Nashville's Broadway Attractions: The Complete 2026 Visitor Guide
- Chase Gillmore

- Apr 30
- 18 min read

Nashville's Broadway attractions refer to the concentrated stretch of live music venues, celebrity-owned honky tonks, historic landmarks, museums, and entertainment districts centered on Lower Broadway, running from 1st Avenue at the Cumberland River waterfront west toward the Gulch and Music Row. In 2026, this four-block core known as Honky Tonk Highway remains one of the most visited entertainment districts in the American South, drawing visitors from across the country and internationally. Live music runs from 10am to 3am, 365 days a year, with no cover charge at most venues. If you're planning your first trip or returning to see what's new, this guide covers what's genuinely worth your time, what costs to expect, and how to navigate the strip like someone who actually knows it.
Honky Tonk Highway is a four-block stretch of Lower Broadway where live music plays all day and night, every day of the year, with no cover charge at most venues.
Peak season runs April through October; weekends draw the heaviest crowds, and many venues enforce a 21-and-over policy after evening hours.
Celebrity-owned mega-bars including Luke Bryan's 32 Bridge (6 levels, 8 bars), Kid Rock's Big Ass Honky Tonk (5 floors, capacity of nearly 2,000), and Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville (highest rooftop on Broadway) now anchor the strip alongside older independent venues.
Beyond the bars, the Ryman Auditorium, Country Music Hall of Fame, Johnny Cash Museum, and Ernest Tubb Record Shop all sit within walking distance of Broadway.
According to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, Davidson County welcomed 16.9 million visitors in 2026, generating a record $11.2 billion in visitor spending.
Staying 5-10 minutes from downtown, rather than in a hotel on or near Broadway, typically means more space, private amenities, and lower per-person cost for groups of 6 or more.
Nashville's entertainment district has transformed dramatically over the past two decades. What was once a struggling stretch of storefronts, largely abandoned after the Grand Ole Opry left the Ryman in the 1970s, became one of the country's most visited music corridors when the Ryman reopened and independent honky tonks began drawing crowds back. Today, the question isn't whether Broadway is worth visiting. It clearly is. The more useful question is how to experience it well, especially if you're coordinating a group, managing a budget, or trying to find something genuine alongside the spectacle.
At Underwood Manor, we've hosted hundreds of Nashville groups for bachelorette parties, bachelor weekends, and birthday celebrations, and the same planning questions come up every time: which bars are actually worth the time, how much should we budget per person, how do we get there and back safely, and what is Broadway like compared to what we've seen online? This guide answers all of that, with honest assessments rather than tourism-board cheerleading.
For more broader trip planning resources, the Nashville things to do guide covers the full city beyond Broadway, including 12 South, the Gulch, and day trip options.

What Not to Miss on Broadway, Nashville?
The must-see Nashville Broadway attractions include Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, Robert's Western World, the Ryman Auditorium, and the newer celebrity-owned venues like Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville and Luke Bryan's 32 Bridge. Each offers a distinct experience, and the honest answer is that your itinerary should balance both the historic independent bars and at least one of the multi-story celebrity concepts to understand what Broadway has become in 2026.
The Independent Honky Tonks Worth Your Time
Tootsie's Orchid Lounge is the most historically significant bar on the strip. Its purple exterior, a product of a painter accidentally using the wrong color, became an icon. Patsy Cline, Willie Nelson, and Johnny Cash all performed inside, and scenes from Coal Miner's Daughter were filmed here. Four stages and three bars give you room to move even when the street-level floor is packed. Come early on a Friday afternoon to get a good spot upstairs with a view over Broadway. Drinks run $8-12 for most domestics and cocktails.
Robert's Western World is arguably the best bar on the strip for people who want actual country music rather than a polished show. The Recession Special, a fried bologna sandwich, chips, a Moon Pie, and a PBR, costs $6 and is genuinely one of the best deals in downtown Nashville. Robert's stays true to its roots: no karaoke, no mechanical bulls, just tight bands playing traditional country for a crowd that came to listen. The floor space is limited and fills quickly after 8pm on weekends.
Legends Corner, at 5th Avenue and Broadway, features a well-known mural of country music legends on its west-facing exterior wall. It's a reliable stop for solid live music in a more manageable space than the multi-story venues nearby.
