87 Millas Sport Bar sits on Calle de Galileo in Chamberí, north of the Argüelles bustle, and it reads as a kitchen as much as a sports bar. The screens carry the match, but the menu is the reason regulars keep the place at a 4.6 Google rating.
The bar opened in 2020 and runs a fusion of American, Mexican and Peruvian plates, a wider kitchen than most sports rooms in the city attempt. Madrid's official tourism site, esmadrid.com, lists it among Chamberí's sports bars and points to the food first.
The room is relaxed and local, the kind of neighbourhood place where the regulars know the staff and a table can hold all night. Reviewers return to two words, generous and cheap, which is the right combination when a long match runs into a second round.
What to order is the food. The tosta de solomillo, sirloin with brie and caramelized onion, is the signature, and the patatas bravas and the burgers carry the rest of the table. Portions are built to share, so order across the table and pair it with a cold caña or a craft bottle.
On the sport, the screens carry the major fixtures, and the room fills for a big LaLiga or Champions League night. This is not a wall-of-televisions sports barn. It is a bar that takes the match seriously and the plates more so.
Who is it for. Fans who want to eat properly while they watch, groups who want value over a tourist-strip markup, and anyone staying around Chamberí or Argüelles who wants a local room rather than a centre-of-town crush. Skip it if you need a dozen screens. The food is the headline here.
Best time to go is a weekend kickoff, when the Friday and Saturday doors open at 1pm and the kitchen is in full swing for a long afternoon. The bar is closed on Mondays, so plan a Tuesday-to-Sunday visit and arrive hungry.
The value is the story the reviews tell. TripAdvisor and Google entries circle the same praise, large plates and low prices, which keeps the 4.6 rating steady and the tables turning. A few notes flag the odd inconsistent dish, the usual trade-off for a kitchen this ambitious at this price.
The crowd is local and loyal. Chamberí regulars treat 87 Millas as a neighbourhood canteen with a match on, so the room feels lived-in rather than touristy. That suits a long, unhurried afternoon of football and shared plates better than a quick stop.
Getting here is simple. The bar sits near the Islas Filipinas and Canal stops, north of Argüelles, a short hop from the university quarter. It is far enough from the centre to keep prices honest and close enough to fold into a wider night.
One ordering tip ties it together. Start with the tosta de solomillo, then build the rest of the table around shared portions rather than one plate each. The kitchen is built for the middle of the table, and a match runs longer when there is food to keep reaching for. Add the patatas bravas and a round of burgers, and a group of four eats well without troubling the bill in the way a centre-of-town room would.
For more of the city's screens, our best sports bars in Madrid guide ranks the Chamberí options together, and the Madrid bar guide maps the wider night. Plan a match day with our guide to watching the game in Madrid, or compare cities in the global sports bars collection.
Sources: 87 Millas Sport Bar official site (2026); esmadrid.com, Tourism Madrid sports-bars guide; TripAdvisor Madrid reviews (Google rating 4.6).