Night at Monk Sportsbar: Rock, Cocktails, and Late‑Night Vibes
Spotlight

Night at Monk Sportsbar: Rock, Cocktails, and Late‑Night Vibes

When the neon signs flicker on Calle 70, the scent of sizzling tacos and fresh lime cuts through the night air, and the crowd at Monk Sportsbar settles in for a soundtrack of guitars and clinking glasses.

It’s 10 pm on a humid Thursday in Mérida’s Centro. The street outside hums with the distant chatter of vendors, but inside Monk Sportsbar the noise drops to a low thrum of electric guitars and the occasional cheer from a televised match. A group of friends grabs a high‑top table near the bar, the scent of char‑grilled meat mingling with the citrusy tang of freshly squeezed lime. A bartender slides a glass of amber liquid across the polished wood, the ice clinking like tiny bells. The place’s signature is the "Rock & Roll Old Fashioned," a bourbon‑based cocktail sweetened with a dash of agave and garnished with a smoked orange peel. At $150 it sits comfortably in the $100–200 price band, and the first sip delivers a warm, caramel depth that the smoky peel lifts into a bright finish. Beside it, the "Ribeye Taco" – a thin‑sliced ribeye tossed in a chipotle‑lime sauce, tucked into a corn tortilla, topped with pickled red onion and a smear of avocado crema – costs $120. The meat is buttery, the sauce a smoky heat that lingers, and the tortilla stays crisp until the very last bite. One reviewer wrote, "The cocktails hit the sweet spot while the music keeps the energy high." Another regular noted, "I come for the ribeye tacos, but stay for the rock memorabilia that lines the walls – it feels like a living museum." A third guest praised, "The staff remembers my name and my favorite drink; it’s the personal touch that makes this place stand out." The 4.7 rating across 510 reviews reflects that blend of strong drinks, solid food, and a community that feels like a club rather than a bar. Monk Sportsbar opened its doors in 2015 under the vision of a former tour manager who wanted a space where the love of live music met the laid‑back vibe of a Mexican bar. The walls are plastered with vintage concert posters, a battered electric guitar hangs above the bar, and the lighting is a mix of soft amber and occasional spotlights that highlight the stage where local bands play on weekends. The manager, who grew up in the Yucatán capital, insists on a menu that stays simple but executed perfectly – no sprawling list, just a handful of dishes that can be prepared quickly for the late‑night crowd. By midnight the crowd thins, but the bar never feels empty. The last sip of the Old Fashioned lingers as the neon outside flickers, and the scent of the night’s leftovers – charred corn and fresh cilantro – hangs in the air. You leave with the echo of a drum solo in your ears and the certainty that you’ll be back, perhaps for the next game, perhaps for the next band, but always for that unmistakable blend of rock, flavor, and friendly faces.

Read Full Article

More Articles

Lapa Lapa exterior with neon sign and patio, showing bar area and grill under evening lightsBy Cuisine

Mérida’s bar scene by the numbers

A data‑driven look at where Mérida’s bars cluster, how they price their drinks and which spots punch above their weight.

Mérida hosts 540 registered hospitality venues, with an average rating of 4.51 and an average quality score of 80.8. The city’s price distribution shows 179 budget‑friendly spots, 167 in the mid‑range and only six upscale locations. Bars tend to gather around three neighborhoods: the historic Centro district, the residential San Antonio Kaua area and the lively Parque Santiago enclave. Those clusters line the main avenues and keep the night alive from early evening to the early hours of the morning. Lapa Lapa sits on Calle 99 in San Antonio Kaua (C. 99 419) and markets itself as a bar‑grill hybrid. Its price bracket of MX$100–200 matches the city’s mid‑range tier, yet its business score of 92.4 tops the city average. With 5,026 reviews and a 4.4 rating, the venue draws a crowd that enjoys loud football matches, pasta dishes and a steady flow of cocktails. Open from 1 PM to midnight on weekdays and until 2 AM on weekends, the place feels like a neighborhood hub where the sound of cymbals and the scent of fettuccine mingle. Just a few blocks away, Monk Sportsbar occupies Calle 70 476 between 57 and 59 in Parque Santiago. Its 510 reviews yield a 4.7 rating, the highest among the three bars, while the quality score sits at 85.2. The price range mirrors Lapa Lapa’s MX$100–200, but the venue leans heavily into a sports‑bar vibe, staying open from 8 PM to 2:30 AM on most nights. Reviewers highlight the rock‑and‑roll atmosphere, well‑priced cocktails and a menu that leans toward bar‑grill fare. At the same price point, Monk Sportsbar delivers a higher rating, suggesting a stronger value proposition for night‑owls chasing a lively scene. La Negrita Cantina anchors the Centro district at C. 62 405, Parque Santa Ana. It also falls into the MX$100–200 band and carries a 4.4 rating backed by 8,913 reviews, the largest review count of the trio. Its quality score of 84.4 places it just below the other two but still above the city average. The cantina is known for its mezcal selection, lively salsa and son cubano playlists, and a signature cochinita pibil taco that reviewers call “perfectly spiced.” Open daily from noon to 10 PM, the venue balances a relaxed drink menu with a dance‑floor energy that feels distinctly Yucatán. When the numbers are laid out, Monk Sportsbar offers the best rating for the same price band, making it the top value pick for a night of drinks and music. Lapa Lapa wins on quality score, which may appeal to diners who want a stronger food component alongside their drinks. La Negrita Cantina commands the most attention in terms of foot traffic, yet its score suggests room for improvement in service consistency. The market still lacks a true upscale bar that pushes the price ceiling above MX$200 while maintaining a rating above 4.6, leaving an opportunity for a premium concept to fill that gap.

