Beerhaus

Beer Hall Sports Bars $$ By James Harlow Published Oct 7, 2025

Beerhaus anchors The Park, the open-air promenade between New York-New York and Park MGM, a two-minute walk from T-Mobile Arena and built for the crowd that spills out of it.

This is a beer hall first and a sports bar second, and the distinction matters. Communal tables, a curated tap wall, games on the floor, and a patio that opens to the promenade. It runs as a Vegas Golden Knights bar on hockey nights, and the energy on a home game is the reason to come.

The room

The space is rustic and bright, with long shared tables, a stage for live music, and an outdoor section that catches the promenade foot traffic. The screens cluster around the bar, so the sightlines are strongest from the rail and weakest from the patio. Harlow's note: if the game is the point, sit inside near the taps, because the outdoor tables trade the view for the people-watching.

What to order

The draw is the tap list, which Visit Las Vegas describes as an artfully curated menu built for both beer nerds and casual drinkers. Order a local Nevada pour and a round from the snack menu, which keeps things light rather than full dinner. Expect $$ pricing, reasonable by Strip standards for the location. Skip it if you want a full sit-down meal, because the kitchen is built for sharing, not entrees.

The crowd and best time to go

It opens at 11am and shifts through the day, from a relaxed afternoon pint to a packed pre-game and post-game surge on Golden Knights nights. The Friday and Saturday late closes at 11pm catch the after-event crowd. Come 90 minutes before puck drop for a table inside. Avoid arriving as the arena empties, when the patio and bar both go three deep.

What regulars say

Across more than 800 Yelp reviews, the recurring praise is the patio, the tap selection and the game-day atmosphere, with the common complaint being the crush and noise when an event lets out. Reviewers consistently flag it as the Knights fan default near the arena.

Who it is for

Beerhaus is for the craft drinker, the Golden Knights fan, and anyone walking to or from a T-Mobile Arena event who wants a patio and a good pour. Skip it if you need a quiet booth or a wall of screens for every sport at once. It is a beer hall with a hockey heart.

The verdict

The detail Harlow keeps returning to is the patio. On a Golden Knights night the indoor screens carry the game while the promenade doors stay open, so the room breathes in a way a sealed casino bar never manages. The live-music stage means the schedule shifts between sports and sets, so check before a marquee game that a band has not booked the room for the same slot. For groups, the long communal tables seat a crowd, though the shared-table format means strangers may join the far end on a busy night, which regulars treat as part of the charm rather than a flaw. The tap rotation leans local, with Nevada brewers well represented, and the snack menu is built for grazing across a full match rather than a sit-down dinner. Come for the beer and the buzz, not for a quiet booth.

For more game-day rooms nearby, see our guide to the best sports bars in Las Vegas and the editorial pillar on the top Las Vegas sports bars. A bigger-screen alternative across the promenade is Tom's Watch Bar in Las Vegas. The full picture is in the Las Vegas bar guide.

Sources: Visit Las Vegas listing (Beerhaus, 2026); The Park official venue page; Yelp (n=800+); Las Vegas top-picks guide.

Keep watching

More sports bars in Las Vegas

Las Vegas sports bars