Manchester is a brilliant date city if you know where to go. The trick is matching the date to the stage you’re at. A first date at 20 Stories is too much. A fifth anniversary at All Star Lanes is too little. Here’s 15 ideas across every vibe, budget, and weather scenario.
First Dates — Low Pressure, Easy Exit
1. John Rylands Library Then Coffee at Takk
Meet at John Rylands on Deansgate. It’s free, it’s impressive, and it gives you something to talk about that isn’t ‘so what do you do?’ The neo-Gothic reading room is genuinely jaw-dropping. Spend 45 minutes wandering, then walk five minutes to Takk on Tariff Street in the NQ for a flat white. Low cost, no booking needed, and if it’s going badly you can leave after the coffee. If it’s going well, you’re in the Northern Quarter with a hundred bars within two minutes.
2. Chetham’s Library Tour
The oldest public library in the English-speaking world, hidden behind Victoria Station. Free guided tours — check their website for times. You’ll see the alcove where Marx and Engels sat, medieval manuscripts, and a building that feels like it hasn’t changed since the 1600s. It’s interesting enough to carry conversation and short enough (about 45 minutes) to not outstay its welcome. Walk to the Cathedral afterwards for a drink at The Old Wellington.
3. Escape Room Then Cocktails
Nothing bonds people faster than being locked in a room together trying to solve puzzles under time pressure. Escape Reality on Deansgate or Breakout near Piccadilly, both decent. About £20–25 per person for an hour. You’ll find out if they’re a team player or a control freak, which is useful information. Afterwards, walk to The Alchemist on New York Street for theatrical cocktails — they do the ones that smoke and change colour, which gives you something else to talk about.
Established Couples — Beyond the Usual
4. Whitworth Gallery Then Fletcher Moss Walk
Start at the Whitworth on Oxford Road. Free, beautiful, usually quiet midweek. The glass promenade at the back looking into the park is lovely. Then get the bus (or drive) down to Fletcher Moss in Didsbury — a 20-minute walk through the botanical gardens and down to the Mersey. End up at one of Didsbury’s cafés or pubs. Feels like a proper day out without leaving the city.
5. Cooking Class at Food Sorcery
Food Sorcery in Didsbury runs evening and weekend cookery classes — pasta making, Thai, Indian, bread. You cook together, you eat what you make, and you learn something. About £55–75 per person depending on the class. Much more memorable than going to a restaurant. Book well in advance, the popular ones fill up fast.
6. Canal Walk to Castlefield Then Dukes 92
Pick up the Rochdale Canal in the Northern Quarter (behind Piccadilly) and walk along the towpath through the city. It takes you through the back of Manchester — old mills, bridges, street art — and drops you into Castlefield. End at Dukes 92 on the canal basin for a drink on the terrace. The walk is about 30 minutes. On a sunny evening, there’s nowhere better. Even on a grey day, it’s atmospheric.
7. HOME Cinema Then Drinks Downstairs
HOME on First Street is Manchester’s arthouse cinema. Five screens showing independent films, foreign films, documentaries, restored classics. Pick something you’d never normally watch. Afterwards, the bar downstairs is good — nice wine list, decent food, and you’ve got a built-in conversation topic. Matinees are cheaper. A midweek date here feels effortlessly cultured.
Rainy Day Dates
8. Dog Bowl Bowling
Whitworth Street West, underneath Albert’s Schloss. Ten-pin bowling with craft beer, street food, and a properly cool vibe. Competitive enough to be fun, casual enough for any stage of relationship. Book a lane on weekends. If bowling’s not your thing, All Star Lanes in the Great Northern is the more upmarket option with private karaoke rooms upstairs.
9. Manchester Art Gallery Then The Britons Protection
Gallery is free, right in the centre on Mosley Street. Wander the Pre-Raphaelites, argue about the contemporary art, then walk five minutes to The Britons Protection on Great Bridgewater Street. It’s a proper old pub with over 300 whiskies and a real fire. No music, no screens, just conversation. One of the best pubs in Manchester for actually talking to someone.
10. Comedy at Frog and Bucket
Oldham Street, NQ. Manchester’s original comedy club, been going since 1994. The Thursday night Beat the Frog is a rite of passage — open mic where the audience votes acts off. Saturday night shows have bigger names. Tickets from about £5–15. Laughing together is underrated as a date activity. Get there early for a good seat.
Fancy Dates — When You’re Trying
11. 20 Stories Sunset Drinks
Top of No.1 Spinningfields, 20th floor. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. Time it for sunset and the views are spectacular. Cocktails are £12–15 and the small plates are good. Smart casual dress code. This is a ‘making an effort’ date — anniversary, birthday, or when you’re trying to impress. Book a window table if you can.
12. Night at Hotel Gotham
King Street. Art deco boutique hotel in a former bank building. The rooms are gorgeous — think 1920s glamour, brass fittings, huge beds. Club Brass on the top floor is a private bar for hotel guests with views over the city. Splashy but Manchester splashy, not London prices. The full experience — room, dinner at the restaurant, drinks upstairs — is a proper treat.
13. Albert Hall Gig
Peter Street. A converted Wesleyan chapel that’s now one of the best live music venues in the city. The acoustics are beautiful and the balcony seats feel special. Check what’s on — anything from jazz to electronic to indie. A gig here followed by late drinks at the nearby Atlas bar makes a memorable night out that doesn’t follow the usual script.
Cheap Dates — When You’re Skint But Still Trying
14. Piccadilly Records Then a Pint
Oldham Street, NQ. One of the best independent record shops in the country. Spend an hour digging through the vinyl and CDs, argue about music, buy each other a record under a fiver. Then cross the road to The Castle on Oldham Street for a cheap pint. Total cost: under £15 for two. Works brilliantly as an early-stage date because musical taste tells you everything you need to know about a person.
15. Rooftop at The Oast House Then Castlefield Walk
The Oast House in Spinningfields has a courtyard with fire pits and a relaxed vibe. A pint here is standard pub prices. Then walk down to Castlefield — Roman fort ruins, canals, the railway viaduct. In summer evenings it’s one of the prettiest spots in the city. In winter there’s something atmospheric about the canals at dusk. A drink and a walk costs almost nothing and feels like a proper date.
The Rules
- First dates: keep it short, keep it cheap, stay in walking distance of backup plans
- Always have a bar in mind for ‘one more drink’ if things go well
- The NQ is the best area for dates because everything is close together
- Avoid the Printworks. Just avoid the Printworks
- If you’re planning a fancy date, book ahead — 20 Stories and Hotel Gotham fill up
- A walk along a canal in Manchester is more romantic than it sounds