Bar in Portland, United States
Teardrop Lounge
320ptsOregon-Sourced Precision Cocktails

About Teardrop Lounge
Teardrop Lounge has held a place in Portland's serious cocktail conversation since well before the city's bar scene attracted national attention. Ranked 48th on North America's Best Bars in 2022 and carrying a Pearl District Recommended designation for 2025, it operates Tuesday through Saturday from 4pm in the Pearl District, where the program sits closer to the technical end of the city's cocktail spectrum.
Where the Pearl District's Cocktail Seriousness Takes Shape
The Pearl District runs on a certain tension: former industrial warehouses converted into galleries and condominiums, a neighbourhood that still carries the grain of its working past even as wine bars and design studios fill the ground floors. NW Everett Street sits in that mix, and Teardrop Lounge occupies it with a low-key physical presence that resists the signalling of venues that need you to know how serious they are before you walk through the door. The room reads as a bar first. The program reveals the rest.
Portland's cocktail scene has followed a recognisable arc over the past fifteen years: early craft enthusiasm, a wave of spirit-forward dive-bar identity politics, and then a more considered technical maturity. Teardrop belongs to that third phase, and its sustained presence through each shift marks it as a reference point rather than a moment. Bars at this level, whether Kumiko in Chicago or Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, tend to earn their longevity not through reinvention but through consistent depth of execution.
The Sourcing Logic Behind the Glass
In Portland's bar culture, ingredient sourcing has become a genuine differentiator rather than a talking point. The city's proximity to Oregon's agricultural interior, the Willamette Valley's herb and produce farms, and the Pacific Northwest's foraging tradition means that bars with the inclination and relationships can draw on materials that bars in denser urban markets simply cannot replicate at the same cost or freshness. This geographic advantage has shaped the better end of Portland's cocktail program since at least the mid-2000s, and it remains the most honest explanation for why certain drinks here taste structurally different from their analogues in New York or Los Angeles.
Teardrop's position in this context follows the logic of bars that treat the glass as the end point of a supply chain rather than a menu exercise. The Pacific Northwest's botanical abundance, from Douglas fir and Oregon grape to locally grown citrus and cold-climate stone fruit, provides the raw material vocabulary. How a bar uses that vocabulary is a program decision; that Teardrop has maintained its standing in the 2025 Pearl Recommended Bar designation and held a top-50 North America ranking in 2022 suggests the decisions being made here are consistent ones.
For context on how ingredient sourcing shapes bar identity across different American cities, the programs at Jewel of the South in New Orleans and Julep in Houston each demonstrate how regional ingredient traditions translate into a bar's structural identity. Portland's version of that argument runs through the Northwest's produce and spirits ecosystem.
Portland's Craft Bar Tier and Where Teardrop Sits
Portland has enough serious bars that comparison matters. Multnomah Whiskey Library operates on a spirits-library model, with depth of selection as the primary draw. Bible Club PDX runs a speakeasy-era aesthetic that places presentation and theatrics alongside the liquid. Rum Club focuses a tight program through a specific spirits category. Takibi and The Green Room each represent different inflections of the city's bar character. Teardrop occupies a different position in that set: a full-service cocktail bar with technical ambition but without a single-category or single-era frame around it.
On the broader North American map, the 2022 World's 50 Best ranking placed Teardrop at 48th, a position that aligns it with bars like ABV in San Francisco and Superbueno in New York City in the tier of recognised city-level reference bars that attract a professional bar community alongside a general clientele. That crossover, where a bar serves the curious and the credentialed without adjusting its program for either, is one of the harder things to sustain.
Within Portland itself, the bar sits alongside local venues including Abigail Hall and 3808 N Williams Ave in the city's recognised cocktail tier. For those exploring the broader Portland drinking scene, the full Portland restaurants guide maps the relevant options across neighbourhoods and formats.
