Oak Lawn is Dallas's gayborhood, and its heart is Cedar Springs Road — "The Strip," a walkable half-mile packed with more than a dozen gay bars, clubs, and drag theaters. Park once and crawl from Round-Up's country-western dance floor to Station 4's mega-club, the Rose Room's drag shows, and Sue Ellen's, Texas's oldest lesbian bar.
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The Complete Guide to Gay Bars in Oak Lawn
Oak Lawn is Dallas's gayborhood, and Cedar Springs Road — 'The Strip' — packs a dozen-plus gay bars into a walkable half-mile: country-western dancing, a world-class drag theater, Texas's oldest lesbian bar, and more. Here's the local's guide.
Oak Lawn is Dallas's gayborhood, and its beating heart is Cedar Springs Road — "The Strip," a walkable half-mile that packs more than a dozen gay bars, clubs, drag theaters, and shops end to end. Park once and you can spend the whole night walking from country-western dancing to a mega-club to Texas's oldest lesbian bar to a world-class drag show without ever calling a rideshare.
That density is the point. Dallas has one of the most concentrated gay scenes in the country, and it's all here in Oak Lawn — anchored by rainbow crosswalks, decades of history, and a community that's loud, proud, and defiantly visible. Here's what Oak Lawn is, the bars along the Strip, the rest of the Dallas scene worth a trip, and how to eat, get around, and stay.
About Oak Lawn & the Cedar Springs Strip
Oak Lawn has been the epicenter of LGBTQ+ Dallas since the 1970s, when the community put down roots along Cedar Springs Road just northwest of downtown. Today the strip between Throckmorton Street and Knight Street is one of the densest gayborhoods in America — a compact grid of bars, restaurants, and queer-owned shops flying Pride flags year-round.
The symbolic center is The Crossroads, the intersection of Cedar Springs and Throckmorton, marked by rainbow crosswalks. In 2018 the corner received a Texas Historical Commission marker honoring it as the historic center of Dallas's LGBTQ+ community — reported at the time as Texas's first LGBTQ historical marker. Much of the strip's nightlife is run by Caven Enterprises, an employee-owned company that's operated Cedar Springs bars since the 1970s and runs four of its biggest venues — JR's, Station 4, Sue Ellen's, and The Mining Company.
What makes Oak Lawn stand out is the range. Within the same few blocks you'll find a legendary country-western dance hall, one of the most famous drag theaters in the South, the oldest lesbian bar in Texas, a Latin nightclub, a leather bar, a gaming lounge, and a coffee-shop-by-day-cocktail-bar-by-night. It's a full scene in a neighborhood you can cross on foot.
Pro Tip
The core of the Strip runs the 3900–4000 block of Cedar Springs, with Sue Ellen's just around the corner on Throckmorton. Park once on a side street (free) and you can walk the entire crawl — no rideshare until you head home.
Gay Bars on the Cedar Springs Strip
The Strip's bars cover every mood, and most sit within a block or two of each other. Here are the anchors.
Round-Up Saloon (3912 Cedar Springs) is the crown jewel — a full-size country-western dance hall open since 1980, with a hardwood floor, multiple bars, and free two-step and line dance lessons three nights a week taught by pros. Boots and belt buckles meet drag and disco, and the lessons make it accessible even if you've never worn boots in your life. Across the street, Station 4 (S4) (3911 Cedar Springs) is the anchor of the nightlife — a 24,000-square-foot mega-club, the biggest LGBTQ+ venue in Texas — with The Rose Room upstairs, one of the most famous drag theaters in America (longtime resident Asia O'Hara; special appearances from Alyssa Edwards). Your S4 admission covers the Rose Room.
JR's Bar & Grill (3923 Cedar Springs) is the classic video bar where Cedar Springs nights begin — three bars, an upstairs patio that's the best people-watching perch on the Strip, and a happy-hour crowd that pre-games the whole night. Next door, The Mining Company (TMC) (3903 Cedar Springs) has been a staple since 1978 — an intimate bi-level club with no cover and cheap drinks, one of the best values on the Strip. And around the corner, Sue Ellen's (3014 Throckmorton) is Texas's oldest lesbian bar — open since 1989 and one of just a few dozen lesbian bars left in the entire country — with two floors, multiple rooms, and live bands in the Vixin Lounge.
Rounding out the Strip: Dallas Woody's (4011 Cedar Springs), the friendly gay sports bar with 28 screens; Alexandre's (4026 Cedar Springs), the intimate piano-and-live-music room; Cheat Code Lounge (3911 Cedar Springs, Suite B), the arcade-games-and-craft-cocktails speakeasy next to S4; Pinkies (3900 Cedar Springs), coffee shop by day and cocktail lounge by night; and Lava Lounge (3908 Cedar Springs), the upscale bottle-service spot.