Layla's, founded in 1997 by Layla Vartanian, holds a notable distinction as the only female, independently owned bar on Lower Broadway. Vintage license plates cover the ceiling and the atmosphere is more intimate than most of the competition. It's a genuine local institution worth supporting.
The Celebrity Mega-Bars: Which Ones Are Worth It
The celebrity-owned venues range enormously in quality and character. Not all of them deliver on their scale.
Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville stands out even among the large-format venues. Four stories with the highest rooftop on Broadway, a tattoo shop, and a reservable speakeasy-style lounge called Buddy's Backroom on the third floor. The rooftop views justify the wait to get up there on a clear night.
Luke Bryan's 32 Bridge spans 30,000 square feet across six levels with eight bars, three stages, and two restaurants. The rooftop bar, nicknamed The Nut House, serves sushi alongside the expected honky tonk fare. It's genuinely impressive at scale. Budget for the crowds, especially on Friday and Saturday nights.
Luke Combs' Category 10, named after his hit Hurricane, has panoramic rooftop views of Broadway that are among the best at street level. Miranda Lambert's Casa Rosa was the first female artist's bar and restaurant to open on Honky Tonk Highway, a fact worth knowing.
Eric Church's Chiefs features a private venue called Neon Steeple, modeled after the Ryman Auditorium, reserved for live shows and residencies. If you can get into a Neon Steeple show, do it. It's a different experience from the open-floor honky tonk format.
Skip Nashville Underground if you're primarily here for the music. It's 40,000 square feet with a mechanical bull and arcade games, and while it's one of the few venues that admits kids during the day, the music takes a back seat to the entertainment park atmosphere. Worth knowing for families with teenagers, less relevant for groups focused on country music.

What Is the 3-Foot Rule in Nashville?
The 3-foot rule in Nashville refers to an informal but widely practiced tipping etiquette on Broadway: any time you are within approximately 3 feet of a live performer, you are expected to tip. Specifically, if you walk past a stage or stand near a musician while they're performing, a dollar or two per song is considered the appropriate acknowledgment. Since cover charges are rare on Broadway, tipping is the primary way musicians are compensated for their work.
The Visit Music City tourism board explicitly recommends this practice in their Honky Tonk Highway guide. Bands on Broadway typically rotate every four hours and split tips among the group. A useful rule for groups: carry smaller bills (ones and fives) before heading out. Trying to break a $20 at a crowded bar mid-set is awkward and slows everyone down.
Beyond tipping musicians, the broader etiquette expectation on Broadway is that you should buy at least one drink per venue you plan to stay in for more than a few songs. The no-cover-charge model depends on drink revenue, and regulars notice when a large group takes up floor space for an hour without ordering.
What Is the Must-Do for One Day in Nashville?
For one day in Nashville centered on Broadway, the most efficient itinerary starts in the afternoon, not the morning. Broadway's live music begins at 10am but the energy doesn't peak until early evening. Use your morning for the Ryman Auditorium tour or the Country Music Hall of Fame, both of which are best visited before the afternoon crowds.
Morning: Ryman Auditorium and the Country Music Hall of Fame
The Ryman Auditorium began as a gospel tabernacle in 1892, hosted the Grand Ole Opry for three decades, and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971. The self-guided daytime tour costs around $30 per person and lets you stand on the actual stage. The pew seating and stained-glass windows give the space a reverence no other Nashville venue can replicate. Arriving at opening and walking the floor before tour groups arrive is worth the early alarm.
The Country Music Hall of Fame sits about half a mile from the Ryman, a 10-11 minute walk from Underwood Manor. Budget two to three hours for a thorough visit. The artifact collection is genuinely impressive, including costumes, handwritten lyrics, and instruments. Don't try to rush it.
Afternoon: Lower Broadway and Honky Tonk Highway
By 2-3pm, the strip is active without being overwhelming. Start at Robert's Western World for the Recession Special and a set of traditional country. Walk west on Broadway, stopping at Tootsie's to catch a set from the upper floor. Legends Corner and Layla's both make good short stops before the evening crowd hits.
The crosswalks on Lower Broadway use a Barnes Dance, also called a pedestrian scramble, which stops all vehicle traffic and allows pedestrians to cross in any direction, including diagonally. It's unusual if you haven't encountered it before and saves significant time crossing the strip.
