ReBar is the bar in the Las Vegas Arts District where the furniture, the artwork, and the glassware are all for sale, a vintage-shop dive on South Main Street that pays tribute to the antique stores that once lined the block. The drinks are cheap, the decor is for sale, and no two visits look quite the same.
The room sits on South Main Street at the heart of the Arts District, a few doors from the area's breweries and consignment shops. The Infatuation frames it as a dive that doubles as a vintage store, where mismatched chairs, recycled artwork, and odd glassware fill every wall. The gimmick is real: anything in the room can be bought off the floor.
Cheap drinks are the everyday draw. Yelp and Tripadvisor reviewers point to beers that start around three dollars and top out near seven, with pitchers of PBR and a rotating set of drafts. The pricing is the reason locals fold it into a regular after-work rotation.
Recognition has followed the concept. ReBar has been named to USA Today's ten best Las Vegas bars and voted best downtown hangout by Las Vegas Weekly, with a Tripadvisor rating near 4.7 across hundreds of reviews. That track record sets it apart from a novelty.
The kitchen turns out reasonably priced food that keeps pace with the drinks. Cuban sandwiches, spicy chicken nachos, and thin-crust pizzas appear across reviews, with gourmet sausages that earned an earlier Cheap Eats nod. Food here supports a long sit rather than competing for attention.
Atmosphere is the selling point, and reviewers return to the same words: relaxed, eclectic, and unpretentious. The recycled-art decor changes as pieces sell and new ones arrive, so the room is never quite the same twice. Friendly bartenders carry the local reputation.
Service draws mostly warm notes, though a few Tripadvisor reviews flag slow pours on busy nights. The trade-off is a room with genuine character rather than polish. Anyone after fast, formal service should set expectations accordingly.
The crowd is downtown locals, Arts District browsers, and first Friday wanderers rather than Strip tourists. It reads as a neighbourhood hangout that happens to sell its own furniture, which is exactly the point. The vintage browsing gives groups something to do between rounds.
Who would love it: bargain drinkers and vintage hunters who want character over polish. Who should skip it: anyone after craft cocktails, a quiet date room, or quick table service, since this is a cheerfully cluttered dive first.
The shelves lean into the Arts District salvage spirit, stacked with records, lamps, and oddities priced for browsing between rounds. The Infatuation notes that buying a chair out from under another drinker is part of the fun. The stock turns over constantly, so the room reads as a rotating flea market with a bar attached.
First Friday and weekend nights bring the busiest crowds, when the patio and front room fill with downtown locals. Earlier in the week the place runs quiet enough to actually shop the shelves. Either way the drinks stay cheap and the room stays loud enough to feel social without drowning conversation.
ReBar ranks among the most distinctive stops on our after-work bars in Las Vegas guide for an unhurried after-work drink, and it earns a place on our hidden-gem bars in Las Vegas list as a genuine Arts District original. The for-sale decor is what separates it from every other dive downtown.
For more nearby, the full Las Vegas bar guide maps the rest of the district's drinking. Many regulars pair cheap pints here with a historic round at Atomic Liquors a short walk away.
