The Gorge Amphitheatre sits in one of the most remote concert settings in North America. That’s the whole point. You drive out through high desert, cross into Grant County, and suddenly the Columbia River cuts through the canyon below you while the stage floats over the cliff edge. There is genuinely no venue on earth that looks like this.
But “remote” means the bar situation is nothing like what you’d find near MSG or the Hollywood Bowl. There’s no honky-tonk strip a two-minute walk from the gate. What there is, though, is a handful of genuinely great spots scattered between the venue itself, the Sagecliffe resort property next door, and the towns of Quincy and George a short drive away. If you know where to go, you can build a full concert-day drinking itinerary that’s actually memorable, not just functional.
The Gorge is a camping culture venue more than a hotel-and-bar-hop venue. Most regulars are on site in tents or glamping yurts. But plenty of people day-trip or base themselves in Quincy, and those people need a plan. This is that plan, put together from personal visits and tips from people who have been making the drive out here for years.
Best Bars Near The Gorge Amphitheatre
What Makes the Gorge Bar Scene Different
The Gorge draws about 27,500 people for big shows. George, Washington has a population of around 700. Those numbers tell you everything about the situation. The infrastructure is built around camping and the venue itself, not around a surrounding entertainment district. Most of the 27,500 people are sleeping in tents on site, drinking what they brought with them or buying from the venue's own bars inside the gates.
That means the off-site bar scene is small but genuinely rewarding for the people who seek it out. Cave B Winery essentially functions as the Gorge's unofficial pre-show bar. The Sagecliffe resort's Fox and Quail Whiskey Bar serves the crowd staying at the higher-end accommodation next door. And the bars in Quincy, 15 minutes away, are real local spots where you're sharing a room with people who actually live here year-round.
There's something honest about all of it. You're not in a manufactured entertainment zone. You're in Central Washington wine country, 900 feet above the Columbia River, and the options reflect that place authentically.
The Cave B Winery Situation
This is the one bar near the Gorge that you genuinely cannot skip. Cave B Estate Winery at 348 Silica Road NW was founded by the same family who originally built the Gorge Amphitheatre, which means the winery and the venue grew up together. The main tasting room is a beautiful round basalt building literally a 2-minute walk from the Gorge parking lots.
On concert days, Cave B operates differently from normal tasting days. They skip reservations, open the full lawn for outdoor tastings at $20 per person, and often host live music on their own Stage B Amphitheatre out front. They've deliberately synchronized their programming with what's playing next door. If there's a jam band weekend at the Gorge, Cave B is likely hosting something that fits the energy. Wine flights, glass pours, and snacks are all available, and the views from that elevated ridge looking toward the canyon are extraordinary.
The one logistical note: if you're parking in Cave B's lots after they close, your car gets towed. They close at 6:30 PM on Fridays and Saturdays. Park in Gorge Lot C and walk the 2 minutes over instead.
Quincy Town Bars: What to Know
Quincy is about 9 miles northeast of the venue, roughly 15 minutes by car. It has a small cluster of bars that serve the town year-round but get noticeably busier during Gorge season. None of them are concert bars in the MSG sense. They're the kind of places where the staff are genuinely local, prices are reasonable, and the atmosphere is whatever the regular crowd makes it that night.
Quincy's Potomac Bar and Grille is the most reliable option: comfortable, well-stocked, and accommodating of the concert crowd without being taken over by it. Andaluz is the right call if you want to keep going after midnight, with a nightclub section that stays lively on busy weekends. Two Doors Down is the low-key dive option where you can drink cheap and talk to people who have seen more Gorge shows than you have.
One practical note: there's no Uber or Lyft operating reliably out here. If you're drinking in Quincy and need to get back to a campsite, build a designated driver plan before the night starts.
Quick Facts: Drinking at The Gorge
Inside the venue: The Gorge sells beer, wine, and cocktails at the bars inside the gates. Prices are venue-standard (expect $14-18 per drink). You can bring in sealed non-alcoholic beverages.
Camping: For most shows, you can bring your own beer and wine into the campsite. No kegs, no binge-drinking devices, and a quiet rule from 2 AM. Many regulars pre-buy beer for the campsite and use that as their post-show wind-down.
Transportation:ย There is no public transport to or from the Gorge. Rideshare availability is extremely limited this far from the nearest city. Either camp on site, arrange a shuttle, drive with a designated driver, or stay at one of the nearby properties. More tips on how to get to Gorge Amphitheatre.
Cave B on show days: No reservations accepted on Gorge concert days. Just walk over and get in line for lawn tastings. Arrive by 4 PM to beat the rush before gates open.
Frequently Asked Questions: Bars Near the Gorge Amphitheatre
Cave B Estate Winery is the only option genuinely walkable from the Gorge, about a 2-minute walk from the main parking area along Silica Road NW. All other bars require a short drive, with Quincy's options sitting about 15 minutes away.
Yes. The venue's own bars open with the gates, and you can buy drinks inside. For off-site pre-show drinking, Cave B Winery next door is the go-to, and on concert days they set up outdoor tastings specifically timed for the pre-show crowd.
Most people camp on site and bring their own beer and wine into the campsite. That's the dominant culture at the Gorge: a cooler and a lawn chair before the show is the standard move. For people not camping, Cave B and the Quincy town bars are the main alternatives.
Cave B Winery is excellent for an afternoon tasting, the Fox and Quail Whiskey Bar at Sagecliffe is a comfortable spot for drinks with views, and the Sandtrap Bar at Crescent Bar Island makes for a good afternoon river outing. Frenchman Coulee hiking and the Ancient Lakes Trail are also nearby if you want to earn your drinks before the show.
Quincy's Potomac Bar and Grille or Andaluz are both solid post-show options. Andaluz runs later and has a nightclub side if you want to keep going. Both are about 15 minutes from the venue by car.
Plan Your Full Gorge Amphitheatre Trip
Everything you need for your music travel to Gorge weekend:
- ๐๏ธย The Gorge Amphitheatre Guide: venue overview, seating tips, and what to know before you go
- ๐ฝ๏ธ Restaurants Near The Gorge Amphitheatre: where to eat before and after the show
- ๐จ Where to Stay Near The Gorge Amphitheatre: camping, glamping, resort, and hotel options
- ๐ Getting to The Gorge: driving routes, parking, and shuttle options from Seattle and Spokane


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