Evening: Pick One Celebrity Venue and Commit
Trying to hit five celebrity bars in one evening means experiencing none of them properly. Pick one. Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville for the rooftop views. 32 Bridge if you want the full multi-story experience. Chiefs if you want something more music-focused. Budget $50-80 per person for drinks over a 3-4 hour evening on Broadway, more during peak season events.
Beyond Broadway: The Gulch and Printers Alley
Printers Alley, between 3rd and 4th Avenue North and Church Street, is a short walk from Broadway and offers a completely different atmosphere. Blueprint Underground Cocktail Club and Skull's Rainbow Room both operate here, with a more subdued, craft-cocktail orientation than the honky tonk strip. Worth knowing if your group wants to wind down after Broadway without going all the way back to your rental.
The Gulch, about 10 minutes from Underwood Manor and roughly a mile from the heart of Broadway, is where Nashville's food and cocktail scene operates at a higher level than the tourist corridor. For dinner before Broadway, the Gulch is the better call than eating on the strip itself.
What Should I Not Miss in Nashville Beyond Broadway?
Nashville's most underrated experiences are the ones that sit just outside the Broadway footprint. The attractions closest to Underwood Manor include Centennial Park with the full-scale Parthenon replica (about 3 minutes away), Vanderbilt University's campus and West End Avenue dining corridor (6 minutes), and the Johnny Cash Museum on 3rd Avenue, which pairs perfectly with a Broadway afternoon.
Historic Architecture Along the Broadway Corridor
Union Station, built in 1900 and added to the National Historic Register in 1969, features a 65-foot-tall lobby with a stained-glass ceiling, Italian marble, and neo-Romanesque architecture. It now operates as a hotel but the lobby is accessible and worth five minutes if you're walking by.
The Frist Center for the Visual Arts occupies the former Old Post Office building completed in 1934. The preserved Art Deco interior is as impressive as anything in the galleries. The center hosts an architectural tour on the first Saturday of each month, which is genuinely worth attending if the timing aligns with your trip.
Riverfront Park, adjacent to the Cumberland River at the east end of Broadway, includes a mile-long greenway trail, a 13,000-square-foot dog park, a playground, and the Ascend Amphitheater. It's free, rarely crowded during weekday mornings, and gives groups a good outdoor option before the afternoon honky tonk circuit begins.
Shopping and Record Stores
The Ernest Tubb Record Shop, established in 1947, sells country and bluegrass albums and memorabilia that you won't find at the souvenir shops on the strip. It's the real version of what most Broadway shops are pretending to be.
The Goo Goo Shop on Broadway sells Nashville's original candy, the Goo Goo Cluster, first made in 1912. Buy a few as gifts. They're better than you expect and genuinely local.
How to Plan Your Broadway Visit by Group Type
Nashville's Broadway attractions work differently depending on who you're with. A bachelorette group on a Saturday night has completely different logistics than a family on a Thursday afternoon or a music history fan on a Tuesday. Planning by group type prevents the most common mismatches between expectation and reality.
Bachelorette and Bachelor Party Groups
For Nashville bachelorette party groups, the sweet spot on Broadway is 5pm to midnight. Arrive before the dinner rush to get good floor positions at Tootsie's or Robert's, then transition to one of the rooftop celebrity venues for the later hours. The Barnes Dance crosswalk system means you can move between venues quickly. Rideshare pickups on Broadway are designated on specific side streets; your driver will specify the corner. Budget an extra 10-15 minutes for rideshare pickup and drop-off on busy nights.
Bachelorette groups traveling in matching outfits (popular on Broadway) should know that most venues have no formal dress code, but very high heels on cobblestone sections of Lower Broadway are a genuine logistical problem. Multiple guests in every group rethink footwear by hour two. Robert's Western World sells boots, conveniently.
One thing most Broadway guides skip: many venues are cash-preferred for tip transactions even when they accept cards for bar tabs. Bring smaller bills specifically for tipping musicians. Underwood Manor's host provides a local guide with Broadway logistics tips at check-in, which guests consistently call out as useful in reviews.
Families with Children
Broadway is family-friendly during daytime hours. Most venues admit children before the evening cutoff, and Nashville Underground is specifically set up for it with arcade games and a mechanical bull alongside the live music. The strict 21-and-over policy takes effect in the evening at most venues, so families should plan to transition away from Broadway by 6-7pm and pivot to Riverfront Park, the Johnny Cash Museum, or dinner in the Gulch.
