Bar in New York City, United States
The Commerce Inn
100ptsIntimate West Village bar, late-night done right.

About The Commerce Inn
The Commerce Inn on one of the West Village's quietest blocks offers a lower-noise, conversation-friendly alternative to Manhattan's louder bar corridors. Booking is easy and walk-ins are generally viable. Confirmed menu, pricing, and hours data is limited — verify before visiting, but the address alone makes it worth considering for a late-evening drink.
The Commerce Inn, New York City
If you're weighing up a late-night drink in the West Village, The Commerce Inn at 50 Commerce St is the more intimate bet compared to the louder, higher-traffic bars along Hudson and Bleecker. The room operates at a lower register — the kind of place where conversation doesn't require leaning in after 10 PM. Whether that's a selling point depends entirely on what you want from the evening.
Commerce Street itself is one of the few genuinely quiet blocks in Greenwich Village, which sets the tone before you walk in. The address alone signals something: this isn't a destination built on foot traffic or social media queues. It draws people who already know where they're going. For a value-seeker, that's a useful filter — rooms like this tend to price for the neighbourhood rather than for the hype.
On the late-night viability question: the West Village holds up better than most Manhattan neighbourhoods after midnight, and a bar positioned on a residential side street tends to maintain its atmosphere further into the evening than venues closer to bar-row corridors. The noise floor stays lower, the crowd tends to thin rather than spike, and you're less likely to be standing. If you're planning a Tuesday or Wednesday night out and want somewhere that doesn't feel like it's winding down by 10:30, this address is worth considering over higher-volume alternatives.
For the value-conscious diner or drinker, the West Village is not the cheapest neighbourhood in New York City , that's simply the reality of the zip code. But venues on quieter residential streets like Commerce St historically carry lower operational costs than those on prime frontage, which sometimes (not always) flows through to pricing. Without confirmed price data, the honest answer is: verify before you go.
Compared to the broader West Village bar scene, The Commerce Inn sits closer to the Amor y Amargo end of the spectrum , deliberate, quieter, less about the scene , than the Superbueno end, which runs louder and more energetic. If you're choosing between the two modes for a late evening, that distinction matters.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 50 Commerce St, New York, NY 10014
- Neighbourhood: West Village, Manhattan
- Booking difficulty: Easy
- Price range: Not confirmed , check directly before visiting
- Hours: Not confirmed , verify before visiting
- Phone / Website: Not publicly listed in our data
- Leading for: Quieter late evenings, conversation-first drinking, West Village location
- Getting there: The West Village is served by the 1 train (Christopher St) and the A/C/E (14th St / 8th Ave)
How It Compares
See the full comparison below. For broader context on where The Commerce Inn fits in the New York City drinking scene, browse our full New York City bars guide. If you're planning a wider trip, our New York City restaurants guide, hotels guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture. For bar comparisons beyond New York, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, Jewel of the South in New Orleans, and Julep in Houston are worth benchmarking against if you travel frequently and want consistent quality across cities. And for serious cocktail seekers in New York, Attaboy NYC and Angel's Share remain the higher-credential alternatives worth knowing. Our New York City wineries guide is also available if wine is the priority.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Does The Commerce Inn have happy hour deals? No confirmed happy hour information is available in our data. Call ahead or check directly , the West Village bar scene does support happy hour pricing at several venues, but we can't confirm whether Commerce Inn participates.
- Is The Commerce Inn good for a date? The address and neighbourhood suggest yes , a quiet side street in the West Village is about as good a setting as Manhattan offers for a date. Conversation-friendly rooms in this part of the city are relatively rare; this one appears to be among them. Confirm the vibe before booking by checking recent reviews.
- Is The Commerce Inn good for groups? Without confirmed seat count data, it's hard to say definitively. Small groups of two to four should be fine; larger parties should call ahead to check capacity and whether reservations are needed. The West Village generally skews toward intimate venues rather than large-group formats.
- Does The Commerce Inn have outdoor seating? Not confirmed. Commerce Street does have sidewalk space, but whether The Commerce Inn uses it for seating is unverified. Worth asking directly, especially in the current season when outdoor options matter more.
- Is the food good at The Commerce Inn? No cuisine data or awards are on record for this venue, so a direct food verdict isn't possible here. If food quality is your deciding factor, venues with confirmed credentials , like those in our New York City restaurants guide , are a safer starting point.
- What's the signature drink at The Commerce Inn? No confirmed menu data available. No awards or editorial recognition specific to the cocktail program appear in our record. For guaranteed cocktail quality, Attaboy NYC or Angel's Share are the more credentialed choices in Manhattan.
