this is a different category entirely.
The bar seating and open layout mean there's no real separation between the kitchen energy and the dining room. That proximity works in Lao'd Bar's favor, the cooking is performance-adjacent, and the smells of fish sauce, fresh chiles, and charred meat travel well. The PEA-R-08 angle is real here: if you can sit at or near the bar, you get closer to the action, which adds to the overall charge of the place. Ask about counter availability when you book.
The Food
Somsith's background running a Southeast Asian food truck shows in the cooking's confidence. Laotian fundamentals, fish sauce, fresh herbs, chiles, run through the menu, but the kitchen isn't producing a strict recreation of any one tradition. The papaya salad is described as stinging with fresh chiles; the rib-eye lahb comes with a fiery crying tiger sauce that reportedly demands a cold lager alongside it. The Lao'd smash burger pairs American cheese with lemongrass-spiked pork sausage, which tells you exactly where Somsith's creative instincts sit: Lao technique and flavor logic applied to American formats. That's a productive tension, and it works.
The frozen guava cocktail is worth noting separately. It functions as a palate reset between the heavier, spicier dishes, and more than one is apparently plausible. Given the heat of both the food and the outdoor setting, that's useful to know going in.
Who This Is For
Lao'd Bar suits food-focused diners who want a specific regional cooking tradition handled with real knowledge rather than generalized Southeast Asian fusion. If you've spent time with Lao cuisine, larb, tam mak hoong, grilled meats with herb-heavy dipping sauces, you'll find the reference points here credible. If this is your first encounter with Lao cooking, the menu is accessible enough, but the chile heat is not decorative. Go with an appetite, a tolerance for spice, and cash for multiple cocktails. Groups of three or four share well; the dishes are built for the table.
This is not the venue for a quiet anniversary dinner. It's a better call for a group of curious eaters who want something that feels current without being trend-chasing. For a fuller picture of where Lao'd Bar sits in Austin's eating options, see our full Austin restaurants guide. You can also explore Austin bars, Austin hotels, Austin wineries, and Austin experiences for broader trip planning.
Booking and Practical Details
Lao'd Bar opened in April 2024, which means it is still inside its first year of operation and building its reservation rhythm. Booking difficulty is rated easy, which means you likely don't need weeks of lead time, but East Austin venues with a growing profile can shift quickly. Check current availability directly. No dress code is in effect; the outdoor-casual setting makes that obvious. The address is 9909 FM 969 Building 4, Austin, TX 78724, which puts it further east than most of Austin's central dining clusters. Factor in travel time if you're coming from downtown. Hours and pricing are not published by the venue, so confirm before you go.
Quick reference: 9909 FM 969 Building 4, Austin, TX 78724, East Austin, casual dress, easy to book, spice-forward Lao American menu, opened April 2024.
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how Lao'd Bar stacks up against its Austin peers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Lao’d Bar handle dietary restrictions?
Dietary accommodations can vary. Flag restrictions in advance via the venue's official channels.
How far ahead should I book Lao'd Bar?
Lao'd Bar opened in April 2024 and is still building its reservation rhythm, so weekend tables are filling faster as word spreads. Booking a week out is a reasonable buffer right now, though Friday and Saturday evenings may require more lead time. Check availability early in the week and have a backup date ready.
What should I order at Lao'd Bar?
The papaya salad and the crying tiger rib-eye lahb are the two dishes the kitchen is most known for — both are aggressively spiced, so order a lager alongside. The Lao'd smash burger, which combines American cheese with lemongrass-spiked pork sausage, is the creative swing worth trying. Order a frozen guava cocktail while you decide on the rest.
Is Lao'd Bar good for a special occasion?
Lao'd Bar works for a low-key celebration with the right group — think birthday dinners where the vibe matters as much as the food. The converted parking lot with garage doors, string lights, and colorful tablecloths reads as festive rather than formal. If you need white-tablecloth gravitas, Jeffrey's in Austin is the better call; Lao'd Bar rewards guests who want flavor and atmosphere over ceremony.
Location
9909 FM 969 Building 4, Austin, TX 78724, United States
Austin, United States
Compare Lao’d Bar
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lao’d Bar | Lao American | Easy | ||
| Barley Swine | New American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| la Barbecue | Barbecue | $$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Olamaie | Southern | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Jeffrey's | French - Steakhouuse, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown | |
| Kemuri Tatsu-ya | Izakaya | $$ | Unknown |
How Lao’d Bar stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Barley Swine, New American, Contemporary, $$$$
- la Barbecue, Barbecue, $$
- Olamaie, Southern, $$$
- Jeffrey's, French - Steakhouuse, Contemporary, $$$$
- Kemuri Tatsu-ya, Izakaya, $$
At the casual end of Austin dining, Lao'd Bar competes most directly with Kemuri Tatsu-ya on atmosphere and price positioning. Both are casual, share-friendly, and built around bold flavors from a specific culinary tradition. Kemuri Tatsu-ya offers a more developed bar program and a covered indoor setting, better for groups who want a longer night with more drinks. Lao'd Bar wins on specificity: if Lao cooking is what you want, there's no real substitute in Austin. la Barbecue operates at a similar price tier but is a completely different format, queue-based, barbecue-focused, daytime-oriented. Don't treat them as interchangeable; pick based on what you're in the mood for.
Moving up the price scale, Olamaie ($$$) is the right call if Southern cooking with more formal service and a quieter room matters to you. For a special occasion that requires table service and a full wine list, Olamaie is the more appropriate booking. At the top end, Jeffrey's and Barley Swine (both $$$$) are different propositions entirely: formal, polished, tasting-menu or composed-plate territory. Neither competes with Lao'd Bar's casual energy or price point, but if the occasion demands structure and service depth, those are your options.
The honest comparison for food-focused visitors is this: Lao'd Bar is the choice if you want something specific, regional, and recently opened with a distinct culinary point of view. Kemuri Tatsu-ya is the choice if you want a proven casual option with more atmosphere polish. La Barbecue is the choice if smoked meat is the priority. For broader options across cooking styles, see our full Austin restaurants guide.
Recognized By
Explore Austin
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