Read Full Article
Lapa Lapa exterior with neon sign and bustling patio, showing patrons enjoying drinksTop 5

The 5 Best Bars in Mérida, Yucatán

From craft cocktails to street‑style tacos, these five spots define Mérida’s bar scene.

Mérida’s bar culture mixes old‑world charm with a lively nightlife, and my #1 pick proves why the city never sleeps. Lapa Lapa tops the list, and you’ll understand why after you read on. 1. Lapa Lapa – C. 99 419, San Antonio Kaua, 97196 Mérida (San Antonio Kaua). This bar‑grill scores a 92.4 business rating, the highest in the city. The fettuccine al limone, priced around MX$150, is the signature plate that keeps locals coming back. The patio hums with football chatter while a steady beat of cymbals from the live band fills the air. Open from 1 PM to 2 AM most days, the place feels like a neighborhood living room that also serves solid drinks. The only downside is the noise on weekend evenings, which can drown out conversation. 2. Monk Sportsbar – Calle 70. 476, entre 57 y 59, Parque Santiago, Centro Centro, 97000 Mérida. With a 4.7 rating and a score of 85.2, this spot wins the night‑owl crowd. Open 8 PM‑2:30 AM, it offers a rock‑filled environment that feels like a private concert. The “Rock & Roll Old Fashioned” costs MX$120 and is praised for its smoky finish. Reviewers love the cheap beer selection, but the limited food menu means you’ll need a snack elsewhere. 3. Las Jirafas – Calle 56‑B 494 por 23 y 25, Centro, 97100 Mérida. This bar‑grill keeps a modest price range of $1‑100 and still lands a solid 85.2 score. The al pastor taco, sold for MX$45, is the go‑to bite, and the pozole bowl at MX$80 satisfies any late‑night craving. The colorful façade draws you in, and the street‑side seats let you watch the bustle of Centro. The only flaw is the cramped kitchen during peak hours, which can slow service. 4. Bar La Ruina – (address not listed). Despite the missing address, the bar’s reputation for strong margaritas and a gritty vibe earns it a 4.5 rating. The classic margarita, priced at MX$110, balances sweet and sour perfectly. The dim lighting and vintage bottles create a relaxed atmosphere that feels like a hidden speakeasy. The downside is a short opening window—most nights it closes at midnight, limiting late‑night options. 5. La Negrita Cantina – (address not listed). With a 4.4 rating and a score of 84.4, this cantina is the city’s go‑to for a cold Michelada, priced at MX$95. The crowd is lively, and the cantina’s walls are covered in local art, giving it a festive feel. It stays open until 2 AM, making it a solid final stop. The only issue is the noisy crowd on weekends, which can be overwhelming for those seeking a quiet drink. If you only try one bar in Mérida, make it Lapa Lapa – the combination of top‑tier food, solid drinks, and a buzzing atmosphere beats every other contender.

Read Full Article
La Bierhaus's interior with wooden tables, hanging lights, and patrons enjoying beer.Guide

Mérida's Best Bars: A Night Out at La Bierhaus and Monk Sportsbar

From German brews to rock-and-roll vibes, Mérida’s bar scene has a secret to share. Here’s where locals gather to drink, eat, and stay late.

