Gay clubs manchester uk

The Village

AXM Prevent & Club

AXM opened its doors in 2004 and offers a late late hours clubbing experience with DJs, cabaret shows and…

MAYA

Situated at the bustling intersection of Chorlton Street and Canal Street, the 20th-century…

Napoleon's

Friendly lock over two floors with a varied crowd.

New Union Hotel & Show Bar

Built in 1865, the Brand-new Union was one of the first ever lgbtq+ establishments in Manchester and has been…

Oscars

Oscars is an intimate, theatre style prevent showing classic and current musical film clips in glamorous…

Salon Madre

Manchester’s much loved Mexican restaurant, Madre, has expanded and opened a tequila…

The Eagle Bar

Men only basement exclude with industrial and well-dressed décor open seven nights a week with a faithful…

The Molly House

The Molly House is a charming, rustic, vintage bar over two floors with outdoor smoking terrace…

Via

A Gay, gothic labyrinth bar serving quality dishes with specials, in a unique relaxed environment…

View

View is a large block and club over two floors and open seven nights a week. Fun includes a&hell

Alternative LGBTQ+ Manchester

Manchester’s Male lover Village, annual Self-acceptance Festival and formidable LGBTQ+ community include long been renowned as a core part of the history, identity and culture of the city – and rightly so. Canal Street was the setting for groundbreaking, hit TV series Queer as Folk in the belated 1990s, and the canal-side bars and clubs here endure at the heart of Manchester’s Gay community. As the scene has evolved, however, so contain the LGBTQ+ venues, club nights, arts and culture and sports spread further afield. The Northern Quarter, the filming location for It’s A Sin in 2019, is also where you’ll locate Aatma, spiritual residence of club darkness Pop Curious?, as well as devoted menswear shop Oi Polloi. 

So, for more LGBTQ+ venues, club nights, culture and sports beyond the Village, read on.

VENUES

Outdoor drinking, dining and entertainment destination Break out to Freight Island has become a new platform for LGBT+ club nights and performances including Homoelectric. Based behind Manchester Piccadilly station on Baring Avenue, Escape to Freight Island also is right around the block from The Star and Garter, another key filming locati

Gay Bars And Clubs In Manchester

Found across Gay Village and the famous Canal Street, gay bars and clubs in Manchester certainly aren't few and far between. These entertaining spots are celebrated for party antics, from drag divas strutting their stuff around you and karaoke before the main event, to heaving dancefloors packed out with an inclusive crowd.



Via Manchester

320 reviews

🌯 Fajita Fridays 🌯

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Looking for somewhere that can take you from daytime tipples to late-night dancing without a hitch? Via is the gay cocktail exclude in Manchester for you. Start off your journey with waterside drinks, before heading indoors where regular entertainment and a lively crowd of punters await.

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On Bar

1 review

A list of Manchester Same-sex attracted Village clubs wouldn't be complete without giving On Exclude a mention. Not only is it the home of killer performances across bottomless brunches and other boozy happenings from Bougie Performative & Boy Toy Events, but this place sure knows how to pitch a party too.

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The Brewers, Manchester

Gay Manchester – the best male lover hotels, bars, clubs & more

Manchester is a city of transformation. The third-largest city in the UK had humble beginnings as a small Lancastrian town before becoming the first proper industrialized city in the world during the Industrial Revolution. And it's been pretty much uphill from there. The first atom was split in Manchester, the first English canal was constructed there, and the gay scientist Alan Turing, who deciphered the encryption of German Enigma machines during the Second World War, was born in Manchester.

Now it remains a constantly evolving city and is a hotbed of customs, music, art, and sport – who hasn’t heard of Manchester United? Most importantly of all, though, Manchester is one of the big three “gay cities” of England – the others being London and Brighton. The legendary Canal Street, part of Manchester’s Gay Village, was the setting for much of the groundbreaking '90s TV show Queer as Folk—the original UK version, that is. The show helped men across the UK—and possibly the world—come out as they saw themselves in the characters and how joyous being homosexual could be, especially in Manchester.

There’s a lot for L