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Detroit’s coolest new bars of 2025

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Detroit’s coolest new bars of 2025


Orange wine, smoked old fashioned, freezer martinis, oysters, olives and more were covering bar tops across Motown over the past 12 months or so as Detroit welcomed the debut of many new splashy lounges and neighborhood watering holes.

From the east side to the west — and of course downtown as well — new places offered unique wine lists, mocktails, throwback drinks and other fun for adults, including books and games.

Read on for details on a dozen of the coolest new bars that opened in the city this year, in no particular order. For the sake of perimeters, I used the same criteria for the Best New Restaurants 2025 list, considering businesses that first opened between November of 2024 and October of this year. Hours listed are the regular business hours, which may be different this month due to the holidays.

The Dirty Shake — Midtown

Adding another cool and casual spot to the list of watering holes in the Cass Corridor, the Dirty Shake debuted in March in a brick building at Second and Forest. Like its elder statesman neighbor down the block the Bronx Bar, the drinks here are pretty cheap and the food is high quality and fun. That’s because it’s owned by the guys behind Chartreuse Kitchen + Cocktails and Freya, Sandy Levine and chef Doug Hewitt. You can have lunch or dinner here (cheeseburgers, smoked chicken wings, jerk chicken, vegan stuff) or just snack on Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, Reese’s Popcorn and other bagged treats. The fact that the Dirty Shake is open daily at 11:30 a.m. and has a big wrap-around porch for summertime makes it an instant classic.

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Open 11:30 a.m.-midnight Sun.-Thurs. and 11:30 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 4642 Second, Detroit. (313) 279-8500. dirtyshake.com.

Chenin — Downtown

Forget everything you think about wine bars because Chenin is totally different. I have never seen anyone older than 50 sitting at one of the few seats, standing around the slight drink rail or smoking a cigarette out the back door, which is one of the only three place you can really exist inside this teeny-tiny space without being in someone’s way (or lap). Formerly home to eight-seat tasting menu restaurant Albena, Chenin is attracting younger millennials and Gen Z Detroiters with their well-edited European wine menu (including skin-fermented wines), fluffy square pizza, gourmet ice cream and late-night burger grilling. They also serve a premade and pre-chilled martini and Budweiser. Go alone and make a new friend, or just eavesdrop on conversations you can’t help but overhear. Go with too many people and risk not being able to get everyone in the door.

Open 5 p.m.-midnight Sun.-Mon. and Thurs. and 5 p.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 1509 Broadway, Suite A-1, Detroit. barchenin.com.

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Roar Brewing Company — Midtown

Sip on one of Roar’s beers like the honey oat stout, raspberry wheat or amber lager. You can also order a mixed drink or choose one of the nonalcoholic beers and canned cocktails offered. Along with a full bar, this new spot with indoor and outdoor seating serves pub grub like burgers, veggie burgers, tots, wings and flavored popcorn. The community-driven space makes sure it’s open for Detroit Lions games, and in the warmer months offers outdoor lawn games and sometimes live music. Proudly promoting itself as the city’s first Black-owned brewery, Roar is a great addition to the dense area near Selden and Second where it’s easy to walk to many other of the city’s top bars and restaurants including SheWolf, Selden Standard, Honest John’s and Barcade.

Open 5-11 p.m. Mon.-Thurs., noon-midnight Fri.-Sat. and noon-11 p.m. Sun. 666 Selden, Suite B, Detroit. (313) 326-2680. www.roar.beer.

Me & You Kitchen and Cocktails — East English Village

This is the kind of laid-back hangout spot where you can really be yourself. Laugh out loud with friends, sing along to the R&B tunes and order an extra round of lemon drop shots, which are just $5 each during happy hour. Formerly Good Vibes Lounge, Me & You is owned by Courtney Sanders and Angela Wright. Wright is also the owner of Mix Bricktown, Lockeroom Sports Lounge and Sandbox Outdoor Bar & Lounge, so she knows what Detroiters want when it comes to mixed drinks and chill atmospheres. Specialties from the kitchen are the fried fish, bologna sandwich and the Big 3 burger. Brunch has its own drink menu with flavored mimosas and mimosa tower flights — not just mimosa towers, but mimosa tower flights — for $100. Brunch cuisine features grits, salmon croquettes, fried chicken and pancakes, T-bone steak and eggs and more. The inside seats 100 and there’s room for plenty more in the backyard during warmer weather. Like the fun sign on the wall says, this is a place for “me & you, yo momma and yo cousin, too.”

