Dog Friendly — Pubs in Abingdon
Discover dog friendly pubs in Abingdon. Browse our directory to find the perfect pub.
Found 12 dog friendly pubs in Abingdon
Pablo Lounge
1-3 Bury Street, Abingdon OX14 3QY
Open-plan, former shop unit at Market Place end of shopping precinct. Bright and airey with lots of pictures on the walls. Promotes gluten-free and vegan menus as well as usual. Coffee, cocktails, wine, and beer on tap and in bottles.
Crown & Thistle
18 Bridge Street, Abingdon OX14 3HS
Over 400 years old and once a coaching inn, there is a wonderful cobbled courtyard drinking area, complete with a cannon. The whole complex was renovated and refurbished at a cost of over £1.8m in autumn 2013 after being acquired by Oakman Inns. There are separate buildings for the bar & function room and the restaurant. The bar has been extended to include the barn which can be closed off for private functions. The bar features comfortable leather seating offering a range of wines and cocktails as well as the real ales. There are a total of seven hand pumps comprising 3 at the main bar, 2 in the function room and 2 in the restaurant serving well kept ales from Wychwood, Brakspear, Loose Cannon, Jennings, Ringwood, Loddon and others. Opens early for breakfast and food served all day including bar snacks.
Grapes
28 High Street, Abingdon OX14 5AX
Now a free house after an uncertain future under Greene King's tenure. Run as a true local with a number of TV's showing sports channels and 2 real ales although second beer not always on. There is patio beer garden to the rear with a 'horsebox' bar.
King's Head & Bell
10 East St Helen Street, Abingdon OX14 5EA
In existence before 1554 as the Bell and for some time a coaching inn in the 19th century it claimed to have stabling for nearly 100 horses and supplied the volunteer fire brigade. Although much renovated and restored - with alterations and refurbishment carried out in summer 2019 by new management - the building still has historic traces. A number of rooms include two meeting rooms upstairs and a large conservatory for diners. The old courtyard is still the nicest beer garden in the town centre.
Nag's Head on the Thames
The Bridge, Abingdon OX14 3HX
Set on an island in the Thames, this Grade II-listed pub is split over two levels with a large garden area next to the river and lovely views of the countryside and the town's historic buildings. Now owned by the Brakspear pubco, it offers a good choice of beers, often local. Live music plays at weekends and some weekdays. A three-time local CAMRA branch Town and Village Pub of the Year.
Ock Mill
Marcham Road, Abingdon OX14 1AD
Cavernous eatery next to a Premier Inn; standard Beefeater décor and menus, with plenty of offers and promotions. Opens in the mornings for breakfast, beer served from noon.
Old Anchor
1 St Helen's Wharf, Abingdon OX14 5EN
This fine old pub has an enviable riverside location without being quite on the river. The original Old Anchor was over the road on a site on the river that it shared with an almshouse. Three houses on the present site were remodelled to create the new inn with new almshouses next to it when St Helen's Wharf was redeveloped in 1884. There are several small rooms and a courtyard garden. Refurbished for reopening May 2021 and under new management again. No draught beer at the moment.
Punchbowl
6 Market Place, Abingdon OX14 3HG
Traditional town pub with two rooms - a fairly basic front bar accessed off the Market Place, and a superb panelled snug possibly C18, with wood panelling, low beams and fixed bench seating, accessed down a passageway off East St Helen Street and linked to the bar through a serving hatch. First recorded as an inn in 1775 and has had various names. On CAMRA's Regional Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors. Has increasingly rare etched glass windows with the insignia of Morlands 'United Breweries'.
Spread Eagle
Northcourt Road, Abingdon OX14 1PL
This is a wonderful pub, tucked away to the north of the town centre, but easily walkable from the Oxford Road. A friendly welcome awaits all, and the beer choice is unrivalled locally: although still owned by Greene King the pub is free of tie. The tenants have built up a good reputation for food, the speciality is exotic meats cooked on hotrocks, and some of the pub is laid out as a dining area, but drinkers are very much catered for. There is a small back garden with a covered area, and an aunt sally throw.
White Horse
189 Ock Street, Abingdon OX14 5DW
Originally owned by the Borough of Abingdon the White Horse dates back to 1845 when the tenant George Turb was a local merchant and beer retailer. Ten years later it was purchased by a local brewer named John Beesley before the Morland family ownership. In 1999 Greene King became the new owners and more recently extended this Grade II-listed building to provide dining facilities within this very traditional English pub. The pub has a beer garden in front and its own car park. Under new management from October 2017 but still has a good range of beers.
Brewery Tap
40-42 Ock Street, Abingdon OX14 5BZ
Morland created a tap for its brewery in 1993 from three Grade II-listed town houses. The brewery is no more but the pub, run by the same family since it opened, has thrived. It offers a diverse range of beers, all sourced locally, and hosts two or three beer festivals each year featuring ales from further afield. The pub has three rooms, two of them away from the bar, and a courtyard outside. Local CAMRA Town and Village Pub of the Year 2019 and 2020.
College Oak
Peachcroft Road, Abingdon OX14 2SB
Busy, popular and welcoming pub on the Peachcroft estate, recently refurbished, that offers good value beer and food. During rugby matches a loyalty card scheme allows customers to get even cheaper beer! There is an actual oak tree by the lake in nearby Radley College reckoned to be anything from 400 to 900 plus years old but too rotten to date properly.
