Do you like showing off how many bars on a list you’ve been to? Are you annoyed by having to arrange all the little checkmarks manually in your phone’s photo app? Well, be annoyed no more – this form lets you easily track your bars!
Check off which of the 2026 North America’s 50 Best Bars 51-100 you’ve been to, then screencap or download it to share with your friends (don’t forget to tag @Bar_Notable!). A more polished and automated version of this will be a premium feature of our site, but you get to test this rough and ready version for free.
(On iPhone, this opens zoomed in and the check squares look like circles, so the checkmarks look a little odd. I’m working on a fix but since I learned all of this in like four hours, I’m going to be happy for what *does* work.)
This is the more detailed followup to a reel I posted on Instagram about the regional diversity of the North American bars on The World’s 50 Best Bars list vs. that of North America’s 50 Best Bars. Spoiler alert: the more regional list not only showcases far more cities (not surprising) but the percentage of bars per city is more varied as well.
An Instagram reel is great for engagement, but not the best for presenting data so here is a little more detail about how I got all those numbers. (And holy hell, finding a succinct way to talk about percentages of percents of lists took me a couple of WEEKS. Not to mention the actual data work.)
First off, let’s look at these first four years of North America’s 50 Best Bars. I love seeing the absolute explosion up to 31 unique cities represented on the 2025 list! As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, it’s also really cool that seven of those 31 are brand new to the list (though two, Boston and Seattle, were previously on World’s 40 Best Bars).
Next up, a deep dive into the North American cities that have been featured on World’s 50 Best Bars. While looking for patterns here, one thing I noticed is that over the course of World’s 50 Best Bars, only six North American cities have had more than one bar on the list at a time. And only three have had more than two bars on the list at a time. Does this pattern hold up for other regions? I don’t know . . . yet. But you can bet I’m going to find out.
As you can see, over 47% of the North American bars to ever appear on the World’s 50 Best Bars have been in New York. Now I’m not dunking on New York – it’s an amazing city and I know it’s a cultural center of the world. But that’s a big number, and it’s a big drop to the next couple of cities.
Since sometimes it’s easier to see the relationship between numbers with a visual representation, here’s a funnel chart of all the North American cities that have been on World’s 50 Best Bars.
After the announcement of the 2025 North America’s 50 Best Bars list, with it’s 31 unique cities represented, I got really curious about what would happen if you applied the North America percentages to the World list. After all, the 23 (on average) North American bars that are good enough to also be a World’s Best Bar should reflect what’s doing well regionally, right?
As you can see, it’s similar but just more interesting. (To me, at least)
Of course, this is just one award and one voting system. I wish I could wrap this up with a great way to help 50 Best Bars increase their reach across more of a region, that was easy to implement and didn’t feel like cheating – but I’m not sure what that solution looks like. I know one big challenge is that a voter who lives in Milwaukee is more likely to visit New York (or another large city) than a New York voter is to visit Milwaukee. For now I’m just trying to bring data driven awareness to the issue in hopes of increasing voter pools, promoting more varied nominations for those awards that accept them, and encouraging the people at the top to talk to bars and people they are promoting to see how they feel about all this.
Oh, and I’ll keep telling New Yorkers to visit Milwaukee (and Minneapolis, Kansas City, Louisville, etc) – the Pink Squirrel at Bryant’s is worth the airfare, I promise.
As we approach the announcement of North America’s 50 Best Bars, I’ve had a few people comment on one of my old Reddit posts about my tracking spreadsheet so I thought I’d post some predictions I have for this year. Basing predictions on past global trends is flawed because it’s hard to account for new bars (certainly threw me for a loop when Bar Leone premiered at #2 on The World’s 50 Best Bars last October!), but there’s still some interesting info to be found.
So my predictions are based on my All Award Tracker which currently contains the following award info:
The World’s 50 Best Bars (2009-2024)
Tales of the Cocktail Spirited Awards (2007-2025 Regional Top Ten Nominees)
James Beard Awards (2012-2025 Nominees)
Asia’s 50 Best Bars (2016-2024)
The World’s 50 Best Bars “Discovery” (2020-2025)
Top 500 Bars (2022-2024)
UK Top 50 Bars (2022-2025)
North America’s 50 Best Bars (2022-2025)
The Pinnacle Guide (2024-2025)
Queen Mary Tavern in Chicago, #63.
Obviously, some of these don’t impact the North American awards – I only listed them because I like to show off. I’ve given every rank, nomination, and win a score, and weighted the scores based on factors like recency and perceived impact of the award.
The North American 50 Best Bars started in 2022 and two weeks ago they announced the inaugural expanded list of 51-100.
My data tells me that the top five won’t change too much.
Handshake Speakeasy (also a shoe-in for the first “Legend of the List” award)
Double Chicken Please
Licoreria Limantour
Overstory
Cafe la Trova
These predictions are based on past performance globally, but my gut says we may see some upsets here. User pgm123 on Reddit did a great analysis of which bars dropped from 2024 Top 50 into 51-100, leaving at least six open spots for new entries onto the list. I’ve been hearing a lot of buzz about Clemente Bar at 11 Madison Park in New York so I think they will likely premiere in the top 25. Several people have asked me about Schmuck, but I think their February opening was too late for this round – watch for them at October’s World’s 50 Best Bars ceremony.
There are also some cool regional things happening in the 51-100 list with seven cities entering the list for the first time!
Tart au Citron cocktail at The Doctor’s Office, Seattle, #76
Calgary (3 bars)
Seattle (3)
Albuquerque (1)
Austin (1)
Boston (1)
George Town (1)
Victoria (1)
Fingers crossed this leads to more and more appearances by bars in overlooked markets. (I’m hoping the new North America’s 50 Best Restaurants also helps with this.)
None of this is based on personal opinion, just data and a hunch. I have nothing to do with any of these awards, I’m just a nerd with a spreadsheet.
I’ll be back to see how this all holds up after the announcement!