RFK Rankings · Savannah
Best Late-Night Restaurants in Savannah 2026
Open late · Savannah · 6 kitchens ranked · Updated June 2026
Compiled by the Restaurants for Kings editorial team · Published June 14, 2026 · Updated June 14, 2026 · Reviewed by Fredrik Filipsson, Editor-in-Chief · How we rank · Corrections
Savannah is a drinking town with an early-dinner reputation, and the two facts are connected: the famous tablecloth rooms close their kitchens by ten-thirty, so the late food lives in the bars. That is no bad thing here, because the late-night value is excellent, a $9.95 loaded potato at 3 a.m., $18.75 drunken noodles out of a dive, $14 peanut-butter wings on Bay Street. The markups, when they come, are on River Street drinks rather than the food. Ranked on how late the kitchen actually serves and what the late hour costs, with the celebrated rooms that quietly close at ten-thirty flagged so you do not walk up to a locked door.
1.Boomy's
A Congress Street dive hides a real Thai kitchen running to roughly 2 a.m.; order the drunken noodles.
Boomy's on West Congress Street looks like a dive bar and cooks like a Thai kitchen, which is exactly its appeal: a full Thai and Vietnamese menu served until roughly 2 a.m. nightly while the bar runs to three. Connect Savannah profiled the kitchen back in 2015 when it stepped up its Lady Saigon cooking, and it has been the city's surprise late-night standout since.
The Drunken Noodles, wide rice noodles with bamboo, snow peas, Thai basil and a red-curry-and-coconut heat, are $18.75 and a genuinely satisfying 1 a.m. plate rather than a drunk-food compromise. The value here is the food quality for the price and the hour; the only thing to watch is the bar tab, since you are drinking in a bar that happens to feed you well. Order the drunken noodles, a spring roll and one drink, and Boomy's is the best late meal in the Historic District.
Walk in; kitchen runs to roughly 2 a.m.
2.Spudnik
A SCAD-grad potato shop runs to 3 a.m. on weekends with $9.95 bowls; go latest, for almost nothing.
Spudnik on West Broughton Street, opened in 2013 by SCAD graduate Andrew Wanamaker, runs the latest kitchen on this list, serving until 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday. The concept is gourmet loaded potato bowls, and at $9.95 for The Classic, russet with cheddar, sour cream, butter and chives, or The Athenian with feta, red-pepper hummus, olives and capers, it is the best value in late-night Savannah by a distance.
There is almost nothing to flag on the bill, since the menu is cheap by design and there is no bar tab to creep, just a ten-dollar potato at three in the morning. It is the around-the-clock-feeling backstop for a Broughton Street night out, the spot you hit when the bars empty and you want something hot and filling for the price of a cocktail. Order The Athenian, add a soda, and you have change from a twenty.
Walk in; open to 3 a.m. Thursday to Saturday.
3.Treylor Park
The Bay Street funhouse runs its full menu to 1 a.m. every night; go for the famous PB&J wings.
Treylor Park on East Bay Street, opened in 2014, is the rare Savannah kitchen that runs its full menu to 1 a.m. seven nights a week, not just on weekends. The funky Southern cooking has drawn the New York Times, Travel and Leisure and the Food Network, and the PB&J Chicken Wings, a pecan-and-peanut-butter sauce with a peach-jam dip, are the signature at $14.
It is a real kitchen keeping real hours, which is what separates it from the bar-grills, and the pricing is fair for the quality and the late convenience: the Nachos Grande at $20 feed a table. The value is in how late the proper menu runs, so this is the spot when you want an actual dinner rather than a snack at midnight. Order the PB&J wings and the pancake taco, and go in knowing the kitchen, unusually for Savannah, will still be cooking at half past twelve.
Walk in; full menu to 1 a.m. nightly.
4.McDonough's Restaurant & Lounge
Savannah's karaoke institution runs its kitchen to 2 a.m. on weekends; go for the Irish egg rolls and the sing-along.
McDonough's near Reynolds Square has been a Historic District fixture since it opened on St. Patrick's Day in 1987, and its kitchen runs to midnight on weeknights and 2 a.m. on Friday and Saturday, well past most of the city. The Irish Egg Rolls, corned beef, sauerkraut and Swiss fried into a roll, are the signature, and the room has been voted Savannah's best karaoke for well over a decade.
Pub-food pricing keeps it firmly in the value bracket, with entrees in the low teens, so a late plate and a beer here is among the cheaper good nights downtown. The draw is as much the atmosphere as the food, a genuine family-run local institution with a microphone, rather than a tourist trap. Come for the egg rolls and the karaoke, keep the bar tab in check, and it is a quintessential late Savannah night.
Walk in; weekend kitchen to 2 a.m.
5.The Warehouse Bar & Grille
River Street's cheapest tavern runs burgers and 35-cent oysters to 2 a.m. on weekends; go for the bargain.
The Warehouse on East River Street, founded by siblings around 1992 and past its thirtieth anniversary, bills itself as the coldest, cheapest beer on River Street and backs it up with a kitchen that runs to midnight Sunday through Thursday and 2 a.m. on Friday and Saturday. The menu is straightforward tavern fare, burgers and hot dogs, and the legendary draw is 35-cent oysters at happy hour.
