Miranda Lambert's Casa Rosa

Tex-Mex Cantina Live Music $$ Downtown

Miranda Lambert's Casa Rosa spreads four floors of pink lit Tex-Mex cantina across 308 Broadway, the rare Lower Broadway room built around margaritas and Southwest plates rather than longnecks alone. Fox News reported the bar opened in March 2021 and bills itself as the first female artist owned restaurant on the strip.

The bar suits anyone who wants tacos, frozen margaritas and live country in one stop instead of a beer only honky tonk. People set on a quiet cocktail room should look off Broadway. The pull here is the food, the pink room and the rooftop view over the strip.

The four floors climb past a wall of memorabilia, including a recreation of the Bluebird Cage tied to the owner's history, before opening to a rooftop. Live bands run alongside the kitchen, and reviewers single out the frozen margaritas and the upper deck. The Tex-Mex menu sets the room apart from its honky tonk neighbours.

The drink to order is a house margarita, frozen or on the rocks, paired with tacos or queso from the cantina menu. There is no cover charge, so the house bands play for tips through the day. Most groups treat the food and the margaritas as the reason to stay rather than a craft cocktail card.

Daytime brings tourists and bachelorette groups working the strip, while the rooftop holds up as the calmer pick once the lower floors fill on weekend nights. A weekday afternoon is the easiest window for a table and a clear view of the band.

Yelp reviewers, read across the recent pattern, return to a few notes. The margaritas, the tacos and the pink room draw the warmest comments, the Bluebird Cage gets the most photos, and the main complaint is the weekend wait and the price of a round on Broadway. Reviewers point newcomers to the rooftop for air and a clearer line on the music.

It suits a group that wants Tex-Mex with its country music, a first trip down the strip, and fans of the owner tracking the memorabilia. Pair it with Tootsie's Orchid Lounge in Nashville or Redneck Riviera in Nashville, and see where it lands in our guide to the best live music bars in Nashville.

The food is the real point of difference on a street built on beer and country covers. Fox News described a Tex-Mex menu of tacos, queso and shareable plates that gives groups a reason to sit rather than drift. The kitchen runs alongside the music through the day.

The pink room reads as a set piece, and the memorabilia rewards a slow climb. The recreated Bluebird Cage tied to the owner's history is the most photographed corner, and each floor adds another reason to keep going toward the roof.

Margaritas carry the drink list, frozen or on the rocks, rather than a deep cocktail card. Reviewers treat a round of margaritas and a plate of tacos as the core order, with the live band as the backdrop to the meal.

The crowd leans toward groups and celebrations rather than solo drinkers, in line with a room built around shareable plates and pitchers of margarita. Parties working the strip are a common sight, especially on the lower floors at the weekend.

The best window is a weekday afternoon, when a table on the rooftop is easy and the kitchen turns out food without the weekend wait. Visitors chasing the memorabilia get a clearer look at the Bluebird Cage and the upper floors before the evening crowd arrives.

Sources: Casa Rosa official site (2026); Fox News feature; Visit Music City local business listing; Nashville Guru profile; Yelp reviews (n=688+).

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