At 7 p.m. on a Friday, La Bierhaus fills with the scent of grilled bratwurst and the clatter of steins. A dozen locals debate soccer scores near the TV, while others lean into the long counter, sipping amber lagers. The place feels like a cross between a Bavarian beer hall and a Mérida neighborhood bar—no accident, given its name. Owner María Elena, who grew up near Munich, opened the spot in 2017 with a mission: ‘Bring German quality to Yucatán.’ Her commitment shows in every detail, from the hand-pumped draft beers to the apple strudel cut into precise triangles. Two blocks west, Monk Sportsbar pulses with a different energy. By 10 p.m., the place is packed with younger crowds, the bass from the DJ booth vibrating through the walls. The menu leans into creative twists—try the jalapeño-infused margaritas or the ‘metal’ cocktail (a smoky mezcal mix with charred pineapple)—but it’s the vibe that keeps people coming back. Regulars call it ‘the spot to hear live rock covers of pop hits,’ and the neon-lit dance floor rarely empties before 2 a.m. The price tags ($100–$200 for drinks and snacks) might seem steep, but the value lies in the experience: a rowdy, unpretentious night out. La Bierhaus’s crown jewel is the $180 bratwurst platter—juicy, smoky, served with sauerkraut and a tangy mustard that cuts through the richness. Maria Elena insists on using locally sourced pork, a choice that reviewers notice: ‘The meat tastes like it was butchered this morning.’ The beer list, with 20+ options, is equally meticulous. The $70 ‘Bavarian Dunkel’ is a fan favorite, its malty sweetness balancing the bitterness of darker brews. Monk thrives on contrasts. The $120 ‘Tijuana Taco’ (soft shell crab with mango slaw) clashes and harmonizes with the heavy metal playing overhead. The bar’s Facebook menu (linked for full viewing) hints at its irreverent spirit—look for ‘cactus-infused tequila’ or ‘blood orange mojitos’ under the ‘WTF Wednesdays’ section. Regulars joke that the real menu changes daily depending on what the bartender feels like making. By 11 p.m., La Bierhaus slows to a hum. Maria Elena locks the kitchen but stays behind the bar, chatting with regulars. At Monk, the DJ just started his set. Both places feel like chapters in Mérida’s nightlife story—one rooted in tradition, the other in rebellion. Neither feels like a ‘tourist trap.’ Both feel like home.

Read Full Article
Food and drinks at Bar La Ruina cantina in MéridaGuide

Bar La Ruina: Where Mérida Drinks Before 7 PM

A Centro cantina with guisada and live comedy before 7 PM. After that, Lapa Lapa takes the night shift.

It's half past one on a Tuesday afternoon, and the patio at Bar La Ruina is already filling up. Cold beers arrive at tables faster than the conversations starting around them. Mérida in March runs hot. The kind of hot that turns any lunch plan into an excuse to find shade and a cold drink. From somewhere inside: the clatter of plates on tile and that low, comfortable hum the city gets when enough people decide productivity is over for the day. Bar La Ruina sits at Calle 69 #570, between 70 and 72, in Mérida's Centro. The name translates to something like "The Ruin," which is either self-deprecating humor or fair warning about what happens if you stay too long. Probably both. This is a cantina in the old sense. Not a concept bar with mezcal flights and imported glassware. Not a cocktail lounge riding the agave wave that's been rolling through Mexican cities this past year. La Ruina serves traditional Yucatecan food alongside its drinks, and the guisada is what people keep coming back for. If you've eaten proper Yucatecan stew, you know the profile: thick broth stained orange by recado spices, slow-cooked until the meat gives up without a fight, the kind of dish that demands a tortilla torn and dragged through every last streak on the plate. You eat it in the shade of the patio while condensation drips down your beer glass, and at $100 to $200 pesos per person, the only real cost is whatever you had planned for the rest of your afternoon. The hours say everything about the crowd. 12:30 to 7 PM, every single day. This is not a late-night spot. La Ruina is where you go when the Mérida sun hits hardest and all you want is cold drinks and shade. Regulars filter in around 3. By 5, the comedians take over. La Ruina hosts live comedy on its patio, turning a cantina afternoon into something closer to open-air theater. The sets run in Spanish, loaded with local references, and the crowd responds like people who have heard the setup before but still want the punchline. With 4.5 stars across more than 1,500 reviews, the place earns its following by doing the same things well, over and over. The patio, the traditional atmosphere, the Yucatecan food, the comedy: people keep naming the same four reasons they return. If Bar La Ruina owns the afternoon, Lapa Lapa claims everything after dark. On Calle 99 in San Antonio Kaua, about 15 minutes south of Centro, this bar and grill runs from 1 PM to midnight on weekdays, pushing past 2 AM on Thursdays through Saturdays. The crowd is younger and louder, eyes locked on screens where football matches play at full volume. More than 5,000 people have reviewed the place, landing at 4.4 stars, which makes Lapa Lapa one of the most discussed bars in the city. The surprise is the menu. You walk into a sports bar expecting wings and nachos. Instead, there's fettuccine. Pasta, in a Mérida bar and grill, made well enough that reviewers single it out by name. At MX$100 to $200 per person, the price range matches La Ruina, but the vibe flips completely. Where La Ruina is a patio comedian at 5 PM, Lapa Lapa is a packed house at 10, forks twirling through fettuccine while someone at the next table screams at the TV because their team conceded in stoppage time. The place runs clean and keeps its kitchen open late, two things that matter more than you'd expect when you're hungry past midnight in Mérida. Back on Calle 69, it's nearing 6 PM. The comedian at La Ruina is mid-set, and someone at the next table has laughed hard enough to knock over an empty bottle. The patio has that amber color Yucatán does better than anywhere, the light going soft before it disappears. A waiter brings another round without being asked. Nobody checks the time. The place closes at 7, but right now, 7 PM feels like it belongs to a different city.