The Pearl District Context
The Pearl's bar and restaurant density means that competition for the evening hour is real. 10 Barrel Brewing Portland anchors a different part of the neighbourhood's drinking market, drawing volume and a beer-focused audience. The quieter north end of the Pearl, where NW Everett runs, attracts a different evening pattern: fewer large-group walk-ins, more deliberate visits. That physical location works for a bar whose program rewards attention.
The Pearl has also become Portland's most internationally legible neighbourhood, the part of the city that visitors from other markets navigate first. For a bar like Teardrop, that position carries value: it means sustained access to an audience that includes both locals who have been coming for years and first-time visitors using the 2022 ranking or the 2025 Pearl designation as a navigation tool.
European bars at the technical end of the craft spectrum, such as The Parlour in Frankfurt on the Main, share a similar positional logic: a neighbourhood that generates consistent footfall from both local regulars and internationally aware visitors. The bar's identity holds because the neighbourhood provides both audiences without the program needing to compromise for either.
Other Portland venues like 7316 N Lombard St represent the city's appetite for serious food and drink programming across different districts, underscoring that Portland's quality bar scene extends beyond any single corridor.
Planning Your Visit
Teardrop Lounge opens Tuesday through Saturday from 4pm. The Pearl District location on NW Everett Street is walkable from most of the neighbourhood's hotels and accessible by streetcar. Early-evening arrivals, before 6pm, tend to allow for a more considered pace at the bar.
| Venue | Format | Hours | Neighbourhood | Recognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teardrop Lounge | Full-service cocktail bar | Tu-Sa from 16:00 | Pearl District | North America's Leading Bars #48 (2022); Pearl Recommended 2025 |
| Multnomah Whiskey Library | Spirits library / members | Varied | Pearl District | Local institution |
| Bible Club PDX | Speakeasy-style cocktail bar | Evenings | SE Portland | Local recognition |
| Rum Club | Single-category cocktail bar | Evenings | SE Portland | Local recognition |
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the signature drink at Teardrop Lounge?
Teardrop does not publicise a single fixed signature, which reflects something true about how bars at this level operate: the program rotates with sourcing opportunities and seasonal availability. The 2022 North America's Leading Bars ranking and the 2025 Pearl Recommended designation both point to a cocktail program built around technical precision and ingredient quality rather than a marquee item. Arriving with an interest in what is currently being made, and asking accordingly, is the more reliable way to access the leading of what the bar offers at any given visit.
Why do people go to Teardrop Lounge?
At its core, Teardrop draws the kind of audience that tracks bar programs rather than bar brands. The 2022 World's 50 Best North America ranking placed it 48th on the continent, a credential that carries weight among the bar community and informed travellers who use those lists as navigation tools. Within Portland, the Pearl District address and the 2025 Pearl Recommended designation mean it functions as a reference point for the city's serious cocktail tier. On price, the Pearl District positioning places it in the mid-to-upper range of Portland's cocktail market, broadly consistent with the technical level of the program. People come for the drinks, and the sourcing decisions behind them, rather than for atmosphere as a primary draw.
Hours
Mo-Sa 16:00+
Recognized By
More bars in Portland
- 3808 N Williams Ave3808 N Williams Ave is a North Portland address in one of the city's more active neighborhood corridors. Booking difficulty is low and walk-ins are likely, but key details — hours, cuisine, and pricing — aren't confirmed in the available record. Do your homework before making it the anchor of an evening.
- 7316 N Lombard StA North Portland address on the Lombard corridor with minimal confirmed public data — best suited to locals looking for a low-friction, neighbourhood-format meal. Easy to book, likely takeout-friendly, and a practical option if you're already in the St. Johns area. Verify current hours and cuisine before visiting, as the digital footprint is thin.
- Abigail HallAbigail Hall is a downtown Portland bar at 813 SW Alder St, well-placed for a pre- or post-dinner drink in the city core. Booking is easy, making it a low-friction option for a date or casual celebration. Confirm hours and current programming directly before visiting, as full menu and pricing details are not yet confirmed in Pearl's data.
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