Music History Enthusiasts
For visitors whose primary interest is the history rather than the party, the itinerary inverts: start at the Ryman Auditorium first thing, visit the Country Music Hall of Fame, stop at AJ's Good Time Bar (housed in the oldest building on Broadway, previously used as a Civil War hospital and Nashville's first used record store), then spend an afternoon at Robert's Western World and Layla's. Skip the mega-bars entirely or walk through one just to understand the scale. The Ernest Tubb Record Shop on the way back closes your loop.
Practical Cost Guide: What Broadway Actually Costs in 2026
Nashville Broadway attraction costs are rarely discussed honestly by travel guides, which tends to leave groups under-budgeted. The no-cover-charge policy at most honky tonks is real, but it doesn't mean Broadway is cheap. Here's what a realistic evening actually costs per person in 2026.
Expense Category | Typical Range Per Person | Notes |
Drinks on Broadway (4 hours) | $40-70 | $8-12 per drink, faster pace in celebrity bars |
Tipping musicians | $10-20 | $1-2 per song at venues you stay at; bring small bills |
Food on Broadway | $15-30 | Robert's Recession Special is $6; most bar food runs $12-18 |
Rideshare to/from Broadway | $8-15 each way | From Underwood Manor (~9 min); surge pricing applies late night |
Ryman Auditorium tour (if daytime) | ~$30 | Self-guided; book in advance on weekends |
Country Music Hall of Fame | $28-32 | Allow 2-3 hours for a thorough visit |
For a group of 8 on a Saturday evening covering drinks, tipping, food, and rideshare, budget roughly $80-120 per person. That's before any cover charges at ticketed events or VIP arrangements at celebrity venues.
The most significant budget variable is pace. Groups that move quickly through multiple bars spend more per hour than groups who settle into one or two spots for longer sets. Robert's Western World and Tootsie's both reward longer stays: the bands build energy across a set in a way that the quick-stop bar-hopping approach doesn't capture.
The Celebrity Venue vs. Independent Bar Trade-Off
The tension between Nashville's newer celebrity mega-bars and the older independent honky tonks is a real and frequently discussed topic among locals. The mega-bars offer impressive scale and rooftop views, but the live music is often secondary to the spectacle. Independent venues like Robert's Western World, Layla's, and Legends Corner remain the places where country music is the main event rather than the soundtrack for a multi-floor entertainment concept.
Neither experience is wrong. They're just different, and knowing which one you're after before you arrive makes the evening better. Most groups benefit from at least one stop at each type. For bachelorette party Nashville groups, the mix of rooftop photos at a celebrity venue and genuine honky tonk time at Robert's or Tootsie's tends to satisfy both the Instagram objectives and the music experience.

Accessibility on Nashville's Broadway: What No One Covers
Nashville Broadway's accessibility situation is uneven and rarely covered by travel guides. Most visitors discover the limitations on arrival, which is a poor experience for anyone with mobility considerations. Understanding the specifics in advance makes a meaningful difference.
The Barnes Dance crosswalks are actually one of the more accessible features of Broadway, since they eliminate the need to time traffic in multiple directions. Sidewalks on Lower Broadway are wide and generally well-maintained, though the historic cobblestone sections near the older buildings can be uneven. Flat shoes or low-heeled boots are genuinely practical, not just a style preference.
Multi-story celebrity venues present the most significant accessibility challenge. Many have elevators, but they operate at varying reliability during peak hours. Nashville Underground, despite its scale, has stated ADA accommodations. Luke Bryan's 32 Bridge has elevator access to upper floors, though wait times on weekend nights can be significant. Before committing to a specific venue for a group that includes guests with mobility limitations, call ahead to confirm elevator access and ask about ground-floor stage viewing areas. Most venues have accessible restrooms on the ground floor.
For groups traveling with guests who use wheelchairs or have difficulty on stairs, Robert's Western World and Legends Corner operate primarily on a single floor and are easier to navigate than the multi-story concepts. The Country Music Hall of Fame and Ryman Auditorium both have formal ADA accommodations and are reliably accessible.
Rideshare pickup and drop-off on Broadway is organized on designated side streets, not on Broadway itself. The specific locations rotate based on event schedules, so check the app for the current pickup point rather than assuming where to stand.
