Bar in London, United Kingdom
The Ivy Club
100ptsMembers-adjacent dining; easier to book than it looks.

About The Ivy Club
The Ivy Club at 9 West St is a dependable Covent Garden choice for a quiet, occasion-worthy evening — easier to book than the main Ivy restaurant below, and well-suited to pre-theater dinners or relaxed date nights. The room trades on atmosphere and consistency rather than culinary ambition or an adventurous wine list. Book if the setting matters; look elsewhere if you want depth in the glass or on the plate.
The Ivy Club, London: Worth Booking?
The Ivy Club earns a cautious yes — but only if you understand what you are buying. This is a members-adjacent dining room in the heart of Covent Garden, trading heavily on the prestige of one of London's most recognisable restaurant addresses. If you are visiting for the atmosphere and the sense of occasion, you will likely get your money's worth. If you are coming for cutting-edge food or a wine program that competes with the city's specialist bars, adjust your expectations accordingly.
The Portrait
The Ivy Club sits above the main Ivy restaurant at 9 West St in WC2H, accessed separately from its more democratic sibling downstairs. The room carries the quiet confidence of a place that has been drawing a certain kind of London crowd for years — West End theatergoers, media figures, and anyone who prefers their evening to feel arranged rather than spontaneous. The ambient energy here runs lower and more controlled than the main restaurant floor below: think low conversation, comfortable upholstery, and a pace that rewards a long dinner rather than a quick turn. This is not a venue for loud groups or anyone seeking a buzzy, high-energy night out. It is, by design, quieter and more deliberate.
On the wine side, the by-the-glass selection at a venue of this standing is worth scrutiny for the explorer who cares about what is actually in the glass. London's dedicated wine bars , think Amaro or the program at 69 Colebrooke Row , will typically offer more depth and curiosity per pour than a restaurant-adjacent club room. What The Ivy Club delivers instead is a dependable, well-curated list calibrated for comfort rather than discovery. If you want to be surprised by an unusual natural producer or a deep regional pour, this is probably not your first stop. If you want a reliable Burgundy with dinner in a room that feels occasion-worthy, it performs that role well.
The food program follows the same logic: accomplished, consistent, and built for the broadest possible definition of a good evening out. It is not a destination for the food-obsessed, but it is also unlikely to disappoint. The kitchen at The Ivy has operated for long enough that dependability is baked in , this is a venue that has survived well past the point where novelty alone keeps tables full. For explorers who track London's restaurant scene closely, this longevity is itself a signal: the room has earned its reputation on repeat custom, not press cycles.
Booking is direct by London standards. Unlike the main Ivy downstairs, which can require planning several weeks out during peak theater season, the Club level tends to be more accessible. If you are planning around a show at one of the nearby West End venues, or looking for a reliable Covent Garden option that will not require the logistics of a harder reservation, The Ivy Club is a practical choice. For a wider view of what London's bar and dining scene offers right now, see our full London bars guide, our full London restaurants guide, and our full London experiences guide.
Practical Details
Reservations: Recommended; bookings are generally easier to secure here than at The Ivy main restaurant, making this a solid fallback for Covent Garden evenings. Dress: Smart casual as a baseline; the room skews formal without enforcing it. Location: 9 West St, London WC2H 9NE, within walking distance of multiple West End theaters. Timing: Pre- and post-theater windows fill fastest; mid-week lunches offer the most relaxed experience. Good for: Date nights, quiet catch-ups, pre-theater dinners; less suited to large celebratory groups or wine-led evenings.
If You Are Exploring Further
London's drinking and dining scene extends well beyond Covent Garden. For cocktail-focused evenings, A Bar with Shapes For a Name and Academy offer more technically adventurous programs. The wine-forward crowd should look at Amaro for by-the-glass depth that a club dining room cannot match. If you are planning trips beyond London, Bramble in Edinburgh remains one of the UK's most consistent cocktail destinations, and Bar Kismet in Halifax is worth knowing for the transatlantic explorer. For a genuine outlier experience, Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu demonstrates what a serious bar program looks like in an unlikely city. See also our full London hotels guide and our full London wineries guide for planning the rest of your trip.
Compare The Ivy Club
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Ivy Club | — | ||
| Bar Termini | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Callooh Callay | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Happiness Forgets | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Nightjar | World's 50 Best | — | |
| Quo Vadis | World's 50 Best | — |
What to weigh when choosing between The Ivy Club and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a reservation at The Ivy Club?
Yes, book ahead — but The Ivy Club is meaningfully easier to secure than the main Ivy restaurant downstairs at the same 9 West St address. If you have been turned away from The Ivy proper, this is a practical and often overlooked alternative in the same building. Walk-ins are a gamble in Covent Garden, so reserve.
Is The Ivy Club good for a date?
It works well for a date, particularly if you want the Ivy cachet without the noise level of the main restaurant floor. The room sits above the street in WC2H, which gives it a degree of separation and a more contained atmosphere. It suits couples more than large groups, and the members-club framing adds a quiet sense of occasion without requiring a formal dress code.
Does The Ivy Club have happy hour deals?
No happy hour deals are documented for The Ivy Club at 9 West St. If price-led drinking is the priority, the Covent Garden area has better options — Bar Termini and Happiness Forgets both offer strong cocktail programmes at more accessible price points.
What's the signature drink at The Ivy Club?
No specific signature drink is confirmed in available data for The Ivy Club. Given its positioning above a long-established London restaurant, the bar offering is likely classic-leaning rather than cocktail-forward. For a venue where the drinks programme is the centrepiece, Nightjar or Callooh Callay in London give you more in that department.
Is the food good at The Ivy Club?
The Ivy Club shares its lineage with The Ivy at 9 West St, a restaurant with decades of London dining history, which sets a baseline expectation for competent, crowd-pleasing British and European food. No specific awards or chef credentials are confirmed for the Club room specifically. Treat it as a reliable rather than destination-level kitchen — the draw is the room and the occasion, not the cooking.
More bars in London
- Scarfes BarScarfes Bar at the Rosewood London is a serious destination in its own right, not just a hotel bar. With a 4.7 Google rating, OAD Casual Europe recognition, and a visually striking room lined with Gerald Scarfe caricatures, it earns a standalone visit. Go midweek for the best atmosphere; groups of six-plus are well accommodated.
- 155 Bar & Kitchen155 Bar & Kitchen on Farringdon Road is a straightforward bar-and-kitchen in EC1 that works best as a reliable local rather than a destination night out. Booking is easy — 24 to 48 hours ahead covers most evenings — and its central location near Farringdon station makes it a convenient stop before or after other plans. Worth knowing; not worth making your only stop.
- 45 Jermyn St.45 Jermyn St. is a wine-forward address in St. James's that rewards those who treat the by-the-glass list as the main event. Booking is easy with a few days' notice midweek, harder Thursday to Saturday. The price point is high for the area, but it's justified if a serious wine selection in a proper room is what you're after.
- 68 and Boston68 and Boston sits on Greek Street in the heart of Soho, making it one of the more accessible spirit-forward bar options in a neighbourhood that takes drinking seriously. Booking is easy by London standards — walk-ins are realistic mid-week, and even weekends rarely require more than a few days' notice. Arrive before 7:30 PM for a quieter experience; later and the room fills fast.
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