Gay Bars on the Cedar Springs Strip
Pro Tip
Do the classic Strip crawl: happy hour at JR's, warm up at TMC, dance lessons at Round-Up, then late-night at S4 and the Rose Room. Get to the Rose Room early on weekends — the good seats fill fast.
Beyond the Strip: More Dallas Gay Bars
Cedar Springs is the core, but the scene spreads across Oak Lawn and beyond — a short walk or rideshare turns up different crowds and vibes. Just off the main strip on Maple Avenue, **Kaliente** is Dallas's gay-owned Latin nightclub (salsa, reggaeton, and legendary Saturday Rumba nights), and **Marty's Live** is the hub of the city's Black LGBTQ+ community. On Oak Lawn Avenue, **CRUSH** brings the newest house-and-disco energy, and **Pekers** runs an eight-hour daily happy hour.
Further out, **Dallas Eagle** in the Design District is the leather and bear anchor — home base for Texas Bear Round-Up, about ten minutes by rideshare — and **Hidden Door** on Bowser Avenue is the legendary cash-only dive that's been serving since 1979 and opens at 7 AM. Across the river in Oak Cliff, **Barbara's Pavillion** is a 50-year-old queer institution with a completely different, come-as-you-are energy from the Strip.
More Dallas Gay Bars Worth the Trip
For the full rundown with what's on which night, see our guide to the best gay bars in Dallas.
Where to Eat & Drink in Oak Lawn
The Strip eats as well as it drinks. Roy G's (4001 Cedar Springs) is the neighborhood's easygoing bar-and-grill anchor, and Street's Fine Chicken (3857 Cedar Springs) is the beloved queer-owned fried-chicken spot at the south end of the strip. For a sit-down meal, Union (3705 Cedar Springs) rounds out the dining, and Pinkies doubles as the Strip's only daytime coffee destination before it flips to cocktails at night.
Because the strip mixes bars, restaurants, and cafés block by block, you can build a whole day-into-night here — brunch, a show, dinner, and a nightcap — without leaving Cedar Springs.
Eat & Drink on Cedar Springs
Pro Tip
Start the day on the Strip: Pinkies opens at 7 AM for coffee, and Hidden Door — a short walk away — opens at 7 AM too if you want a proper dive-bar breakfast beer. Cedar Springs is one of the few gayborhoods with a real early-morning option.
Things to Do in Oak Lawn
Beyond the bars, Oak Lawn carries real community weight. The Resource Center (5750 Cedar Springs) is one of the largest LGBTQ+ community centers in the Southwest, running health services, programming, and events year-round. And the strip is lined with queer-owned shops — Out of the Closet (a thrift store benefiting HIV services), Skivvies, Outlines Menswear, and Pride Gifts — that make for an easy daytime browse between the bars.
Don't skip The Rose Room at Station 4 even if the mega-club isn't your scene — its full-production drag shows, with theatrical staging and a rotating cast of Dallas legends, are a destination in their own right. And snap the obligatory photo at The Crossroads, where the rainbow crosswalks and the historical marker mark the heart of gay Dallas.
Community & Culture in Oak Lawn
Oak Lawn's Big Weekends
Oak Lawn's calendar is stacked. The neighborhood throws its own Pride — Pride in Dallas on Cedar Springs (September 13–20, 2026), a week of bar events on the strip culminating in the Michael Doughman Parade on Sunday, September 20. The citywide Dallas Pride lands earlier, on June 6, 2026, with a nighttime parade and a festival. And every October, the Halloween Block Party on Cedar Springs (Saturday, October 24, 2026, in the 3900 block) turns the strip into what's billed as Texas's biggest street party — a costume promenade, drag, DJs, and tens of thousands of people. For the leather and bear community, Texas Bear Round-Up anchors at the Dallas Eagle.
Pro Tip
Visiting outside the big weekends? You won't miss much — Cedar Springs runs strong nightly, with line-dance lessons at Round-Up, Rose Room shows at S4, and karaoke up and down the Strip. A regular weekend is the best way to actually meet the neighborhood.
Getting to & Around Oak Lawn
Oak Lawn sits just northwest of downtown Dallas. From Dallas–Fort Worth (DFW) or Dallas Love Field (DAL) — Love Field is the closer of the two, about 10 minutes away — a rideshare drops you on the Strip in short order. DART light rail's Oak Lawn and Cedar Springs area is served by nearby stations and bus routes, but most visitors rideshare in and then go on foot.
Once you're on Cedar Springs, everything is walkable — the whole point of the neighborhood. Side-street parking is free, most bars have small lots, and you can crawl the entire strip without a car. Only the outliers — the Dallas Eagle in the Design District (about 10 minutes) and Barbara's in Oak Cliff (about 15) — need a rideshare.
Pro Tip
The Dallas Eagle and Barbara's Pavillion sit outside walking distance of the Strip — plan a rideshare if you're pairing a Cedar Springs night with a leather bar or the Oak Cliff scene.
