A dim, stylish hideaway offering custom cocktails.
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- Address
- 2175 Rue de la Montagne #100, Montréal, QC H3G 1Z8, Canada
- Phone
- +15142849393
- Website
- cloakroombarmtl.com

A Counter in the Coats: Montreal's Intimate Bar Scene in Focus
Cloakroom is a cocktail bar in Montreal at 2175 Rue de la Montagne #100, with a recommended reservation policy and an average Google rating of 4.6. The bar occupies a compact, coatroom-adjacent space that belongs to a specific Montreal tradition: the bar as antechamber, a place designed for close conversation and unhurried drinking rather than spectacle. In a city where the drinking culture runs from Plateau dive bars to the polished rooms of the Golden Square Mile, Cloakroom sits toward the quieter, more deliberate end of that range.
Montreal's cocktail scene has shifted considerably over the past decade. The city moved through its speakeasy phase, absorbed the farm-to-glass wave, and is now in a period of consolidation where the leading small bars compete less on gimmick and more on consistency, sourcing, and the quality of the host relationship. In that context, a tiny bar with a controlled format and a low seat count is a structural commitment to a particular kind of experience.
The Architecture of a Short Menu
Small-format bars in Montreal and across Canada have largely abandoned the maximalist menu in favour of tighter, seasonally rotated programs. The logic is direct: a short list, changed regularly, allows a bar to source unusual spirits in meaningful quantity, train staff deeply on each expression, and deliver a more coherent narrative across the evening. The approach mirrors what has happened at places like Lazy Bear in San Francisco on the food side, where a fixed progression replaces choice with editorial intent.
At Cloakroom, the physical constraints of the space reinforce this philosophy. A bar that seats very few guests cannot sustain a drinks list of sixty options; what it can do is make every selection count. That kind of discipline, applied consistently, is what separates bars with genuine reputations from venues that happen to be small. For the guest, the implication is practical: arrive with an openness to recommendation rather than a specific request.
Reading the Progression: How the Evening Builds
The most useful frame for understanding what Cloakroom offers is not the individual drink but the arc of the visit. Like the multi-course format that defines Montreal's higher-end dining rooms, from Jérôme Ferrer - Europea to Mastard to Sabayon, a well-run intimate bar constructs an evening in sequences. An opening drink might be lower in alcohol and higher in acidity, designed to orient the palate. A middle round deepens into texture and proof. A closing pour shifts toward length and warmth.
That progression is only possible when the bar has enough control over the environment to manage pacing. High-volume rooms cannot do it. A venue like Cloakroom, with its limited footprint and close host-to-guest ratio, has the conditions to deliver it. The structure is in place.
Across Canada, the bars and restaurants with the most durable reputations tend to share this quality: the format itself encodes an intention. Alo in Toronto does it through a fixed tasting menu. Tanière³ in Quebec City does it through an immersive course structure rooted in regional ingredients. Cloakroom does it through the intimate bar counter, where the host's ability to read the table and sequence accordingly becomes the product itself.
Where Cloakroom Sits in the Montreal Drinking Map
Montreal's premium bar market occupies a small but distinct tier. Below it sits a large and well-developed mid-market, anchored by neighbourhood bars in the Plateau, Mile End, and Rosemont that offer serious cocktail programs without formality. Above the mid-market, a handful of hotel bars and upscale restaurant programs compete on polish and wine list depth. Cloakroom's position is lateral to both: it is not a hotel bar, not a neighbourhood hangout, and not an adjunct to a restaurant. It belongs to the category of the specialist standalone cocktail bar, a format that Montreal has fewer of than comparable cities like Toronto or Vancouver.
That relative scarcity matters. In Toronto, a bar like AnnaLena in Vancouver or comparable small-format venues have a denser comparable set to compete against and learn from. In Montreal, the intimate cocktail bar occupies somewhat rarer ground, which means that the bars doing it well tend to accumulate reputations more quickly. Guests who know what they are looking for will find Cloakroom through word of mouth and editorial reference.
For context on what the broader Montreal dining scene offers around a visit, the city's modern cuisine tier, including 3 Pierres 1 Feu and Abu el zulof, provides a useful frame for the ambition level the city is operating at.
Seasonal Timing and When to Visit
Montreal's bar culture has a pronounced seasonal rhythm. Winter pushes the city indoors and into smaller, warmer rooms; summer opens terraces and shifts drinking habits toward longer, lighter sessions. A compact bar like Cloakroom is well-suited to the colder months, when the appeal of a few well-made drinks in a close, controlled environment is at its highest. The shoulder seasons, September through November and March through April, tend to produce the most focused and unhurried bar visits in the city, before the summer crowd disperses across the terraces.
Booking ahead is advisable, particularly on weekends. Venues with limited capacity fill quickly, and the quality of the experience is directly tied to not being in an oversubscribed room.
For those building a wider Canadian itinerary, comparable specialist dining and drinking experiences worth considering include Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln, Eigensinn Farm in Singhampton, Narval in Rimouski, Fogo Island Inn Dining Room in Joe Batt's Arm, The Pine in Creemore, Busters Barbeque in Kenora, and Cafe Brio in Victoria. For a benchmark of what a technically precise, internationally recognised program looks like, Le Bernardin in New York City offers a useful point of comparison in terms of format discipline and course sequencing, applied to the food side.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 2175 Rue de la Montagne #100, Montréal, QC H3G 1Z8, Canada
- Neighbourhood: Downtown Montreal, Golden Square Mile adjacent
- Format: Intimate cocktail bar; low seat count; host-led service
- Reservations: Advance booking recommended, particularly Thursday through Saturday
- Leading season: October through March for the most focused experience
- Contact: Hours: Mon to Thu and Sun, 4 PM to 1 AM; Fri and Sat, 4 PM to 3 AM
City Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| CloakroomThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Cocktail Bar | $$$ | |
| Restaurant Ermitage | Authentic Russian & Eastern European Fine Dining | $$$ | Edouard-Montpetit |
| Restaurant Canada Best | Malaysian and Sri Lankan | $$ | Parc-Extension |
| La Taverne sur le Square | Classic Bistro | $$$ | Westmount Square |
| Fiorellino | Modern Italian Pizza & Pasta | $$$ | Quartier international de Montreal |
| Le Richmond | Northern Italian Fine Dining | $$$ | Griffintown |
At a Glance
- Intimate
- Elegant
- Sophisticated
- Trendy
- Hidden Gem
- Date Night
- Special Occasion
- Craft Cocktails
Chic, comfortable, and elegant with an inviting speakeasy atmosphere featuring skilled bartending.