Safety and Practical Tips Most Guides Skip
Broadway is safe by any major entertainment district standard, but it draws enormous crowds, especially on weekend nights and during major events like CMA Fest in June. A few practical considerations that most travel guides omit:
Secure your valuables. Large groups in crowded bars are a pickpocket environment. Front pockets for wallets, crossbody bags worn in front, and leaving unnecessary cards at the rental are practical choices for a Broadway evening.
Drink safety. Broadway bars are generally well-staffed and professionally run, but the standard practice of not leaving drinks unattended applies here as in any crowded venue. The buddy system within your group is a genuine recommendation, not a cliche.
Rideshare logistics matter. On a Friday or Saturday night after midnight, rideshare surge pricing can push single rides from Broadway to outlying rentals to $25-40. Groups splitting a larger rideshare vehicle mitigate this. Pre-arranging a pickup time with a sober group member or splitting into two vehicles before surge peaks is worth planning in advance.
Late-night food. Broadway options for late-night food are limited and overpriced. Having snacks or a simple meal option at your rental before heading out means you're not dependent on the strip for food after midnight. Underwood Manor's fully stocked kitchen with a 4-burner gas stove makes this easy for groups staying there.
For comprehensive Nashville trip planning beyond Broadway, the Nashville trip planning guide covers logistics from arrival through day-by-day activity suggestions.
Where to Stay Near Nashville's Broadway Attractions
Accommodations near Nashville's Broadway attractions split into two practical categories: walkable downtown options and slightly removed rentals with private amenities. The right choice depends almost entirely on group size and what you want when you're not on Broadway.
For couples or groups of 2-4 who want to walk everywhere, the Luxe Cowgirl is 3 blocks from Broadway with resort-style pool and sky lounge access, sleeping up to 8 guests across 2 bedrooms. The Luxe SoBro in the SoBro district is also 3 blocks from Broadway with a private balcony overlooking a saltwater pool, sleeping up to 4 guests and walking distance to the Ryman Auditorium and Bridgestone Arena.
For groups of 6-10, the private rental model genuinely outperforms downtown hotels on multiple dimensions: more beds, more bathrooms, shared kitchen, private outdoor space, and lower per-person cost. Underwood Manor sits about 9 minutes from Broadway by rideshare (roughly $8-12 each way), sleeps up to 10 guests across 3 bedrooms, and offers a 7-person hot tub, the moody speakeasy game room with an 8-foot slate pool table and custom whiskey barrel bar, and a private backyard with a SoloStove smokeless fire pit. The Ryman Auditorium is about 8 minutes away and the Country Music Hall of Fame about 11 minutes.
Guest Megan, who booked a 4-night bachelorette stay, put it directly: "The location is 10 min from everything like Broadway making it a central spot to stay at." Guest Geralyn noted: "5 mins or less to downtown in a peaceful neighborhood with an outstanding back yard."
The Herman Haven is a boho-chic Nashville rental less than 2 miles from Broadway, sleeping up to 10 guests with every bedroom having its own private en-suite bathroom. It's also pet-friendly and wheelchair accessible. For groups that want proximity closer to the strip than Underwood Manor, The Herman Haven's Gulch-adjacent location is hard to beat at 7 minutes from Broadway.
For larger groups of 12-24, Fern Unit A and Fern Unit B are side-by-side redesigned luxury homes, each sleeping 12 guests with 7-person hot tubs, rooftop decks with skyline views, and game rooms, located 7-10 minutes from Broadway. They can be booked separately or together. For the largest groups, the Ultimate Bach Pad offers 8 bedrooms, 7 bathrooms, 2 hot tubs, 3 game rooms, and 2 rooftop decks for groups up to 24 guests, about 8-10 minutes from Broadway. You can find more options at Nashville's top-rated vacation rentals or explore downtown Nashville vacation rental options in detail.
According to AirDNA's Nashville market data, the average Nashville short-term rental daily rate was $360.10 in the most recent reporting period, with the STR market scoring 82 out of 100 on overall market performance. Davidson County hotel occupancy ran at 67% in 2026 with an average daily rate of $199.20. For groups of 8 or more, a private rental typically costs less per person than a comparable hotel room block while providing significantly more shared space.
Frequently Asked Questions About Nashville's Broadway Attractions
How far is Underwood Manor from Broadway and the Nashville honky tonk district?