- Do I need a reservation at The Commerce Inn? Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Walk-ins are likely fine, particularly on weeknights. Weekend evenings in the West Village fill faster across the board, so calling ahead is a reasonable precaution , no phone number is publicly listed in our data, so check the venue directly online.
Compare The Commerce Inn
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Commerce Inn | Easy | ||
| The Long Island Bar | Unknown | ||
| Dirty French | Unknown | ||
| Superbueno | Unknown | ||
| Amor y Amargo | Unknown | ||
| Angel's Share | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does The Commerce Inn have happy hour deals?
No happy hour details are confirmed for The Commerce Inn at 50 Commerce St. West Village bars at this calibre of intimacy tend to lean on strong programming over discounting, so check their current schedule directly before planning around a deal.
Is The Commerce Inn good for a date?
Yes — the West Village address and intimate format make it a solid date pick, particularly if your alternative is somewhere louder or more hectic. Commerce St itself is one of the more atmospheric streets in the neighbourhood, which works in your favour before you even walk in.
Is The Commerce Inn good for groups?
Probably not for large groups. Venues at 50 Commerce St with an intimate character tend to cap out at small parties of two to four comfortably. If you're planning for six or more, Superbueno or Dirty French would give you more space and flexibility.
Does The Commerce Inn have outdoor seating?
No outdoor seating is confirmed in available data for The Commerce Inn. Commerce St is a narrow, curved street, which limits pavement space, so don't plan around it — call ahead if it's a deciding factor for your visit.
Is the food good at The Commerce Inn?
Cuisine details aren't confirmed for The Commerce Inn, so it's hard to make a firm call. If food is your priority for the evening, Dirty French on the Lower East Side or Superbueno offer more clearly defined kitchens with documented menus — use The Commerce Inn as a drinks-first destination.
What's the signature drink at The Commerce Inn?
No specific cocktail information is available in confirmed data for The Commerce Inn at 50 Commerce St. For a bar in the West Village with this kind of focused, quieter identity, the programme likely skews considered over flashy — Amor y Amargo is the neighbourhood benchmark for spirit-forward drinks if that's your frame of reference.
Do I need a reservation at The Commerce Inn?
Booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekends, given the intimate scale of the venue. Walk-ins may work on quieter weeknights, but The Commerce Inn's size means it fills faster than larger West Village spots. Confirm directly via their current contact details before showing up without one.
More bars in New York City
- (SUB)MERCER(SUB)MERCER occupies a basement address on Mercer Street in SoHo, positioning it as a deliberate destination rather than a drop-in. The subterranean format tends to keep ambient noise lower than street-level alternatives, making it a reasonable call for groups of four or more. Book ahead for weekends and confirm group capacity directly with the venue.
- 1 OR 81 OR 8 on DeKalb Avenue is a low-key Fort Greene bar that works best for two people on a weeknight when the room is quiet enough for conversation. Walk-ins are easy, no advance planning required. If a specialist cocktail program is your priority, Attaboy or Amor y Amargo offer more defined experiences — but for a neighbourhood drink without the fuss, this delivers.
- 230 Fifth Rooftop Bar230 Fifth is the easiest rooftop bar in Midtown to walk into, and the Empire State Building views justify the trip. The crowd skews groups and tourists, and the drinks are solid rather than craft-focused. Go early on a weekday for the best version of the experience; after 9 PM on weekends it tips firmly into party-group territory.
- 4 Charles Prime Rib4 Charles Prime Rib is a compact, reservation-required West Village dining room built around a focused prime rib format. It works well for dates and pairs but is too small for groups of four or more. Booking is easy relative to Manhattan peers, and the narrow menu signals a kitchen that executes one thing consistently well.
- 44 & X Hell's KitchenA low-key Hell's Kitchen neighborhood bar-restaurant that earns its place for easy weeknight dates and pre-theatre dinners. Booking is simple, the room is intimate enough for conversation, and there's no dress pressure. Not a cocktail destination, but a reliable, pressure-free option in Midtown West when you want comfort over spectacle.
- 58-22 Myrtle Ave58-22 Myrtle Ave is a low-key Ridgewood neighborhood spot that rewards return visits more than first impressions. Easy to get into, with no reservation headaches, it suits regulars looking for an unpretentious room rather than a structured cocktail program. If a strong drinks list or kitchen ambition matters to you, look to Attaboy or Amor y Amargo instead.
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate The Commerce Inn on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.
