The “taste of the Rockies” certainly extends far beyond Molson Coors, based some 30 minutes west of downtown Denver in Golden, Colorado. Denver itself is said to brew more beer than any other U.S. city, so expect to find a slew of microbrews and the bars that love them, especially in LoDo’s former warehouse district (within the state of Colorado are hundreds more). Every fall, Denver is home to the biggest celebration of U.S. beers, the 40-year-old Great American Beer Festival (GABF), and that ain’t the only reason the city’s been called the “Napa Valley of Beer”: Even the mayor (now senator) founded a brewpub here.
Where: In downtown Denver, several microbreweries are within easy walking distance of one another—and, conveniently, Coors Field, if you’re headed to a baseball game. We started at Wynkoop Brewing Company (1634 18th St., map)—Colorado’s first brewpub, est. 1988, founded by Gov. John Hickenlooper in his pre-politics days, and the one largely credited with revitalizing the LoDo district—for a pint of its Denver-appropriate specialty, Patty’s Chile Beer (pictured), a light and spicy German-style brew made with Anaheim chiles and smoked ancho peppers. You might also try its flagship Railyard Ale, a smooth session beer (now available in cans throughout the metro area), the refreshing Wixa Weiss (a two-time GABF medal winner), or (when available) the heady Metacool Maltuwanna, a malty amber ale brewed with hemp seeds (no, you won’t get high). The beers here regularly do well at the GABF, and the sprawling pub, complete with upstairs billiards parlor, is pretty awesome.
When: Daily, 11am-2am
More microbreweries & brewpubs: There’s the award-winning Great Divide Brewing (2201 Arapahoe St., map), est. 1994, with a dedicated tap room and innovative concoctions like a smoked porter and an oak-aged stout infused with locally roasted espresso. Among the more traditional brewpubs around here are Rock Bottom Restaurant & Brewery (multiple locations including 1001 16th St., map), which is a family of breweries across the country (though no two branches’ beers are ever exactly the same), and mini-chain Chophouse & Brewery (1735 19th St., map).
Outside of LoDo, there’s the English-style Bull & Bush Pub & Brewery (4700 Cherry Creek Dr. South, map) in Cherry Creek; hippie-friendly Vine Street Pub (303-388-2337; 1700 Vine St., map) in the Uptown neighborhood, which carries hand-crafted beers from Boulder’s Mountain Sun Pub & Brewery; and the tasting room of Strange Craft Beer Company (1330 Zuni St., Unit M, map), which bills itself as Denver’s smallest and youngest microbrewery.
Good to know: Want more history and beer-making background? The Denver Microbrew Tour ($55; reservations required) will take you to four of LoDo’s breweries in about two hours with an informative guide.
Editor’s note: This content has been updated to reflect business closures, but we are no longer adding new breweries and bar info to these beer roundups, as there are simply too many nowadays!
Last updated: Feb. 2025