Underwood Manor is approximately 9 minutes from Lower Broadway by rideshare, at a typical cost of $8-12 each way. The rental is about 5 minutes from downtown Nashville generally. Most groups find the short ride well worth having a private fenced backyard, 7-person hot tub, and speakeasy game room waiting when they return from the strip at 1 or 2am.
What not to miss on Broadway in Nashville?
The absolute essentials on Nashville's Broadway are Tootsie's Orchid Lounge for its history and four-stage format, Robert's Western World for the Recession Special ($6) and traditional country music, and at least one rooftop visit, Jelly Roll's Goodnight Nashville has the highest rooftop on Broadway. The Ryman Auditorium tour and the Country Music Hall of Fame are the two non-bar experiences that no music history fan should skip.
Is Broadway Nashville free to visit?
Most honky tonks on Lower Broadway charge no cover, and live music runs from 10am to 3am, 365 days a year. You are expected to tip musicians $1-2 per song when within 3 feet of the stage, and buying at least one drink per venue is the social contract that makes the no-cover model work. Budget $50-100 per person for a full evening including drinks, tips, food, and rideshare.
When is the best time to visit Broadway Nashville?
Weekday afternoons from 2-6pm offer the best balance of live music, manageable crowds, and bar access before age restrictions kick in for families. April through October is peak tourist season with the heaviest weekend crowds. Friday and Saturday nights from 9pm onward are the most crowded and highest-energy, but also the most expensive for rideshare and the most difficult for large group logistics.
What Nashville attractions are closest to Underwood Manor?
Underwood Manor's nearest verified landmarks include Centennial Park and the Parthenon replica (about 3 minutes), Vanderbilt University (about 6 minutes), the Ryman Auditorium (about 8 minutes), Broadway and Lower Broadway (about 9 minutes), the Gulch district (about 10 minutes), and the Country Music Hall of Fame (about 11 minutes). The Grand Ole Opry at Opryland is about 18 minutes away.
Does Underwood Manor have a hot tub?
Yes. Underwood Manor has a 7-person premium hot tub with jets and lighting in a private fenced backyard, alongside a SoloStove smokeless fire pit with unlimited firewood, bistro string lights, and a Weber charcoal BBQ grill. The backyard is one of the most consistently praised features in guest reviews, particularly for groups returning from a late night on Broadway.
What is the speakeasy game room at Underwood Manor?
The speakeasy game room at Underwood Manor is a converted garage space with a dark, moody lounge design featuring an 8-foot slate pool table, dartboard, 55-inch Smart TV, custom whiskey barrel bar, crystal chandelier lighting, and a "Blame It on My Roots" neon sign. It's one of the most distinctive features in any Nashville group rental and a genuine alternative to spending an extra night out when the group wants to stay in.
Planning Your Nashville Broadway Visit: Final Recommendations
Nashville's Broadway attractions reward visitors who plan at the right level of detail: enough to avoid the most common mistakes (underbudgeting, trying to hit too many bars, skipping the Ryman), but not so rigid that you can't follow a good band for an extra set. The data supports Nashville's position as one of the most visited entertainment districts in the country. According to the Nashville Convention and Visitors Corp, Davidson County welcomed 16.9 million visitors in 2026, generating $11.2 billion in spending, a record. In 2026, the district continues to grow, with new celebrity venues filling gaps that existed even a few years ago.
The practical advice that consistently matters most: arrive on Broadway before 5pm to claim good positions at the independent venues before the evening crowds double the floor count. Carry small bills specifically for musician tips. Choose one celebrity rooftop venue rather than trying to climb through three. Have a plan for rideshare pickup before midnight, not after. And if your group is staying 5-10 minutes out rather than in a downtown hotel, the private backyard you return to at 2am is frequently the best part of the evening.
For more Nashville planning resources, the best live music venues in Nashville Tennessee guide goes beyond Broadway to cover neighborhood venues, and the month-by-month Nashville visit guide covers seasonal timing in detail. For bottomless brunch options to start your Broadway day, the Nashville bottomless mimosa brunch guide is worth bookmarking.

If you're coordinating a group trip to explore Nashville's Broadway attractions, Underwood Manor puts you about 9 minutes from the honky tonks with a private backyard hot tub and speakeasy game room waiting when the group is ready to wind down. That combination of proximity and private space is the reason bachelorette groups, birthday weekends, and friend groups keep choosing it over downtown hotels. Check availability and book Underwood Manor directly to skip the platform service fees.





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