9 Mississippi Dive Bars Loved By Locals
Dive bars are all about community, and Mississippi is blessed with both friendly people and great bars. Here are some of our favorites!
What officially defines a βdive bar?β The term was first used to describe the sort of basement drinking establishment where patrons would literally dive down into the subterranean retreat. These days, itβs used to describe a category of drinking holes that are traditionally less flashy, maybe even a little shabby, and frequented by local clientele.
Other defining elements can include a jukebox with selections that havenβt changed since the Clinton administration, primary lighting derived from neon beer signs, walls covered with garish art or dollar bills signed by patrons, and perhaps a more forgiving attitude toward the presence of dogs in the bar.
Dive bars are fearless in their customs and rules, with traditions not to be quibbled by newcomers. Cash only? Use the ATM in that dark corner. Looking for a local craft beer selection? Just sit back and enjoy your longneck PBR, friend. These are the spots where an intention of βtwo beers and home by 10 p.m.β can quickly turn into β10 beers and home by 2 a.m.β But most of all, dive bars are about community, and Mississippi is blessed with an abundance of both friendly people and great dive bars. Here are some of our favorites.
Mississippi Moonshine Tavern
18272 28th St., Long Beach, MS 39560
Hours: Monday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Friday, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 a.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.Β
Long Beach is a shorefront town that attracts visitors to experience coastal life, but locals also sometimes need a place to hide out. Thatβs where Mississippi Moonshine Tavern comes in. Selling cans of beer by the bucket and storing jello shooters in a small fridge behind the bar, itβs a prototypical dive. Regulars ring the U-shaped bar to bend an elbow while waiting their turn at the pool table, and the tile floors make cleanup more manageable if a beer falls off the tableβs edge during a particularly challenging shot. (Seriously, donβt put your beer cans on the pool table!)

Boone Dox
820 Township Rd., Gulfport, MS 39507 β’Β (228) 731-3407
Hours: Monday through Wednesday, 10 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Thursday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2 a.m.; Sunday, 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
This convivial tavern features long tables for patrons to gather around β friends or people who havenβt met yet but will soon be friends. Darts and billiards are the leading entertainment options, but Boone Dox occasionally hosts live music acts. Whereβs the stage, you might ask? Help me move these bar stools out of the way so the guitar player can plug in his amplifier. Just be careful with your backstroke while youβre shooting pool, or youβre liable to mess up his song by hitting his guitar. Itβs the perfect tiny dive bar setup.

Redβs BBlues Club
398 Sunflower Ave., Clarksdale, MS 38614 β’ (662) 627-3166
Hours: Wednesday, 5 p.m. to 11 p.m.; Thursday, 5 p.m. to midnight; Friday, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Saturday, 11 a.m. to midnight; closed Sunday through Tuesday
A juke joint is a subset of dive bars made famous in the Mississippi Delta region. While the name implies music from a jukebox, often the entertainment comes from live music acts that provide the background for dancing and frolicking. Clarksdale is known as the birthplace of the blues, and Redβs Blues Club is exactly what youβre thinking of when you imagine the ultimate juke joint. You might see Red himself, holding court in the corner of the small single room while legendary blues artists perform stripped-down primal roots music. The garish interior of the former music store is part of the atmosphere, and the fact that there are cans of bug spray on the bar lets you know that youβre in a legit juke joint!

Martinβs Downtown
214 State St., Jackson, MS 39201 β’ (601) 354-9712
Hours: Monday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 1:30 a.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m. to midnight
Martinβs is a little larger than your average dive bar, but as a gathering spot for downtown residents of Mississippiβs capital for more than 50 years, it fits the bill nicely. Itβs also unusual that you can feed your soul and your belly at Martinβs, thanks to a short pub grub menu. The bartender may also be your server and food runner, so be patient because there are many people to take care of. Appearing on the stage at Martinβs has become a rite of passage for regional bands, the sign that they are really on their way to the top. The exposed brick and beams of the interior make it seem like they arenβt quite finished building the place, but itβs looked like that for years.