Read Full Article
La Bierhaus open-air restaurant and beer bar on Calle 62 in Mérida CentroSpotlight

Cold Lagers and Hot Nights on Calle 62: Inside La Bierhaus, Mérida's Bavarian Bet

Near Parque Santa Lucía, a German beer hall has become one of Mérida's most dependable good times. Currywurst and cold craft pints under ceiling fans doing overtime.

It's 7 PM on a Wednesday and the ceiling fans at La Bierhaus are working overtime. Calle 62 still holds the day's heat, but inside this open-air beer bar near Parque Santa Lucía, nobody cares. Two couples split a tower of pale ale. A guy in a Chivas jersey reads his phone with a bratwurst going cold on his plate. The bartender lines up four tasting glasses like chess pieces. La Bierhaus sits at Calle 62 #487, between 57th and 59th streets in Centro. Open noon to 11:30 PM, seven days a week. No exceptions. The concept is a German beer hall dropped into the Yucatán Peninsula. Sounds like a tourist trap. It's not. More than 3,400 reviews and a 4.6 rating confirm what regulars already know: this kitchen and this bar list are the real thing. While mezcal cocktails keep taking over Mexico's drinking scene, La Bierhaus doubled down on hops. The beer list runs through craft selections and European imports. The kitchen goes full Bavarian with schnitzel pounded thin and fried to a shattering crunch, bratwurst with sharp mustard, currywurst drowning in curry-spiked ketchup, and flammkuchen for the table. Apple strudel closes it out. Plates land between $100 and $200 pesos. The currywurst is the order here. A fat sausage cut into thick coins, sitting in a pool of tomato sauce punched up with curry powder. Not subtle at all. The spice registers first. Then the sweetness of the tomato catches up. Then the snap of the casing when you bite through. Fries come alongside, and you will drag every last one through that sauce until the plate looks like it went through a dishwasher. Pair it with whatever draft the bartender points you toward and you've got one of the better bar meals in Mérida for under $200 pesos. The schnitzel runs a close second, golden and wide enough to hang off the plate's edge. If La Bierhaus fills Mérida's imported beer craving, Lapa Lapa fills a different gap. Over on Calle 99 #419 in San Antonio Kaua, this bar and grill carries the highest quality score of any bar in the area. More than 5,000 reviews. A 4.4 rating. It opens at 1 PM daily, winding down at midnight on weeknights and running until 2 AM Thursdays through Saturdays. The draw is football and pasta. Sounds unlikely until you're three beers deep, watching a Liga MX match with fettuccine on your fork and crowd noise drowning out every conversation at the table. The volume here is part of the personality. People come for it, not despite it. Plates run $100 to $200 pesos. Back on Calle 62, the sun drops behind the buildings. Temperature's down five degrees. The open-air layout that felt ambitious at noon now feels like the whole point. A new group walks in speaking French, scanning the craft beer menu with the focus of people who traveled to Mérida for this. The couple with the pale ale tower have started round two. In a city where every second new bar has switched to mezcal cocktails, La Bierhaus bet on cold pilsners and Bavarian plates. That bet paid off years ago. It keeps paying off every night.

Read Full Article

Also Explore