How regional lists impact global ones…

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.

Image of a dimly lit ice cream cocktail in a curvy glass

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.


North America’s 50 Best Bars Data

For literal years, I’ve been working on finding a good way to embed my 50 Best tracking spreadsheets into the site and I FINALLY DID IT. They aren’t perfect, but they are a massive improvement over previous efforts. You can find them in the Bar Charts menu above.

Additionally, I got the first two years of the North American 50 Best Bars set up for tracking. I will work on the Asia list next.

2018 Final Statistics

It’s been a couple of weeks since 2019 rolled in and it’s finally time to post the 2018 Bar Charts!

I started keeping track of our bar visits in my Bullet Journal back in October 2017 and converted it to a spreadsheet early in 2018. As the year went on, I used this project as a bit of a playground to hone my Excel and stats skills – sometimes work projects improved the bar chart and sometimes the bar chart taught me something that helped me at work. It’s been a fun and surprising project!


The key info includes:

  • “Total Outings” – this is how many times we’ve gone out for a drink, or to a place that serves drinks. If we go to the same place twice in a day, it’s only counted once. Also, we count a day as the hours between waking up and going to bed – so if we’re out past midnight, it counts towards the previous day.
  • “Individual Bars” – this is a count of unique bars in a given time period. Because we often go to the same bars repeatedly, I wanted to separate out this number from outings.
  • “Busiest Day” – After a few epic bar crawls, I started tracking what day of the month/year we had the highest number of bar visits. This often coincides with trips or USBGMSP events.
  • “Busiest Day Total” – How many visits we made on the busiest day.
  • “Most Visited Bar” – Pretty self-explanatory really.
  • “Busiest City” – It’s almost always home, unless we’ve had a trip that month.

On to the data!!

Here’s the main breakdown of 2018. As you can see, our numbers tend to spike when we travel. Also, the “Most Visited Bar” formula tends to pick a winner even if it’s a tie – which it was in both October (5 each for Marvel and Hodges Bend) and December (4 each for Marvel and Hodges Bend).
What would bar tracking be without a bar chart!?! This just shows total outings vs. individual bars by month. The closer the bars are, the more new/different places we went.
This pie chart is pretty useless because of all the places we only went once, but it’s pretty. (Also a good demonstration of how we’ve split locations that have separate restaurants and bars – so Young Joni is at the bottom but their Back Bar tied for 7th place.
The pie chart becomes a bit more useful when limited to bars in the metro area.
Our 2018 top five visited bars.

A few more numbers for which I don’t have fancy charts:

  • Of our 366 outings…
    • 255, or 70%, were in the Twin Cities metro
    • 15, or 4%, were in Outstate Minnesota
    • 59, or 16%, were outside of Minnesota but in the United States
    • 37, or 10%, were outside of the United States
  • Of the 172 unique places we drank…
    • 77, or 45%, were in the Twin Cities Metro
    • 10, or 6%, were in Outstate Minnesota
    • 50, or 29%, were outside of Minnesota but in the United States
    • 35, or 20%, were outside of the United States

2018 in Summary

We got to take some amazing trips – San Francisco, New Orleans (overlapping slightly with Tales of the Cocktail!), London, and Paris. We played a lot of “Bar Tag” where the bartender or a patron at one spot would tell us we HAD to check out another, so we did! Also, bars that were in our hotel did very well. Convenience wins!

While at home, we still spent a lot of time at Marvel. Considering we got engaged and legally married there, it will always be our “Winchester.” Despite being a 15-minute-walk away, we didn’t make our first visit to newcomer Hodges Bend until April. Even so, they managed to jump to second place. Republic stays high in the list because they have an amazing beer list and a great happy hour burger.

Being Social Media Coordinator for the USBGMSP impacted my drinking destinations quite a bit. We hosted our annual fundraising competition, Iron Bartender, in October and I did a lot of running around to photograph (and drink) cocktails.

I continue to have a great passion for the hospitality industry both at home and around the world. Very rarely am I heading into a bar or restaurant thinking “I can’t wait to have a drink,” instead it’s usually “I can’t wait to see my friend!” And even in the places we’ve never been or travel to, we seem to make an impression by being kind, respectful, curious, and excited – when we went to the Little Red Door in Paris for the first time, one of the bartenders there remembered us from our visit to Happiness Forgets in London, over a year before!

Here’s to another year of adventuring…and spreadsheets!