​Open 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Wed.-Thurs., 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. and 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Sun. 16801 Harper, Detroit. (313) 909-0809. Meandyoueast.com. 

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Paris Bar — McNichols and Jos Campau

Long live the dive bar. Paris Bar debuted this year with DJs, live bands and cocktails from the same folks behind Outer Limits Lounge, which sits just outside Hamtramck in Detroit. The space, lit mostly by the warm glow of vintage neon signage, was formerly Simpson’s Record Shop. Before that, though, it was also a local bar called Paris Beer Garden. (“Amateurs wanted. Cash prizes.” reads a classified advertisement from Paris Beer Garden in a 1935 issue of The Detroit News seeking musicians.) Paris Bar has a lot of room to hang out. Drinkers gather near the bar and when bands are booked they’re in a back room. There’s also a small, fenced-in yard out back with modest patio furniture. Expect anything here: rock and roll, punk, metal, the avant-garde, art shows, films and more.

Open 8 p.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Sat. and 6 p.m.-midnight Sun. 2961 E. McNichols, Detroit. instagram.com/parisbardetroit.

Father Forgive Me — English Village

One of the first buzzy openings of the summer was Father Forgive Me’s early June debut. Located on the grounds of the Shepherd — a former church that has been converted into a cultural center, part of an east side development — this hip, new and somewhat upscale indoor and outdoor bar has been a go-to spot since then. The menu has craft cocktails, wine by the glass or bottle and a few beers. There’s food, too, mostly small things and shareables like the very on-trend tinned fish, olives and a mortadella sandwich. They usually don’t take reservations here, but there’s an exception for the New Year’s Eve party on Dec. 31. There will be two seatings for $130 per person that includes all food and drinks. The menu is expected to feature shrimp cocktail, beef tartare and tater tot waffles with caviar.

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Open 4-11 p.m. Mon., Wed.-Thurs., 4 p.m.-midnight Fri., noon-midnight Sat. and noon-11 p.m. Sun. Closed Tuesdays. 1265 Parkview, Detroit. fatherforgiveme.com.

Full Measure Brewing — Eastern Market

This is a great new hangout for craft beer lovers, of course, but the spacious and clean new Full Measure Brewing is an all-around great addition to Eastern Market. The food menu is no afterthought here, with many items that are vegetarian, vegan or gluten-free. There’s also food that’s none of those things, like the po’ boy with Creole remoulade and grilled jumbo shrimp or fried catfish (or fried green tomatoes to make it vegetarian). It comes with fries for just $15 and the menu recommends pairing it with a pint of their Bla Bla Ginger or Atmospherium Saison. The menu also does a good job at explaining the bitterness and alcohol content of all the beers. There’s a brunch menu, too, as Full Measure is an easygoing spot to fuel up before or after your weekend market shopping.

Open 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Mon.-Fri., 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Sat. and 10 a.m.-8 p.m. 2700 Orleans, Detroit. (313) 818-3977. fullmeasurebrewing.com.

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Vesper Books & Wine — Core City

This new corner spot at Grand River an W. Warren is one of the most well-lit bars on this list because it’s also a bookstore. Vesper specializes in cookbooks and other food-adjacent literature, which are shelved around an interior that also features a mix of couches and tables that look thrifted right out of your cool aunt’s 1990s-era living room. They sell wines by the glass at the bar (or order at the counter and take a seat) and customers can also shop for a variety of interesting wines to take home. The menu has a few cocktails and beers (Budweiser, again). A short snack menu has wine-centric vittles like a cheese plate, olives or something more substantial like a beautiful soppressata sandwich or tinned fish served with bread, butter and pickled vegetables. This place has been abuzz since late 2022 and finally debuted in December 2024. Vesper is open early for a wine bar, so you can pop in and nurse your hangover after closing down Chenin the night before.

Open 2-11 p.m. Wed.-Thurs., 2 p.m.-midnight Fri., noon-midnight Sat. and noon-9 p.m. Sun. 5001 Grand River, Detroit. (313) 716-1708. vesperbooksandwine.com.

Arcenciel — Livernois and Fenkell

Named for the French word for “rainbow,” this new nightlife destination debuted in November 2024 as an LGBTQ+ dance club. Friday nights is geared toward women, and Saturday nights for men, but anyoe and everyone is welcome on either night at the 4,500-square-foot club with a state-of-the-art dance floor. A supper club-style Versailles Dining Room restaurant has been put on hold and is expected to reopen in Spring 2026.

Open 9 p.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 14925 Livernois, Detroit. (313) 635-5080. arcencieldetroit.com.

