Most Aspen dining rooms close their kitchen at 10. A handful keep cooking until midnight. A few will pour you a real cocktail at 1 AM. This is the map for what happens between dinner and bed.
Aspen is not a late-night town in the New York sense. There is no 24-hour anything. The dining rooms that serve the serious dinners turn over their last tables around 9:30 and pull the kitchen at 10. After that, the geography of the town shifts — what was a restaurant becomes a bar, what was a bar becomes a lounge, and a handful of places that lean toward locals quietly become the only options for someone who is hungry at 11.
Below: the rooms that stay open. Grouped by what you actually want — food, a cocktail, a scene, or just somewhere quiet to land after a long dinner.
If You Want Real Food After 10.
- Zane's Tavern Kitchen open until midnight. Burgers, Mexican, real pub food. Casual, locals' bar, not pretentious. The default answer when someone says "I'm hungry, it's 11 PM, what now."
- Aspen Public House Inside the Wheeler Opera House. Late-night kitchen with high-quality-beef burgers, salads, fried chicken. Year-round, family-friendly until late, then the bar takes over. Central patio is one of the best in town.
- New York Pizza Open until 2:30 AM. The locals' choice for late-night pizza. By the slice or whole pie. Delivery available. No frills — the room is what it is. The pizza is the point.
- BUCK (The Bar Under Cooper) Kitchen open until midnight. Real Philly cheesesteaks, wings, authentic Mexican tacos, mac & cheese eggrolls. Open until 2 AM. Sports bar atmosphere with eleven satellite TVs.
- Jimoto Ramen Ramen, late. The right answer when it is raining or snowing and you want something hot before bed.
If You Want a Real Cocktail.
Three rooms in town serve cocktails that are worth ordering at 11 PM. They are not the same kind of room — pick by mood.
- Bad Harriet Underground speakeasy at Hotel Jerome. Refined cocktails, stylish ambiance, low lighting, leather upholstery. Located beneath the historic Aspen Times building. The most-recommended after-dinner room in town. Reservations recommended.
- Hooch Craft Cocktail Bar 301 E. Hopkins. Dimly-lit lounge, small plates, a long whiskey list, the kind of room that you stay in longer than you planned. The crowd is older than the dance-bar crowd, younger than the hotel-bar crowd.
- J-Bar at Hotel Jerome Aspen's oldest bar. The actual bar is from 1889. Hand-crafted cocktails celebrating Colorado spirits. Reinterpreted American classics. This is the room you go to when the cocktail is the destination — order an Aspen Crud and look around.
If You Want a Scene.
For some travelers, after dinner the question is not where to eat or drink — it is where to be among people. Aspen does this well, if you know where to go.
- Madame Ushi Underground room. Premium sushi and izakaya plates at dinner — then transforms into a late-night social scene, hosting DJs. Nightclub energy without leaving the restaurant. The room where the after-dinner crowd ends up.
- Escobar Live DJs, tunnel-shaped interior, checkered floors, colorful lights, dance floor. Walking-mall location. The dance bar of Aspen — not subtle, not quiet, and that is the point.
- Stranahan's Whiskey Lodge 307 S. Mill Street. Western-style bar with Colorado's first single-malt whiskey. Stays interesting late. More of a place to settle in than to scene-chase.
- The Caribou Club America's most famous private members club. Vast wine cellar. Elaborate dinners and dancing until 2 AM with Aspen's in-crowd. Membership required — if you have a host, you have a great late night ahead of you. If you do not, you do not.
The Rules of Late Aspen.
The town shuts down quieter than you might expect. By midnight the sidewalks are calm. By 2, the bars empty. The next morning the kitchens that closed at 10 are open again at 7. This is the rhythm of a mountain town that has dinner at the center of its evening — and a few good rooms for the people who are not ready for the evening to end.