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The Bell Inn, Nottingham

A Grade II‑listed Nottingham pub with 15th‑century fabric, sandstone cellars and a snug, music‑friendly rear bar.

4.3

A Grade II‑listed city‑centre pub occupying parts of 15th‑century buildings, The Bell Inn mixes low‑beamed rooms, stone-flagged corridors and subterranean sandstone cellars to create an atmospheric old‑world drinking house in Nottingham’s Market Square area. Expect changing real ales, an upstairs restaurant, live music in the rear bar and a compact outdoor seating area on Angel Row.

A brief summary to Bell Inn

  • 18 Angel Row, Nottingham, NG1 6HL, GB
  • +441159475241
  • Visit website
  • Duration: 0.5 to 3 hours
  • Mid ranged
  • Environment icon Indoor
  • Mobile reception: 4 out of 5
  • Monday 11 am-11 pm
  • Tuesday 11 am-11 pm
  • Wednesday 11 am-11 pm
  • Thursday 11 am-11 pm
  • Friday 11 am-12 am
  • Saturday 11 am-12 am
  • Sunday 12 pm-11 pm

Local tips

  • Book ahead for an evening meal or live‑music night—tables in the upstairs restaurant and rear bar fill on event nights.
  • Ask staff about the changing real ales and cellar history—the subterranean caves are a key part of the pub’s character.
  • If you prefer quieter spaces, try one of the smaller front bars rather than the larger rear room during peak hours.
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Bell Inn location weather suitability

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  • Weather icon Mild Temperatures

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Discover more about Bell Inn

Ancient fabric beneath a modern city

The Bell Inn sits within two medieval timber buildings whose fabric stretches back to the 1400s, giving the pub a tangible sense of age that surfaces in exposed beams, uneven flagstones and leaded stained glass at the front. The ground floor is arranged as a string of small rooms and a narrow corridor that leads to a larger rear bar, preserving a compartmentalised plan that reads as layers of use and adaptation over centuries.

Caves, wells and a brewing past

Beneath the pub lie hand‑carved sandstone caves and former wells that once supplied cool water and natural cellaring for brewing and storage. These subterranean spaces, with their smoke‑blackened rock and vaulted hollows, are a reminder of Nottingham’s long relationship with underground cellars and of a time when beer storage and kitchen activity were rooted in the rock below the city.

Interior character and fixtures

Inside, original features sit beside 19th‑ and 20th‑century alterations: timber panelling, a solid wood serving bar, globe lighting and etched glass set pieces from the late 1920s. Plaques and small memorials, together with lists of past landlords discreetly displayed, add to the pub’s sense of identity while multiple snug‑like rooms create different atmospheres — from the brighter front bars to the darker, more boisterous rear space.

Food, ales and live music

The Bell operates as a full‑service pub and restaurant, offering a mix of classic pub dishes alongside vegetarian and vegan options and a rotating selection of real ales and hand‑pulled beers. The rear bar hosts regular live music evenings — often jazz and acoustic sets — which animate the larger room and make it a hub for evening entertainment in the city centre.

Setting and civic ties

Positioned on Angel Row beside Nottingham’s Old Market Square conservation area, The Bell reads as part of the city’s historic core. The building carries civic recognition for its heritage and has local connections to the town’s social and sporting life; displays and commemorations inside reference local figures and episodes that tie the pub to Nottingham’s broader story.

Visitor experience and atmosphere

Visiting The Bell is primarily about the sensory contrast of cool shadowed interiors against the bright bustle of Angel Row outside. The mix of low ceilings, wooden panelling, the faint echo of steps on stone and the occasional brass clink behind the bar creates a snug, rooted atmosphere. Whether you come for a quiet ale in a side bar, a meal upstairs or a music night in the back room, the building’s long history is present in every doorway and cellar stone.

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