Sober Travel Guides
Dry tourism is a 2026 travel trend. Whether you're sober, sober-curious, or just want to remember the trip — these city guides cover the bars, cocktail spots, and restaurants worth seeking out in each destination.
Sober Travel Guide: Austin
15 NA-friendly venues
Austin is best known for its 7 cocktail bars with documented NA programs.
See Austin travel guide →Sober Travel Guide: Denver
12 NA-friendly venues
Denver is best known for its 7 cocktail bars with documented NA programs.
See Denver travel guide →Sober Travel Guide: New York
13 NA-friendly venues
New York is best known for its 10 cocktail bars with documented NA programs.
See New York travel guide →Sober Travel Guide: Los Angeles
14 NA-friendly venues
Los Angeles is best known for its 5 cocktail bars with documented NA programs.
See Los Angeles travel guide →Sober Travel Guide: Chicago
14 NA-friendly venues
Chicago is best known for its 6 cocktail bars with documented NA programs.
See Chicago travel guide →Sober Travel Guide: Dallas
13 NA-friendly venues
Dallas is best known for its 8 restaurants with documented NA programs.
See Dallas travel guide →
Why a sober travel guide?
Most travel guides assume drinking is part of the trip. Most sober resources assume you're looking for recovery support. Neither covers the question that actually matters when you're traveling and not drinking: where do you go for an actual evening out, with good drinks that happen to be alcohol-free, in a setting that feels intentional rather than improvised?
We list venues that have published NA programs — named mocktails, NA spirits on the back bar, or a fully alcohol-free menu — and group them by neighborhood so you can plan a route. Every venue is human-verified against public menus and editorial press.