Restaurant in Newcastle Upon Tyne, United Kingdom
Michelin-backed pub grub at fair prices.

Broad Chare holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) and a 4.6 Google rating from over 1,500 reviews — making it the strongest case for hearty Traditional British cooking at ££ prices in Newcastle. Split across a proper ground-floor pub bar with 50+ beers and a rustic upstairs dining room, it is the Quayside's most reliably good table for the money.
With a 4.6 Google rating across more than 1,500 reviews and back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards in 2024 and 2025, Broad Chare is the clearest answer to the question of where to eat well in Newcastle without paying fine-dining prices. At ££, this quayside pub-with-kitchen delivers hearty, punchy British cooking — haggis on toast, grilled calves liver with bacon, sage and crispy onions — in a converted warehouse that has become one of the most reliably good rooms in the city. If you want serious food at pub prices in the most historically significant part of Newcastle, book here first.
Broad Chare sits on the lane it takes its name from, in the Quayside district , the oldest and most architecturally layered part of Newcastle upon Tyne. This is not a neighbourhood that needs a destination restaurant to make it interesting, but the presence of Broad Chare has made it a stronger reason to spend an evening down by the river rather than migrating north toward the city centre's busier strips. The building itself is a converted warehouse, which gives the space a solidity and character that most purpose-built gastropubs spend years trying to manufacture.
The operation splits cleanly across two floors. Ground level is a proper bar: snacks available, more than 50 beers on offer, and the kind of atmosphere that makes it a neighbourhood pub in the truest sense rather than a restaurant that happens to serve beer. If you are coming specifically to eat, the upstairs dining room is where to be , rustic in register, warm in feel, and set up for the food to take priority. For a first-timer, understanding this split matters. You are not choosing between two experiences at the same level; the upstairs dining room is where Broad Chare earns its Bib Gourmand.
The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition, held consecutively for at least two years, is a specific credential worth understanding. It does not mean the food is almost-Michelin-starred; it means the inspectors have determined the kitchen delivers notably good cooking at a price point that represents genuine value. In a city where ££££ Modern British restaurants like House of Tides and SOLSTICE BY KENNY ATKINSON set the upper end of the quality conversation, Broad Chare occupies a different and arguably more useful position: the place you can eat at twice for the price of one cover elsewhere.
Food itself is Traditional British in a way that takes the category seriously. Haggis on toast and grilled calves liver with bacon, sage and crispy onions are the kinds of dishes that require precise timing and confident seasoning to work , they are not forgiving of a kitchen operating below its leading. The fact that both appear in Michelin's notes as representative of what the kitchen does consistently suggests the standard is held across services, not just on good nights. Fair prices and a genuinely friendly team are cited alongside the food quality, which matters in a pub setting where service can often be the variable that makes or breaks an otherwise solid meal.
For a first-timer arriving in Newcastle and trying to calibrate where Broad Chare sits in the wider picture: it is not the most technically ambitious table in the city, and it is not trying to be. Compare it instead to the Pipe and Glass in South Dalton or the Hand and Flowers in Marlow , British pubs where the kitchen has earned formal recognition by doing a specific thing very well, at a price that makes the meal feel like a discovery rather than an obligation. Broad Chare is in that company at the regional level.
Beyond the food, the location gives the venue a second layer of appeal. The Quayside is where Newcastle's history is most legible , the bridges, the old lanes, the river , and Broad Chare's position on one of those lanes means a meal here comes with a sense of place that a city-centre restaurant cannot replicate. If you are visiting Newcastle for the first time and want to eat somewhere that feels genuinely rooted in the city rather than transportable to any high street, this is a stronger choice on that count than most of what you will find further north. For a fuller picture of what else the city offers across food, stays, and bars, see our full Newcastle Upon Tyne restaurants guide, our hotels guide, and our bars guide.
See the full comparison below.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Broad Chare | Traditional British | This much-loved 'proper' pub is named after the lane it sits on, in the most historic part of the city. Housed within a converted warehouse by the quay, the operation is split between the cosy ground-floor bar – serving snacks and over 50 different beers – and the rustic upstairs dining room. Here, the kitchen produces a consistently high quality offering of hearty, punchily flavoured dishes like haggis on toast and grilled calves liver with bacon, sage and crispy onions. Fair prices and a friendly team add to the appeal.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | Easy | — |
| House of Tides | Modern British, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| SOLSTICE BY KENNY ATKINSON | Modern British | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| 21 | Modern British | Unknown | — | |
| COOK HOUSE | Modern British | Unknown | — | |
| Dobson & Parnell | Modern Cuisine | Unknown | — |
How Broad Chare stacks up against the competition.
Yes. The ground-floor bar serves snacks alongside more than 50 beers, so a bar meal is a genuine option here, not an afterthought. If you want the full kitchen output, including dishes like haggis on toast or grilled calves liver, head upstairs to the dining room. The bar is the better call for solo drop-ins or a lighter visit.
The pub occupies a converted warehouse on the Quayside, split across two distinct spaces: a bar downstairs and a rustic dining room above. It holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025), which means good food at fair prices rather than a formal tasting-menu operation. Come for punchily flavoured, hearty British cooking and a wide beer selection, not a special-occasion blowout.
This is a pub, not a fine-dining room. The converted-warehouse setting and Bib Gourmand positioning both point to relaxed, everyday dress. Clean casual is appropriate for both the bar and the upstairs dining room. No need to dress up.
Solid choice. The ground-floor bar with 50+ beers and bar snacks is well-suited to eating alone without ceremony. The upstairs dining room works too, but the bar counter format makes solo visits easier in practice. The friendly team noted in its Michelin recognition adds to that comfort.
The kitchen is known for hearty, punchily flavoured British dishes. Haggis on toast and grilled calves liver with bacon, sage and crispy onions are specifically flagged in Michelin's own notes on the venue. Beyond that, the 50-beer selection is a draw in itself and worth planning around.
Broad Chare's back-to-back Bib Gourmand status has made the upstairs dining room consistently busy, so booking ahead for a sit-down meal is advisable, especially at weekends. The bar operates as a walk-in space for snacks and drinks, which gives you a fallback if you haven't planned ahead. Specific booking lead times aren't published, but treat it like any popular Michelin-recognised venue and reserve a few days out at minimum.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.