Kitty O’Hanlons since 1994 - Have Fun & Make Memories

Welcome to Kitty's !!!!

A warm Irish welcome is always received with a Guinness that’s perfectly poured.

Plymouth’s first and only Irish Bar in the heart of Plymouth City Centre. We aim to provide a warm welcome and relaxed atmosphere. Regular Live Music and one of the best places to Watch Live Rugby. Come in and experience it for yourself. Home of the Perfect Pint of Guinness.

Like sport and live music courses through our veins at Kitty's so we have always got something going on, live music sessions, lots of sport from the Irish GAA, to Rugby, Football, Horseracing, and even Tennis and Golf! and always people living life.

Rugby Live

Looking to watch sports in Plymouth? We show sporting events live on our HD screens, bringing you the best atmosphere in Plymouth to watch rugby, Formula 1, Irish GAA, boxing, football and more with an unmatched atmosphere on our 4K HD screens.

Music Live

We’re passionate about nurturing up and coming talent, and also welcoming incredible well know acts. Whether it’s a high-energy gig, an intimate acoustic set, or a foot stomping traditional Irish session, Kitty O'Hanlons Plymouth is the place to be to experience live music at its best.

Be Alive

Inspired by the classic boozers and bars of Ireland and New York, Kitty O'Hanlons features dark wood, and a back-bar for the ages. Whether you're joining for one of Plymouths's best pints of Guinness, an Irish Whiskey, a carefully crafted cocktail or a few drinks with friends, expect genuine Irish hospitality at the heart of it all.

Kitty's Irish Bar Plymouth
Atmostphere & Entertainment

Kitty's ~ Where the past meets FUN

Standing on the oldest known inn site in Plymouth, the Abbey was built here, in St. Andrew’s Street, following the demolition of the mediaeval Turk’s Head in 1861. St. Andrew’s Street itself of course is one of the oldest thoroughfares in the city although since 1979 its line has been interrupted by Plymouth Magistrates’ Court. Until the 1930s an ancient terrace of buildings known as Abbey Place ran from the corner of St. Andrew Street, opposite this pub, across to the top of Finewell Street and the Prysten House.

Curiously enough it is this building – the Prysten House – which indirectly gives its name both to Abbey Place and the Abbey Hotel. Long thought, albeit mistakenly, to have been a place with ecclesiastical connections, the house, built by Thomas Yogge in the fifteenth century, was being referred to as the Old Abbey at least 250 years ago. The picture of an old Abbey ruins on the inn sign is no more than an attractive piece of fiction.

Known as Kitty O’Hanlons since 1994, this was the first ‘Irish’ pub in Plymouth and now the best Irish Bar in Devon.