Inside the Miyana complex on the Polanco edge, Twin Peaks takes the American sports-lodge formula, scales it up to two patios and a wall of screens, and lets a Mexico City crowd decide which game wins the room.
Published June 11, 2026 · By Daniel Okafor
Twin Peaks Miyana sits at Avenida Ejército Nacional 769 in Colonia Granada, the mixed-use district that locals fold into greater Polanco. It is the Mexico City branch of the U.S. lodge chain, and its arrival was covered as a notable expansion when the brand pushed deeper into the capital; FSR magazine reported the group opening additional Mexico City locations as the format caught on. The room reads exactly as intended: timber-and-stone lodge styling, big communal tables, and a bar built to keep up with a full house.
The numbers do the talking. The Miyana venue carries more than 70 televisions across the floor and two patios, with some booths fitted with their own screens, so the staff can run several fixtures at once without anyone losing their match. That coverage is why it pulls NFL Sundays, Champions League midweeks, Liga MX weekends and the marquee boxing and UFC cards under one roof.
Drink it the way the lodge intends. Twin Peaks builds its reputation on famously cold draft beer, served near freezing, alongside a full bar of cocktails and shots. The kitchen runs made-from-scratch American pub food: burgers, wings, nachos and sharing plates sized for a long afternoon. It is generous rather than refined, which suits a place where the screen, not the plate, is the centrepiece.
As a Mexico City sports bar, Twin Peaks owns the big-screen, big-group end of Polanco. You come here for an NFL Sunday with a dozen friends, a Champions League knockout that needs proper sound, or a fight night where the room reacts as one. For how the city's watching scene splits by neighbourhood, our guide to the best bars for watching the game in Mexico City lays out the options.
It anchors a Polanco corner of the map that runs to several registers. For brisket with the NFL, Pinche Gringo BBQ throws the loudest American-football parties; for an Irish-pub night with bands, McCarthy's Irish Pub delivers; and for a polished cantina with the football on, Cantina La No. 20 is the grown-up pick. For the broader tour, see our roundup of the best bars in Mexico City.
Time it for the fixture and the patio. The kitchen opens at noon daily and runs to midnight, stretching to 2am on Friday and Saturday when the big cards land. A marquee weekend night fills fast, so a reservation or an early arrival is the difference between a patio table and a wait at the host stand.
The crowd skews international and group-led. Polanco professionals, visiting NFL fans and birthday parties make up much of the floor, and the lodge format reads as familiar to anyone who has watched a game in the United States. English is widely spoken, which makes it an easy landing spot for travellers chasing a fixture far from home.
Service is the part that scales or breaks a room this size, and Twin Peaks keeps the beer and food moving across a busy, multi-screen operation. That coordination is the quiet reason a 70-screen floor feels like a sports bar rather than a stadium concourse.
What makes Twin Peaks Miyana worth the trip is its completeness. Few rooms in the city can guarantee your fixture on a dedicated screen with cold beer and food at the table, and fewer still can do it for a party of fifteen without anyone craning their neck. Judged on Mexico City's own terms, it is Polanco's most reliable big-game room.
Sources: Twin Peaks Mexico official site, Miyana branch listing; FSR magazine, Twin Peaks opens additional Mexico City location; OpenTable and Facebook listings, Twin Peaks Miyana (2026).