On a stretch built for tourist markups, the Warehouse is the value counter-pick, cheap food and cheaper beer in a genuine River Street tavern rather than a themed bar. The trade-off is that the food is simple bar fare, not a destination kitchen, so set expectations accordingly. Come for a late burger, a round of cheap oysters when the timing lines up, and the kind of unpretentious River Street night the area is not otherwise known for.
Walk in; weekend kitchen to 2 a.m.
6.Pour Larry's
A City Market dive serves loaded nachos into the early hours to 3 a.m.; go for the close-the-night snack.
Pour Larry's on West St. Julian Street in City Market is a repeat Connect Savannah best-bar winner that keeps food going into the early hours, with the bar open to 3 a.m. and casual American plates served through the night. The loaded nachos are the late order, alongside shrimp tacos and burgers, in a true City Market dive-bar setting.
It is the most bar-first entry on this list, so treat it as a close-the-night snack rather than a dinner: the food is honest and cheap, but the room is built around the drinks, and that is where the spending happens. The value play is to use it for exactly what it is, a 2 a.m. plate of nachos to soak up a City Market night, with one round rather than a marathon. For a hot snack when everything else has finally closed its kitchen, it does the job.
Walk in; food served into the early hours.
Avoid for a late dinner
Famous rooms, ten-thirty kitchens
The Olde Pink House. The most famous restaurant in Savannah is the one visitors most often assume runs late, and it does not: the dinner kitchen closes around ten-thirty. It is a genuine destination for an earlier, dressed-up dinner in the historic mansion, so book it for eight and head to Boomy's or Treylor Park if you want to keep eating past eleven.
Cotton & Rye. The well-regarded Habersham Street room turns out some of the better cooking in town, but its kitchen closes at ten, missing the late window entirely. Go for an early dinner and a cocktail, then move downtown to the bar kitchens above once the clock passes eleven and Cotton and Rye has shut the pass.
How to eat late in Savannah
Late dining in Savannah is a walkable Historic District affair, which is the city's saving grace. Boomy's, Spudnik, Treylor Park and McDonough's all sit within the downtown grid, with Spudnik on Broughton running latest at 3 a.m. and Boomy's close behind around two. The Warehouse is down on River Street and Pour Larry's is in City Market, both an easy walk. Because nearly everything clusters in the squares-and-streets core, you can move between late kitchens on foot, which beats most cities this size for late-night convenience.
On value, Savannah is a bargain after dark: Spudnik's $9.95 potatoes, McDonough's low-teens pub plates and the Warehouse's cheap tavern fare mean a late dinner rarely tops twenty dollars a head. The one thing to watch is the bar tab, since most of these kitchens live inside drinking rooms, and on River Street and in City Market the drinks carry the tourist markup, not the food. Order the signature, keep the rounds in check, and you will eat well late for very little. The Savannah dining guide has the full picture, and the worldwide open-late ranking shows how the city compares.
Frequently asked
What Savannah restaurant is open the latest?
Spudnik on West Broughton Street runs the latest kitchen, serving its gourmet loaded potatoes until 3 a.m. Thursday through Saturday, with The Classic at $9.95. Boomy's on Congress Street cooks Thai food to roughly 2 a.m. nightly, and Pour Larry's in City Market keeps food going into the early hours. For a real meal in the small hours, Spudnik and Boomy's are the answers; for a dinner-sized menu, Treylor Park runs to 1 a.m. every night.
Does the Olde Pink House serve late?
No. The Olde Pink House is the restaurant visitors most often assume stays open late, but its dinner kitchen closes around ten-thirty, so it is firmly an earlier-evening destination rather than a late-night option. It is well worth booking for a dressed-up dinner in the historic mansion at a normal hour. Once the clock passes eleven, the late food in Savannah lives in the bars, Boomy's, Treylor Park, Spudnik and McDonough's among them.
Where is the cheapest late-night food in Savannah?
Spudnik is the value champion, with gourmet loaded potato bowls at $9.95 served until 3 a.m. on weekends and no bar tab to creep. McDonough's pub plates run in the low teens, and the Warehouse on River Street trades in cheap tavern fare and 35-cent happy-hour oysters. Boomy's drunken noodles at $18.75 are a step up but still fair for a real Thai kitchen at 1 a.m. A late dinner in Savannah rarely needs to top twenty dollars a head.
Is Savannah good for late-night dining?
Better than its early-dinner reputation suggests, as long as you know where to look. The famous tablecloth rooms close their kitchens by ten-thirty, but a cluster of Historic District bars, Boomy's, Spudnik, Treylor Park, McDonough's, keep cooking to 1, 2 or 3 a.m., and they are all walkable from one another. The food is cheap and genuinely good for the hour. What Savannah lacks is late fine dining; what it offers is excellent-value late bar kitchens.
What's the best late-night restaurant in Savannah?
Boomy's is our top pick, a Congress Street dive hiding a real Thai kitchen that runs to roughly 2 a.m., with $18.75 drunken noodles that beat any drunk-food compromise. For the latest and cheapest, Spudnik serves $9.95 loaded potatoes to 3 a.m. on weekends. For a full late dinner, Treylor Park runs its menu to 1 a.m. nightly. Pick by how late you need and whether you want a meal or a snack.
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