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Cannons — Morningside

Brightening up the space where beloved and dimly-lit tiki bar Lost River was, Cannons debuted this fall with oysters, barrel batched cocktails and nods to the United Kingdom like a perfect pour of Guinness, Welsh rarebit and bread pudding. Upstairs is a cozy techno haven that has already hosted sets by some of the greats: Juan Adkins, Derrick May and Kevin Saunderson. This summer there is sure to be plenty more fun on the rooftop deck that overlooks Mack Avenue at the Detroit and Grosse Pointe Park border. Stop in for a pint and a football game (either kind), and soak in all the small details of the refurbished barroom.

Open 4 p.m.-2 a.m. Mon.-Fri. And 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Fri.-Sat. 15421 Mack, Detroit. instagram.com/cannonsbar.

Sip N Read — Corktown

Another bar and bookstore in one! At Sip N Read, the name says it all. The 2,400-square-foot space is owned and operated by Tamela Todd, author of three nonfiction books and a winemaker. She proudly displayed her her Library of Rosé from the Sip-N-Read wine collection, which is available to enjoy in 5- or 8-ounce pours at the bar. All the wines here are Michigan-made. Sip-N-Read is a place to shop for books, visit with friends, sit and read, have a drink or a mix of all of these. Rather than store shelves, the displays are more like a living room, with cozy, plush chairs. The selection is a small, curated mix of current memoirs, nonfiction, novels and some classics. Todd and her team at Sip N Read are planning to lean into this year’s Dry January and offer guests a new menu of mocktails while they aim to create a space that makes alcohol-free socializing intentional and inviting.

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Open 4-9 p.m. Thurs.-Sun. 1620 Michigan, Ste 122, Detroit. sipandread.net.

The Post Bar — Downtown

The sportiest watering hole on this list of new spots, the Post Bar turned on the old neon sign late last year. Longtime Detroiters will know the name, as there were once raucous Post Bar locations throughout the area, including on Congress by Joe Louis Arena and even one on Woodward in Ferndale (where Imperial is now). They’ve got every kind of beer, liquor and hard seltzer that’s currently trending, along with a hearty food menu. Choose from pub grub like a giant pretzel, turkey chili or Cajun chicken nachos, or try the more sophisticated prime rib French dip, strawberry salad or charcuterie board. 

Open 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Daily. 1325 Broadway, Detroit. instagram.com/thepostbardetroit.

Melody Baetens is The Detroit News restaurant critic

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mbaetens@detroitnews.com





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Detroit man arrested following manhunt for double murder in Tennessee

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Detroit man arrested following manhunt for double murder in Tennessee


STERLING HEIGHTS, Mich. – A 28-year-old man from Detroit has been arrested for the murder of two people in Tennessee.

Troy Hutchinson and Rodrell Jeter were shot and killed Nov. 16, 2025, outside Nashville, Tennessee. A third man was hospitalized with critical injuries.

Police believe four men were traveling from Detroit to Atlanta in a Ford Bronco when the fourth man opened fire on the victims before leaving in the vehicle. The Bronco was found abandoned in Kentucky, just south of Cincinnati in Ohio.

Jeter and the man who was hospitalized were both from Detroit, while Hutchinson is from Atlanta.

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A motive for the shooting remains unknown.

In late November, police identified the suspect as Dashonn Moten. He was indicted on 17 counts, including two counts of first-degree murder, attempted murder, and two counts of felony murder.

After nearly two months, Moten was arrested Friday, Jan. 10, in Sterling Heights and is awaiting extradition to Tennessee for his arraignment.

If convicted, Moten faces possible execution.

Copyright 2026 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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Thompson: The new year brings a promising future for Detroit students

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Thompson: The new year brings a promising future for Detroit students


Detroit Public Schools Community District often gets a bad rap due to declining enrollment issues or longstanding challenges that led to the historic takeover of the school system before voters returned it to an elected board. 

And in many cases, that is the lens through which the school system’s performance is examined and viewed across the state. But there are hidden stories of progress within a school system that is still struggling to define itself and to give young Detroiters hope for a meaningful future. 

I saw that first-hand last week at Denby High School, part of the Detroit Public Schools Community District, on the city’s east side, where hundreds of young Black and Brown male students gathered in the basketball gym for the annual policing and prosperity forum. 

