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Coconut Grove, Miami: A Bachelorette Neighborhood Guide

By RipTrip Editorial·May 31, 2026·Miami / South Beach Guide →
Coconut Grove, Miami: A Bachelorette Neighborhood Guide
Quick Summary
Best forGroups who want Miami without the South Beach pretension and cover charges
VibeLeafy, walkable, waterfront, a little bohemian
Stay nearCocoWalk and the central village so everything is on foot

Why Coconut Grove for a Bachelorette

The Grove is Miami's oldest neighborhood and its most walkable. You can spend a whole day moving between rooftop bars, waterfront seafood, and a wine shop without ever calling a car.

It is where locals actually go to drink, so you trade the velvet ropes and bottle minimums of South Beach for craft cocktails and neighborhood spots. That makes it ideal for a group that wants a good time without the attitude.

Where to Drink

Bodega Taqueria y Tequila

This Grove outpost hides a not-so-secret second-floor speakeasy and a moody mezcaleria behind the taco counter. It is the easy first stop to get the group going.

Order this: a round of margaritas and the late-night tacos to share.

The Taurus

Open since 1969, The Taurus is the Grove's oldest bar, with more than 100 whiskeys and 70 beers in a cozy, wood-paneled room. It is the spot for the group members who want a real drink and a little history.

Mae's Room

An intimate cocktail den that feels like a stylish midcentury living room. This is your late-evening, lower-lit, conversation-and-craft-cocktails stop.

Where to Eat

Glass and Vine

Set in Peacock Park with outdoor seating, Glass and Vine draws a crowd for sunny weekend lunches and rose. Book the patio for a long, photogenic group meal.

Order this: the shareable seafood plates and a couple of bottles for the table.

Ariete

A chef-driven, locally loved spot for a nicer group dinner. Reserve well ahead for a weekend bachelorette dinner, as tables go fast.

Monty's Coconut Grove

Waterfront, casual, and built for an afternoon of raw bar and frozen drinks with a marina view. This is your low-key day-drinking anchor.

Order this: a bucket of peel-and-eat shrimp and frozen rum runners.

What to Do Between Meals

CocoWalk is the open-air shopping and dining hub at the center of the village, with a luxury cinema if you want an afternoon break from the heat. For something more memorable, tour the Italian Renaissance-style Vizcaya Museum and Gardens, one of the most photogenic spots in all of Miami.

On the water, you can rent a private boat or join a sunset sail out of Regatta Harbour, which is an easy upgrade for a milestone bachelorette.

How to Structure a Day in The Grove

Start late with waterfront brunch at Glass and Vine, then wander CocoWalk and tour Vizcaya in the early afternoon. Reset at the hotel, do cocktails at Bodega, dinner at Ariete, and a nightcap at Mae's Room.

Planning Tips

  • Stay in or near the central village so the whole day is walkable and you skip surge-priced rides.
  • Book Ariete and the Glass and Vine patio at least two weeks out for weekend groups.
  • The Grove is greener and quieter than South Beach, so it pairs well as a home base with one planned night out in Brickell or Wynwood if your group wants a bigger club night.

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