Where to Stay in Oak Lawn
Oak Lawn and neighboring Uptown put you within walking distance or a short ride of the Strip. The classic in-neighborhood pick is the Warwick Melrose on Oak Lawn Avenue, a stately historic hotel a few minutes from Cedar Springs. Uptown and Turtle Creek add more Gay Friendly options a quick rideshare away.
For the full list, see our guide to LGBTQ+ friendly hotels in Dallas.
What is Oak Lawn known for in Dallas?
Oak Lawn is Dallas's gayborhood, centered on Cedar Springs Road — "The Strip." It's one of the densest gay districts in the country, with more than a dozen LGBTQ+ bars, clubs, and shops in a walkable half-mile, plus rainbow crosswalks and a Texas Historical Commission marker at The Crossroads (Cedar Springs & Throckmorton). Oak Lawn has been the heart of LGBTQ+ Dallas since the 1970s.
What are the best gay bars in Oak Lawn / Cedar Springs?
Round-Up Saloon (country-western dancing since 1980), Station 4 and its Rose Room drag theater (the biggest LGBTQ+ venue in Texas), JR's Bar & Grill (the classic video bar), The Mining Company (a staple since 1978), and Sue Ellen's (Texas's oldest lesbian bar) anchor the Strip. Woody's, Alexandre's, Cheat Code, Pinkies, and Lava Lounge round it out — all within a few blocks on Cedar Springs.
Where is Cedar Springs and how do I get there?
Cedar Springs Road runs through Oak Lawn, just northwest of downtown Dallas, with the gay strip concentrated between Throckmorton and Knight Streets. Dallas Love Field airport is about 10 minutes away by rideshare; DFW is farther out. Once you're on the Strip, the bars are walkable end to end.
Can you do a gay bar crawl on Cedar Springs?
Absolutely — Cedar Springs was built for it. JR's, TMC, Round-Up, S4, Sue Ellen's, Woody's, Alexandre's, and more are all within a 15-minute walk, so you can park once and hit a dozen bars on foot. A classic route: happy hour at JR's, warm up at TMC, dance lessons at Round-Up, then late-night at S4 and the Rose Room.
When is Dallas Pride?
Dallas has two celebrations. The citywide Dallas Pride is June 6, 2026, with a nighttime parade and festival. Oak Lawn throws its own — Pride in Dallas on Cedar Springs, September 13–20, 2026, a week of strip events ending with the Michael Doughman Parade on September 20. The neighborhood also hosts the enormous Halloween Block Party on Cedar Springs each October.
Is Oak Lawn a gay neighborhood?
Yes — Oak Lawn has been the center of LGBTQ+ Dallas since the 1970s and holds the highest concentration of gay bars, queer-owned businesses, and community organizations in the metro. The Dallas–Fort Worth area is home to an estimated 211,000 LGBTQ+ adults, one of the largest LGBTQ+ metro populations in the country, and Cedar Springs is its visible heart.
Are there Gay Friendly hotels near Oak Lawn?
Yes — the Warwick Melrose sits right in Oak Lawn on Oak Lawn Avenue, a few minutes from Cedar Springs, and neighboring Uptown and Turtle Creek add more Gay Friendly hotels a short rideshare from the Strip. See our LGBTQ+ friendly hotels in Dallas guide for the full list.
Oak Lawn Gay Nightlife FAQ
What is Oak Lawn known for in Dallas?
Oak Lawn is Dallas's gayborhood, centered on Cedar Springs Road — "The Strip." It's one of the densest gay districts in the country, with more than a dozen LGBTQ+ bars, clubs, and shops in a walkable half-mile, rainbow crosswalks, and a Texas Historical Commission marker at The Crossroads (Cedar Springs & Throckmorton). It has been the heart of LGBTQ+ Dallas since the 1970s.
What are the best gay bars in Oak Lawn / Cedar Springs?
Round-Up Saloon (country-western dancing since 1980), Station 4 and its Rose Room drag theater (the biggest LGBTQ+ venue in Texas), JR's Bar & Grill (the classic video bar), The Mining Company (a staple since 1978), and Sue Ellen's (Texas's oldest lesbian bar) anchor the Strip, with Woody's, Alexandre's, and Cheat Code rounding it out — all within a few blocks on Cedar Springs.
Where is Cedar Springs and how do I get there?
Cedar Springs Road runs through Oak Lawn, just northwest of downtown Dallas, with the gay strip concentrated between Throckmorton and Knight Streets. Dallas Love Field airport is about 10 minutes away by rideshare; DFW is farther out. Once you're on the Strip, the bars are walkable end to end.
When is Dallas Pride?
Dallas has two celebrations. The citywide Dallas Pride is in June, and Oak Lawn throws its own — Pride in Dallas on Cedar Springs in September, a week of strip events ending with the Michael Doughman Parade. The neighborhood also hosts the enormous Halloween Block Party on Cedar Springs each October.
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