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    Bar in New York City, United States

    Fig. 19

    100pts

    Late-night Chrystie St bar that holds up.

    Fig. 19, Bar in New York City

    About Fig. 19

    Fig. 19 is a Lower East Side bar on Chrystie Street that works best as part of a wider evening rather than a standalone destination. Walk-ins are easy, late-night availability is strong, and the neighbourhood does a lot of the heavy lifting. Confirm hours and menu details directly before visiting, as Pearl's verified data on the venue is currently limited.

    Should You Book Fig. 19?

    If you've been to Fig. 19 once, the question on a return visit is whether it holds up when the novelty is gone. For a late-night bar on Chrystie Street in Manhattan's Lower East Side, the answer is yes — the address alone does a lot of work. This stretch of LES is one of the more reliable corridors for a drink after 11 PM in New York, and Fig. 19 sits squarely in that conversation.

    The venue is at 131 Chrystie St, a block that pulls a crowd running from early evening into the small hours. That late-night viability is the strongest argument for booking here, particularly if you're planning a special occasion that starts elsewhere and ends somewhere with a drink in hand. The Lower East Side rewards that kind of night — starting with dinner at a nearby spot and arriving at Fig. 19 when the room has settled into its rhythm is a better strategy than showing up at 7 PM.

    For a date or celebration, the Chrystie Street location works in your favour. The LES has enough density of good bars that you're not making a special trip for Fig. 19 alone , you're slotting it into a wider evening. That flexibility makes it a lower-stakes booking than a destination cocktail bar like Angel's Share or Attaboy NYC, both of which require more deliberate planning and earlier arrival times.

    Booking is direct. Walk-in availability on most nights means you don't need to plan weeks ahead, which is an advantage if your evening is still taking shape. Compare that to Amor y Amargo, where the small footprint and specific focus on bitter cocktails means it fills up faster and rewards advance thought.

    Pearl's data on Fig. 19 is limited , no verified hours, menu details, or awards on record , so if specific programming like happy hour pricing or a particular cocktail is the draw, confirm directly before arriving. What the address tells you is that this is a Lower East Side bar operating in a competitive, high-quality neighbourhood. That context sets a reasonable baseline expectation. For a broader look at what's worth your time in the borough, see our full New York City bars guide, our full New York City restaurants guide, and our full New York City hotels guide.

    Practical Details

    DetailFig. 19Angel's ShareAttaboy NYC
    NeighbourhoodLower East SideEast VillageLower East Side
    Booking difficultyEasy / walk-inModerateModerate–Hard
    Late-night viabilityStrongModerateStrong
    Leading forFlexible evenings, datesSerious cocktail focusCraft cocktail destination
    Price tierNot confirmed$$$$

    Also worth knowing about if your travels take you further afield: Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston represent strong regional comparisons for the serious cocktail bar format. For New York specifically, Superbueno is worth a look if you want a more defined programme alongside your drinks.

    FAQs: Fig. 19, New York City

    • Do I need a reservation at Fig. 19? Walk-ins appear to be the norm here , booking difficulty is low. That said, specific hours aren't confirmed in Pearl's data, so check before you head out late. If you want a guaranteed seat with no uncertainty, Angel's Share takes reservations and is a few minutes away in the East Village.
    • Is Fig. 19 good for a date? The Lower East Side location makes it a natural fit for a date night, particularly as a second stop after dinner. It's easier to get into than Attaboy NYC and less specialised than Amor y Amargo, which suits a more casual or spontaneous evening.
    • What's the signature drink at Fig. 19? No verified menu data is available. Confirm with the venue directly , Pearl does not publish drink details without a confirmed source.
    • Does Fig. 19 have happy hour deals? No confirmed pricing or happy hour information is available in Pearl's data. Call ahead or check the venue's current listings before building your evening around a deal.
    • Is the food good at Fig. 19? No cuisine type or food programme details are confirmed. The Lower East Side has a high density of strong kitchens nearby , see our full New York City restaurants guide for options to pair with a visit.
    • What's the crowd like at Fig. 19? Chrystie Street draws a mixed LES crowd , younger, neighbourhood-leaning, and more local than tourist-heavy. Expect a different feel to the East Village's more destination-focused bars. For something with a more curated, cocktail-forward crowd, Amor y Amargo or Angel's Share will skew that way. Also see our full New York City experiences guide and our full New York City wineries guide for more ways to plan your time.

    Compare Fig. 19

    How Fig. 19 Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Fig. 19Easy
    The Long Island BarWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Dirty FrenchUnknown
    SuperbuenoWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Amor y AmargoWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    Angel's ShareWorld's 50 BestUnknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Do I need a reservation at Fig. 19?

    Walk-ins are the norm at Fig. 19 — it operates as a bar, not a ticketed dining room. That said, Chrystie St draws a consistent late-night crowd, so arriving before 9 PM on weekends is the practical move if you want a seat. Compared to Amor y Amargo, which can get tight fast given its small footprint, Fig. 19 gives you a bit more flexibility.

    Is Fig. 19 good for a date?

    Yes, with the right expectations set. The Lower East Side address and late-night bar format work well for a second or third date — it's more interesting than a generic wine bar and less performative than a tasting-menu spot. If you want something more structured for a first date, Angel's Share in the East Village offers a quieter, reservation-friendly alternative.

    What's the signature drink at Fig. 19?

    Specific menu details aren't confirmed in our current data, so we won't speculate on named cocktails. What is documented is that Fig. 19 sits in a neighbourhood with serious bar competition — Amor y Amargo is a block away and Dirty French draws a different but overlapping crowd — which means the drinks program has to pull weight to keep regulars returning.

    Does Fig. 19 have happy hour deals?

    Pricing and happy hour specifics aren't confirmed in our current data. For a Lower East Side bar at 131 Chrystie St, check directly when you arrive or call ahead. If value-per-drink is the priority, Superbueno in the neighbourhood runs some of the more competitive cocktail pricing in the area.

    Is the food good at Fig. 19?

    Fig. 19 operates primarily as a bar; food programming details aren't confirmed in our current data. If food quality is your main criterion, Dirty French on Ludlow St is the stronger option nearby — it's a full kitchen with a track record. Fig. 19 is better framed as a drinks destination with food as a secondary consideration.

    What's the crowd like at Fig. 19?

    The Chrystie St address puts Fig. 19 in a corridor that skews creative, late-night, and neighbourhood-regular rather than tourist-heavy. It draws a younger Lower East Side crowd that knows its bars, not a Times Square overflow contingent. If you prefer a calmer, more spirits-focused room, Amor y Amargo two blocks over is quieter and more cocktail-nerd-oriented.

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