Brewski is a craft beer bar on Żurawia in central Warsaw, built around a tap wall of more than 50 lines with still more beers in the fridges. It occupies the former PiwPaw site in Śródmieście, reworked with a row of Chesterfield sofas.
Who would love it: beer drinkers who want range, with dozens of taps and a deep bottle and can list to work through. Who should skip it: anyone after cocktails or a quiet wine room, since this is a beer-first bar.
Pale Ale Travel's Warsaw guide counts more than 50 taps at Brewski, with even more beer in the fridges, which puts it among the widest tap selections in the city. The choice is the main reason to come.
The bar took over the space that previously held PiwPaw and smartened the interior with an array of Chesterfield sofas, which gives the room a more lounge-like feel than a bare taproom. The seating makes it a place to settle in rather than stand at the bar.
The tap list rotates across Polish and international craft brewers, leaning on the hoppy and experimental end that drives the local scene, so the lineup changes between visits. Staff are used to steering newcomers through the board, which helps with a wall of that size.
The name nods to the slang for a beer, which the bar leans into as a straightforward, beer-led identity. The focus stays on the range and turnover rather than a food-first kitchen.
The Żurawia address sits in Śródmieście, central Warsaw's core, a short walk from Nowy Świat and the surrounding bars, which makes it an easy stop on a night out in the centre. The location keeps a steady mix of local drinkers and visitors.
The sofa-lined room reads as relaxed and group-friendly, suited to a long session working across the taps rather than a quick single round. Arriving earlier on weekends is the safer plan before the seats fill.
For a first visit, asking the staff for a flight or a steer across the 50-plus taps is the simplest way in. It belongs among Warsaw's craft beer bars rather than its cocktail or vodka rooms.
Warsaw Insider's craft beer coverage groups Brewski with the city's leading multi-taps, pointing to the scale of the tap wall as the headline feature.
Taking over the former PiwPaw site gave Brewski an established beer address, which it kept while reworking the look toward a lounge feel.
The fridges extend the choice beyond the taps, so rarer cans and bottles are available alongside the draught lines for drinkers chasing specific brewers.
Żurawia sits a block from the Nowy Świat axis, which puts Brewski within walking distance of the central bars and makes it an easy mid-crawl stop.
The Chesterfield seating signals the bar's intent to be a place to settle in over several measures rather than a stand-and-go taproom.
For drinkers comparing it with Kufle i Kapsle or PiwPaw, Brewski's pitch is sheer tap count and a more comfortable room to work through it.
Staff keep the tap list updated on the board and are used to walking newcomers through unfamiliar Polish brewers, which helps when the wall runs past 50 lines.
The central Śródmieście location and long opening hours make it a dependable beer stop whether for an early pint or a later session across the taps.
See where it sits in our guide to the best craft beer in Warsaw, and browse more rooms across the best bars in Warsaw.
Flights are a practical way to sample several beers at once, which suits a first visit faced with more than fifty draught lines.
