Lesbian Bars & Sapphic Nightlife in Washington, D.C. (2026)

July 8, 2026
8 min read
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A guide to lesbian bars and sapphic nightlife in Washington, D.C. — A League of Her Own, as you are, the roving queer-women party scene, and the history behind it all.

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Here's something most cities can't say: Washington, D.C. has a dedicated lesbian bar. With only about three dozen left in the entire United States, that alone puts D.C. on the short list of great American cities for queer women's nightlife. But the scene is bigger than one room — it runs on a pair of anchor spaces, a lively circuit of roving sapphic parties, and a lineage of lesbian bars that stretches back half a century.

This guide covers where queer women actually go out in D.C.: the two dedicated spaces to know, the recurring nights and parties that move around the city, and the history that makes D.C.'s sapphic scene one of the most storied in the country.

The Dedicated Spaces

Two venues anchor queer women's nightlife in D.C. — one a proper lesbian bar, one a queer-women-forward space that's become a community hub.

A League of Her Own — Adams Morgan

2319 18th St NW · Adams Morgan

A League of Her Own — ALOHO to regulars — is D.C.'s dedicated lesbian bar, and one of only about three dozen left in the entire United States (per the Lesbian Bar Project). It opened in 2018 to help fill the void left by Phase One's closure, and it's since become one of the best-regarded lesbian bars in the country. Set alongside Pitchers in Adams Morgan — the two share a building and two patios — ALOHO has its own entrance, its own energy, and a fiercely loyal following. Expect a lively sports-bar-meets-dance-floor vibe, DJs every weekend, and a packed calendar of queer women's events: open mics, comedy, singles mixers, and drag.

  • Hours: Typically Thursday 6 PM–12 AM, Friday and Saturday 6 PM–3 AM
  • Best for: A guaranteed queer-women night out, weekend dancing, and community events

Hours and programming shift — confirm the current schedule at [alohodc.com](http://www.alohodc.com/).

as you are. — Capitol Hill

500 8th St SE · Barracks Row, Capitol Hill

Founded by two women, as you are. is a queer-women-forward space that runs as a coffee shop and cafe by day and transforms into a lounge and dance bar by night. It's become one of D.C.'s most beloved community spaces, with a calendar that leans sapphic and inclusive: recurring nights like Fishnets & Feelings, Night of 1000 Billies (a queer country party), Latin nights, craft nights, and themed karaoke. Its location matters, too — it sits on the same 8th Street SE block as the legendary Phase One, carrying the "Gay Way" torch forward.

  • Best for: A daytime-to-nighttime hang, sapphic theme nights, and a warmer, community-first vibe

Here are D.C.'s queer-women spaces:

A League Of Her Own, Washington D.C

A League Of Her Own, Washington D.C

Washington D.C., Washington D.C.

as you are. DC, Washington D.C

as you are. DC, Washington D.C

Washington D.C., Washington D.C.

Pitchers DC, Washington D.C

Pitchers DC, Washington D.C

Washington D.C., Washington D.C.

Pro Tip

D.C.'s two anchor spaces sit in different neighborhoods — ALOHO in Adams Morgan, as you are on Capitol Hill — so they draw slightly different crowds. If you're bar-hopping, treat them as two separate nights rather than one crawl.

The Roving Sapphic Party Scene

Here's the thing about queer women's nightlife in D.C. (and most cities): a lot of it doesn't live in a dedicated bar at all. Some of the best sapphic nights are recurring parties that pop up at bars and venues across the city, run by collectives and promoters who've built their own community out of necessity. It's worth following these organizers directly, because the calendar is always shifting.

Recurring and rotating nights the scene has leaned on include:

  • Dyke Night — a long-running weekly party (historically Wednesdays) at a rotating bar home.
  • First Sunday Tea — a monthly tea dance at a U Street music venue.
  • #FrequencyFriday — monthly sapphic parties from a local collective, hosted at lounges around 9th Street and U Street.
  • Themed sapphic parties — one-offs and series like queer country nights, cowgirl parties, bi-focused nights, and mixers that surface regularly on Eventbrite and in community groups.

Black queer women have also built a distinct, vital nightlife community in D.C. — often out of necessity, through their own party series, promoters, and collectives when mainstream spaces didn't serve them. It's one of the most important threads in the city's sapphic scene, and it runs largely on its own calendar of parties rather than a fixed address, so plugging into those organizers directly is the way in.

Pro Tip

The roving-party scene moves fast and venues change. Before you plan a night around a specific party, check the organizer's Instagram or Eventbrite for the current date and location.

The Phase One Legacy

You can't understand D.C.'s sapphic scene without Phase One. Opened at 525 8th Street SE in 1971, Phase One ran for 45 years — making it the longest continuously operating lesbian bar in United States history. For generations it was the heart of queer women's D.C., anchoring the "Gay Way" stretch of 8th Street SE on Capitol Hill.