The annual event initiated and led by tenacious Detroiter Sharlonda Buckman, the district’s assistant superintendent for family and community engagement, is one of the hidden jewels of the public school system and brings together male students from various high schools to discuss their interaction with law enforcement. On the panel were senior and junior police officers from the Detroit Police Department, as well as the district’s public safety chief, Labrit Jackson, all of whom took hard questions from the students about how to navigate the complexities of the criminal justice system. 

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Before the start of the forum, I met three students: 17-year-old Justin Montgomery, 17-year-old Exavier Ward and 16-year-old Wesley Lewis, all students of Denby. 

The three of them live on the east side and are serious and determined students who believe they have an obligation to be worthy ambassadors of their communities. 

“I just got a scholarship from Cleary University for track and field and cross country and I just signed the papers so I can be committed,” Ward told me. “I am excited for the new year and I’m ready to live my adult life.” 

His parents are also joyful about his future because, “out of all of my siblings, I’m going to be the first one to go to college. I want to major in cybersecurity,” he says. 

Montgomery is scouting Oakland University or Central Michigan University and is also interested in a trades school. He’s keeping his options open.

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“I have been here for a while and I’m ready to get out of high school. The experience has been good for me,” he says. 

For Lewis, graduating in 2027 will make him the first in his family to be committed to college. That alone keeps him upbeat for the new year as he prepares for the challenges and the pressures of being an 11th grade student. 

“I’m really ready to go to college. I’m looking at Kentucky State University, Wayne State University and Michigan State University,” he says. “I probably would major in music in college because I currently play the piano. But sometimes I get nervous about college because I feel like it is going to be harder than high school.” 

These impressive young men speak to the vitality of the school system and the need to continue to nurture and support them.

The forum on policing and prosperity reinforces that need. 

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“This forum is so important because we give the students an opportunity to have a voice and talk about the things that are important to them and how they interact with law enforcement,” says Marty Bulger, the district’s senior director of male mentoring.

“Even a more dynamic piece is the fact that because the city has seen a reduction in violent crime, we believe as we reach our young people, we will continue to see a decline. These young men are our future leaders.”  

 X (formerly Twitter): @BankoleDetNews

bankole@bankolethompson.com

Bankole Thompson’s columns appear on Mondays and Thursdays in The Detroit News.

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How are Lions fans feeling after Bears’ thrilling win vs. Packers?

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How are Lions fans feeling after Bears’ thrilling win vs. Packers?


The NFL showed on Saturday why they’re the best league in professional American sports. Both Wild Card games were phenomenal, and the dramatic finishes in each game were jaw-dropping. But let’s put aside the thrilling Rams vs. Panthers finish, because the nightcap was far more interesting to Detroit Lions fans.

The Chicago Bears somehow mounted yet another fourth-quarter comeback against the Green Bay Packers in what is already a defining moment in Ben Johnson’s career as the Bears head coach. I got a sense from most Lions fans that they were rooting against Johnson and the Bears for obvious reasons: It’s tough to watch your offensive coordinator go out there and win the division and beat the Packers in the playoffs in his first year.

But there was also a strong contingent of Lions fans out there after Saturday’s outstanding drama reminding people that the Packers remain enemy No. 1—a sentiment I happen to agree with.

So today’s Question of the Day is:

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How are you feeling after the Bears’ wild win over the Packers?

My answer: I was definitely among the people rooting against the Bears on Saturday night. For me, it was less about Ben Johnson and more about the Bears being exposed as somewhat fraudulent. Their defense is bad and over-reliant on turnovers, and the last-second comebacks are completely unsustainable. In both of those senses, Saturday was a miserable failure for those narratives. I mean, this statistic is absolutely ridiculous:

And as much as I hate to do it, I have to give the Bears defense credit for changing up their gameplan out of the half, making Jordan Love look uncomfortable for the final two quarters, and holding Green Bay to just six second-half points without even forcing a turnover. As for the comebacks, they can’t keep getting away with it, right???

All of that said, I was still grinning ear-to-ear after the game. For one, I just love dramatic, entertaining football. I’ll take that result any day over the Packers beating the Bears 42-0.

Additionally, the Packers just had their hearts ripped out. One of the most pompous and smug franchises in all of sports now has to sit there and come to terms with blowing an 11-point lead in the final five minutes to their biggest rival. They have to marinate in a 1-4 record in their last five playoff games. And now they have to seriously consider whether their coach—once billed as one of the winningest coaches in NFL history—is the right guy to lead them into the future.

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So I’m still brimming with schadenfreude this wonderful Sunday morning, and no amount of “did you write this article from Cancun?” comments will hurt me.

What are your thoughts on the game and the NFC North? Scroll down to the comment section and sound off!



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