Daveβs Dark Horse Tavern
410 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr Dr. E., Starkville, MS 39759 β’ (662) 324-7001
Hours: Sunday, Monday, and Wednesday, 3 p.m. to midnight; Thursday through Saturday, 3 p.m. to 1 a.m.; closed Tuesday
From the slightly sagging ceiling to the small rhomboid stage cut out of the wall to host small groups and open mic nights, there arenβt a lot of straight lines at Daveβs, and they wouldnβt have it any other way. Daveβs Dark Horse Tavern is a Golden Triangle fixture, promising βcontinuing education since 1995β to a generation of Mississippi State students and Starkville residents. True to its name, Daveβs is a dim place with red rope lights wrapped around posts providing much of the illumination and all of what passes as βdecor.β Thatβs OK, though. Daveβs Dark Horse is the favorite if youβre looking for good, affordable food, strong drinks, and excellent happy hour deals.


Gilβs Fish Camp Bayou Bar
1024 Legion Ln., Ocean Springs, MS 39564 β’ (228) 818-5445
Hours: Monday and Tuesday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.; Wednesday and Thursday, 11 a.m. to midnight; Friday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to 2 a.m.
Despite being named βMississippiβs Best Dive Barβ by a national website, this little hole-in-the-wall on Fort Bayou is short on pretentiousness and long on atmosphere. In addition to waterfront views and crawfish boils (when theyβre in season,) Gilβs specializes in cheap beers so cold theyβll freeze your glass, and their version of a boozy adult milkshake, the Bushwacker, will put you on island time any hour of the day. They even offer drive-through service so you can pick up a daiquiri to-go, but then youβd miss out on the company of the genial regulars posted up at the tiny bar. Like tossing a coin over your shoulder into Romeβs Trevi Fountain, signing your name on a dollar and pinning it to the wall means that youβll probably return someday soon.

The Mermaid Dive Bar
709 Howard Ave., Biloxi, MS 39530 β’ (228) 207-2878
Hours: Daily, 6 p.m. to 4 a.m.
The Mermaid is a different kind of βdiveβ bar β¦ as in diving undersea. Sure, it checks many of the boxes of your pedestrian tavern: drinks served in mason jars, music from a jukebox, low lighting, darts, and pool, but it takes the diving theme even further. At different times during most evenings, mermaids and mermen dressed in aquatic garb jump up on the small stage to lounge in a giant martini glass. Youβll leave believing in the myth!

Blue Front Cafe
107 W Railroad Ave., Bentonia, MS 39040 β’ (662) 528-1900
Hours: Daily, 6 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Another iconic juke joint and dive bar, Blue Front Cafe has earned a spot on the Mississippi Blues Trail for its role in the development of the βBentonia Bluesβ style of music since it opened way back in 1948, and itβs the oldest juke joint in the state thatβs still in operation. Modern blues rockers The Black Keys paid homage to the legendary bar by featuring it in videos and album covers, and patrons can enjoy a cold beer and live blues just about every night of the week. When the crowds get big, or the Blue Front is staging a festival, the music pushes out to the front porch, where it wafts across the cotton fields of the Delta.

The Ugly Pirate
144 Demontluzin Ave Suite F, Bay St Louis, MS 39520 β’ (228) 467-2682
Hours: Wednesday and Thursday, 4 p.m. to 10 p.m; Friday, 4 p.m. to midnight; Saturday, noon to midnight; Sunday, noon to 10 p.m.; closed Monday and Tuesday
This tiny nautical-themed bar only has a few bar stools and a couple of tables, but that just means that regulars hang out shoulder-to-shoulder amongst the riot of pirate memorabilia and tiki-inspired decor. For such a small bar, The Ugly Pirate offers a surprising variety of craft beers on tap, and theyβve been known to block off a couple of parking spots in the lot to set up an impromptu stage for bands. Also, donβt miss out on the Friday night turtle races. Place your bets!


This article was made possible byΒ Visit Mississippi.Β
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Chris Chamberlain
A rare Nashville native, Chris Chamberlain has been writing professionally for over 16 years. Chris loves to write about food, bourbon, and quirky history β especially in the South. Find more of Chris's work at the Nashville Scene, Resy, Fodor's, Tennessee Visitors Guide, Bourbon Plus, NFocus, Thrillist, and Eat This, Not That.