When Phase One closed in 2016, it left a hole that the community felt sharply — and its closure was part of a national wave that saw the number of American lesbian bars collapse to just a couple dozen. That loss is exactly why the spaces that exist today matter so much, and why the Lesbian Bar Project formed to document and support the ones still standing. D.C.'s scene didn't disappear when Phase One did; it regrouped, with A League of Her Own opening two years later and as you are. rising up literally down the block from where Phase One stood.

Beyond the Bars: Sports, Community & Culture

Queer women's life in D.C. extends well past nightlife, and if you're new in town — or visiting and want to meet people — the community infrastructure is one of the best in the country.

  • Stonewall Sports D.C. — D.C. is the birthplace of Stonewall Sports, the LGBTQ+ recreational league that started here in 2010 and has since spread nationwide. Kickball, dodgeball, bocce, and more draw huge queer crowds (women very much included), and the post-game bar hangs are a social scene of their own.
  • The DC LGBTQ+ Community Center — the DC Center runs women's and sapphic programming, support groups, and community events year-round, and is a good first stop for finding your people.
  • Meetups & culture — book clubs, queer-women's brunches, and sapphic social groups turn up regularly on Eventbrite and in local Facebook groups. D.C.'s scene is as much about community as it is about bars.

This is part of why D.C. punches above its weight for queer women: even with only a couple of dedicated bars, the surrounding web of leagues, parties, and community spaces keeps the scene genuinely thriving.

Where to Stay

D.C.'s queer-women spaces are split between Adams Morgan (ALOHO) and Capitol Hill (as you are), with the wider gay nightlife concentrated around Dupont, Logan Circle, and U Street. Staying central keeps all of it within a short Metro ride.

Stay Central

Dupont Circle and the 14th & U corridor are the most convenient bases — walkable to nightlife and well-connected to both Adams Morgan and Capitol Hill.

Getting There & Getting Around

  • A League of Her Own (Adams Morgan): No Metro station in Adams Morgan itself — the closest are Woodley Park and Dupont Circle (Red line), each about a 12–15 minute walk, or take a rideshare.
  • as you are. (Capitol Hill): A short walk from Eastern Market (Blue/Orange/Silver) on Barracks Row.
  • Rideshare: The simplest way to bounce between the two neighborhoods on a night out.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are there lesbian bars in Washington, D.C.?

Yes — D.C. is one of the few U.S. cities with a dedicated lesbian bar: A League of Her Own in Adams Morgan, one of only about three dozen left in the entire country. as you are. on Capitol Hill is a second queer-women-forward space, and the city has a busy scene of roving sapphic parties on top of that.

Where is A League of Her Own?

A League of Her Own (ALOHO) is at 2319 18th St NW in Adams Morgan, sharing a building and patios with Pitchers. It's typically open Thursday through Saturday evenings, with DJs and queer women's events on weekends.

What is the best lesbian night in D.C.?

It depends what you're after. For a dedicated bar, A League of Her Own on a weekend is the reliable answer. For theme nights and a community vibe, as you are. runs sapphic events like Fishnets & Feelings and Night of 1000 Billies. And the city's roving parties — Dyke Night, #FrequencyFriday and others — are worth following for something different each week.

Is as you are. a lesbian bar?

as you are. is a queer-women-forward space founded by two women — a cafe by day and a lounge and dance bar by night — rather than a strictly lesbian bar. In practice it's one of the central gathering spots for D.C.'s sapphic community, with regular queer-women programming.

What happened to Phase One?

Phase One, at 525 8th Street SE, opened in 1971 and ran for 45 years — the longest continuously operating lesbian bar in U.S. history — before closing in 2016. Its closure was part of a national decline in lesbian bars, and it's a big reason the spaces open today are so treasured.

Where do queer women go out in D.C.?

The anchors are A League of Her Own (Adams Morgan) and as you are. (Capitol Hill). Beyond those, queer women's nightlife runs on recurring parties hosted around the city — at U Street, 9th Street, and Capitol Hill venues — so following local sapphic promoters and collectives is the best way to find what's on any given week.

Are D.C.'s lesbian and sapphic spaces welcoming to everyone?

Yes — both A League of Her Own and as you are. are explicitly inclusive spaces that welcome the full LGBTQ+ community, including trans and nonbinary people, alongside the queer women at their core. The roving sapphic parties similarly range from lesbian-centered to broadly queer, so there's a night out for every corner of the community.

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Robbie S.

Robbie S.

I'm Robbie, the founder of Out x Out. I'm from Minneapolis, though I'm spending 2026 building this community from the road — somewhere between South America and Asia. The idea for Out x Out came from a trip to Berlin, where the gay nightlife calendar was years ahead of ours: you could see not just where to go out, but which night to go — so naturally I wanted that kind of insider info for every city in the US (and beyond... eventually). I'm more of a behind-the-scenes type, but the whole point of this is connection: I'd take one real one over a hundred surface-level ones, and I'm trying to build that for the community, city by city.

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