Finding affordable beer in Tallinn shouldn’t require a pub crawl. We track 0.5L beer prices across bars, restaurants, and saunas in Tallinn so you can see at a glance where to get the best deal — and where you might be overpaying.
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Beer beer prices in Tallinn — what to expect
Tallinn has one of the most interesting beer scenes in the Baltics. You can pay €4.90 for a half-litre of A. Le Coq at a local bar, or €7.50 for a craft IPA at a taproom — sometimes on the same street. The difference between the cheapest and most expensive venues we track is often 50% or more.
We made it so you can find the cheapest beers in Tallinn quite easily, but we’re updating manually as we go and as we update the site, so (beer) with us.
As a rule of thumb: bars and restaurants in the Old Town tend to charge more, while places in Kalamaja, Telliskivi, and outer neighbourhoods offer better value. Saunas (saun) are traditionally some of the cheapest places to grab a cold beer — it’s a deeply local experience and a great way to drink well for less.
💚 Good value (under €5)
Local Estonian brands like A. Le Coq and Saku Originaal at neighbourhood bars, kebab spots, and public saunas. You’re paying for the beer, not the postcode.
🟠Mid-range (€5–€6.50)
Most sit-down restaurants, beachside spots, and specialty venues. Craft options from Põhjala and Saku Hele fall here. Good quality, fair price.
🔴 Premium (€6.50+)
Old Town tourist traps, hotel bars, and fine dining. The beer itself isn’t better — you’re paying for the view or the vibe. Worth it sometimes, but know what you’re getting.
How to use the map
Each circle on the map shows the price of a standard beer at that venue. Green = cheapest, orange = mid-range, red = most expensive — relative to the places currently on the map. Click any marker to see the venue name, exact price, and beer type. Hover over a card below the map to highlight it on the map.
Questions & Answers
Got a question not answered here? Send us a message on Facebook — we read every message.
General
How does the beer price map work?
We manually collect the price of a standard 0.5L beer at venues across Tallinn and display them on an interactive map. Each marker shows the price — green for cheapest, red for most expensive. The map updates as we verify new prices.
What size beer do the prices refer to?
We focus on 0.5L (half a litre) as the standard Estonian serving size. Where a venue only serves 0.4L or 0.33L (common at craft beer bars and some restaurants), we note the actual size on the card. All prices are in euros.
What type of beer is shown?
We prioritise the cheapest standard lager or pilsner available — typically A. Le Coq, Saku Originaal, or the house draft. If a venue is known for craft beer, we show the entry-level price and note the beer. The goal is a fair comparison across very different types of venues.
How often are prices updated?
We verify prices as often as we can, but beer prices do change — especially seasonally or after a menu refresh. If you spot a price that’s wrong, please let us know on Facebook and we’ll update it as soon as possible.
Why are some venues missing from the map?
A venue only appears on the map once we have a verified price for it. We’re adding new places regularly. Many venues in Tallinn don’t publish their beer prices online, so we rely on visits, tips from readers, or direct contact with the bar.
What does the colour of the marker mean?
The colours are relative to the prices currently shown on the map — not fixed categories. Green means one of the cheapest options among tracked venues right now. Red means one of the most expensive. Orange is the middle range. As more venues are added, the colours may shift.
Getting listed & reporting errors
I found a wrong price — how do I report it?
Message us on Facebook with the venue name and the correct price (a photo of the menu helps a lot). We’ll verify and update it quickly. We’d rather have accurate data than a long list of guesses.
I own a bar — how do I get listed on the map?
Send us a message on Facebook with your venue name, address, and beer price. We’ll add you to the map once verified. It’s completely free — we just want the data to be accurate.
Will you add other cities in Estonia?
Yes — Tartu is next. Tallinn is our focus for now while we build up the database and make sure the map works well. Follow us on Facebook to hear when we expand.
Is there a mobile app?
Not yet. The website works well on mobile — just open it in your browser before heading out. An app may come later once the map has enough coverage to be genuinely useful on the go.
Know a place we’re missing? Message us on Facebook →
