GuideUpdated July 15, 2026

5 Best Cocktails and snack Restaurants in Montreal

The best 5 restaurants for cocktails and snack in Montreal — curated by TastyPals editors.

The best cocktails and snack restaurants in Montreal are The Coldroom, Bootlegger Cocktail Bar & Cuisine Montréal, Atwater Cocktail Club, and more. Start with The Coldroom if you want the strongest overall first pick.

By Carlos Mendez5 ranked picksPublished July 15, 2026Updated July 15, 2026
5 Best Cocktails and snack Restaurants in Montreal
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Top picks at a glance

How the restaurants compare

How we chose

We looked for restaurants that feel like a strong fit for the guide topic, not just the most obvious names in the city. The shortlist favors rooms with clear mood, dependable pacing, and enough distinction to help someone decide faster. Read our full methodology →

Room tone

Lighting, pace, and general energy all need to support the reason someone clicked this guide.

Food fit

We favored restaurants that feel best suited for the moment, not just restaurants with broad reputation.

Useful range

The final list tries to give readers enough variation in neighborhood, price, and style to compare real options.

5 ranked picks

The ColdroomThe Coldroom operates on a premise that still carries genuine romance in the age of over-tagged cocktail bars: there is no sign, no obvious door, no concession to the casual passerby. The entrance is unmarked, tucked into the stone-and-brick texture of Old Montreal, and you find it the way the bar intends — by being told. What waits inside is reportedly a narrow, dim room kept deliberately small, the kind of proportions that put the bartender within arm's reach and make the bar rail feel like a conversation rather than a transaction. The neighbourhood adds its own atmosphere: Vieux-Montréal at night has a weight to it, and a room this spare lets that weight in without fighting it. For a date, the geometry alone does half the work. The bar's reputation rests entirely on its cocktails, which is precisely how it should be. By consistent account, The Coldroom builds its drinks on classical structure — precise ratios, clean technique, house variations that know what they are riffing on. Regulars and reviewers alike point to the foundational classics as the honest measure of the place, and the consensus is that it passes those tests. The bar food is described as limited and deliberately so, calibrated to extend an evening rather than anchor it. No dish competes with the glass in front of you, which is, clearly, the philosophy. Come early if a seat at the bar matters to you — and by most accounts, it should, since that is where the pacing and the bartender access make the experience cohere. The room is too tight for groups of more than three or four without losing the intimacy that defines it. Couples are its natural audience. Arrive before nine on a weekend, speak quietly, and let the room do what it was built to do. View restaurant →
Bootlegger Cocktail Bar & Cuisine MontréalUp a flight of stairs on Saint-Laurent, Bootlegger leans hard into its speakeasy bit — 600-plus bottles of spirits, rare whiskeys, absinthes, and a team of mixologists who've apparently been hauling their cocktails to competitions. That's the headline. But here's what I respect: the kitchen isn't an afterthought propping up the bar. This is a cocktail joint that actually cooks. The pulled pork nachos — homemade corn chips, signature pulled pork, smoked BBQ sauce, that red cabbage slaw — get called the best nachos people have had, and I believe them. The beef tartare draws raves, and the Bootlegger burger is the kind people swear they'll reorder. Then there's the $1 oyster happy hour, which is the whole reason this place earns a spot in my back pocket. Yes, the cocktails run pricey — that's the cost of admission to a bar that makes its own syrups, juices, and bitters and runs damn near zero-waste. Come Sunday for live jazz, Friday or Saturday for DJs. Just remember to eat while you drink. View restaurant →
Atwater Cocktail ClubAtwater Cocktail Club earns its reputation before you even get inside — the approach through a graffiti-lined alleyway, punctuated by a red industrial light, is the kind of entrance that filters out the ambivalent. The room reportedly delivers on the promise: dark walls, silver banquettes, and a glass ceiling that scatters candlelight in ways that make the whole space feel lit from within. Dramatic without tipping into exhausting. That balance, by all accounts, holds up on a Tuesday as well as a Saturday. The cocktail programme is what this place is actually about. The menu is built around techniques that stay deliberately invisible — fermentations, emulsions, house-made components — and the El Mono series anchors the list. The El Mono Highball is the lightest entry point, described as clean and sessionable for something with this much going on behind the bar. The El Mono Sour runs those same base flavours through a more textural format, and the El Mono Fashioned is the slow-sipper of the three — spirit-forward, for the crowd that wants to actually taste what they ordered. Diners consistently point to the programme's conviction: these are drinks with a point of view, not just a theme. Food comes by way of a shared kitchen with neighbouring Foiegwa, which means the menu leans into late-night territory — burgers, truffle fries — alongside a few items that reach further, like bone marrow and escargots. For the price level, the kitchen's ambition reads as genuine rather than performative. Practically speaking: no reservation anxiety, best experienced late, and if you're working through the menu, the El Mono Fashioned is reportedly the one that lingers. View restaurant →

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Le Bar DarlingLe Bar Darling has worked out something that a lot of Montreal's bar scene is still getting wrong: the idea that a room can take its cocktail program seriously and run a real kitchen at the same time, without one apologizing for the other. It's a mid-price spot with a genuinely democratic spirit — the kind of place that makes sense for a solo lunch at the counter, a low-key second date, or a late stop on a Plateau crawl when hunger becomes undeniable. By all accounts, it doesn't perform cool; the ease is apparently just baked in. The menu is where the personality shows up. The smoked salmon bagel is the kind of thing that looks like a safe play on paper but is reportedly constructed with real attention to proportion — the balance between smoke, fat, and bread is what diners point to, not just the ingredient list. The shakshouka has a reputation for the kind of braised-tomato depth that most brunch spots don't have the patience for. The piri-piri chicken and avocado salad is known for threading heat against richness — a combination that's easy to mishandle — and the kitchen is said to keep it in check. Steak frites at this price point anywhere in Montreal is a leap of faith, and Darling's version is consistently cited for the frites specifically, not as an afterthought but as the actual point of the dish. The soupe of the day rounds out a menu that moves comfortably from morning through late without feeling scattered. Practical intel: weeknights are reportedly when the room is at its best, before it hits full volume. The soupe of the day is worth ordering as a read on what the kitchen is confident about that week — it changes, and that's the point. Two dishes and a drink is the format this place seems built for. View restaurant →

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Save these spots to your Montreal list

Save these spots to your Montreal list in the TastyPals app, then explore similar restaurants when you want a tighter shortlist for the night.

Personalized city picksCleaner shortlistsBuilt for iPhone and Android
TastyPalsTonight
Your taste. Our picks.
Smarter follow-through after the guide: better restaurant context, quicker narrowing, less second-guessing.
For tonight
Date night spots with warm rooms and polished service
Next step
Keep exploring in the app when you want a tighter shortlist