The Best Live Music Pubs in Belfast Right Now

There’s a particular kind of magic that happens in a Belfast pub when the fiddle starts up in the corner and the whole room leans in. No stage, no ticket, no setlist — just a chair pulled up, a pint poured, and music that’s been passed hand to hand for generations. This city doesn’t just host live music, it lives and breathes it — and there’s never been a bigger moment to prove it. This summer, from Sunday 2nd to Sunday 9th August 2026, Belfast takes centre stage as it proudly hosts Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann, the world’s biggest celebration of Irish music and culture. It’s only the second time the festival has ever come to Northern Ireland, and the first time for Belfast, with over 800,000 people expected across eight days of street performances, pub sessions and stage concerts in Ireland’s only UNESCO City of Music.

But here’s the thing: you don’t need to wait for August, and you don’t need a Fleadh wristband to feel it. From lively pub sessions to headline concerts, the Fleadh will transform Belfast into a carnival of sound, colour, culture and craic — yet the pubs below are already doing exactly that, week in and week out. Think of this as your warm-up, or your year-round answer to “where’s the real session at?” If you want the craic, the community, and the goosebumps, here’s where the locals actually go.

The Duke of York (Cathedral Quarter)

Start here. The Duke of York is the most photographed pub in Belfast — a narrow, mirror-walled bar down a cobbled alley — and it hosts trad sessions several nights a week. The quality is consistently high. Tucked down Commercial Court with benches along the alleyway outside, it’s the beating heart of the Cathedral Quarter. One word of advice: get there early; it fills fast and standing room is all you’ll get if you arrive late.

Kelly’s Cellars

If the Duke is the postcard, Kelly’s is the soul. On a Cathedral Quarter Saturday afternoon you’ll find cover artists everywhere, but Kelly’s Cellars is where you come for the real thing — the kind of traditional session that puts you inside the tradition rather than outside looking in. One of the oldest pubs in the city, and one of the most honest.

Maddens Bar

Berry Street’s Maddens is a purist’s delight, easy to spot thanks to the huge mural wrapping its side. Pouring what is arguably the city’s best pint, Madden’s welcomes musicians from 9pm each evening — or, as the owner puts it, they normally start landing in around then. World-class trad musicians regularly pull up a chair in the corner without ceremony. No theme, no concept, no Instagram aesthetic — just one of the most authentic traditional music pubs in the city.

Fibber Magees

For sheer reliability, it’s hard to beat Fibbers on Great Victoria Street. It’s one of the few places that holds traditional Irish music in Belfast 7 nights a week and, for that reason, it’s very popular (you’ll do well to nab a seat). Wooden panelling, an open fire, and a bit of Titanic memorabilia thrown in for good measure.

The Dirty Onion

Set in one of Belfast’s oldest buildings with a sprawling beer garden, the Onion is where traditional music meets big night out energy. The tip from regulars: their early evening sessions can often be truly memorable — less crowded, with fabulous musicianship.

The John Hewitt

A pub with a conscience. Run by the Belfast Unemployed Resource Centre and named after the poet, its music programme is one of the best in the city — regular trad sessions, plus folk, jazz, and singer-songwriter nights. The atmosphere is warm, the pints are well-kept, and the crowd is a genuine mix of ages and backgrounds.

McHugh’s Bar

Housed in what’s reckoned to be one of Belfast’s oldest surviving buildings, McHugh’s has exposed brick walls and dark wooden fixtures throughout — atmosphere by the bucketload, and live music to match just a short walk from the Cathedral Quarter.

Lavery’s

For something bigger and rowdier, head to Bradbury Place. Belfast’s oldest family-owned pub, with over a century of service and still the one everyone ends up in, Lavery’s runs live music Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights. As the locals say — if you’ve never been, you’ve never really been to Belfast.

The Sunflower

And for the folk and roots crowd, The Sunflower is an absolute must — a warm, inviting space with a dedicated following for its folk and roots nights and a strong sense of community.

A final pro tip for chasing sessions on the night: if you’re looking for pubs with live music in Belfast tonight, your best bet is to check their Facebook pages, since session times shift and the best ones are often unannounced. And if you’re planning around the Fleadh — most Fleadh events are free to attend, including outdoor concerts, street sessions and competitions, so book your beds early and let the city do the rest. Now go follow the sound of a fiddle down a cobbled alley. That’s where Belfast keeps its heart.

Fleadh Cheoil na hÉireann takes place in Belfast, August 2–9, 2026. For more information visit fleadhcheoil.ievisitbelfast.com, and discovernorthernireland.com.