St. Patrick’s Day weekend is arriving in Richmond the way it usually does. Loud, crowded, and full of people who suddenly discover a deep personal connection to Ireland sometime around their second beer.
Downtown is preparing for one of its busiest party weekends of the spring. Between pub block parties, bar crawls, rooftop DJs, and the return of Shamrock the Block, thousands of people are expected to spill into Shockoe Bottom, Shockoe Slip, Scott’s Addition, The Fan and the Financial District looking for a pint, a band, and a good time.
For better or worse, this is one of the weekends when Richmond remembers it likes to party.
Shamrock the Block & Church Hill Irish Festival Return
The annual festival has grown into one of Richmond’s biggest early-spring gatherings, bringing live bands, beer tents, food trucks, and a sea of green shirts to the streets. This year’s event takes place Saturday, March 14 from 12–6 p.m. on Leigh Street in Scott’s Addition next to Midtown Green, where thousands of people are expected to gather for an afternoon of music, drinks, and Irish-themed celebration.
By mid-afternoon, the sidewalks are usually shoulder to shoulder, the music bouncing off the walls while the beer lines stretch out but keep moving. Just around the corner, spots like En Su Boca, River City Roll, and Fat Dragon tend to fill up as the crowd spills through the area looking for another drink, another taco, or somewhere to sit down for five minutes before heading back out.
For those still feeling festive the following weekend, Richmond’s Church Hill Irish Festival returns March 21–22 at 25th and Broad. Now celebrating its 40th year, the longtime neighborhood festival brings Irish coffee, bagpipes, Celtic vendors, local bands, and plenty of Guinness to the top of Church Hill, along with its traditional Saturday parade and the Hill Topper 5K on Sunday.
Together, the events stretch Richmond’s St. Patrick’s celebrations across two weekends, giving the city plenty of time to wear green and pretend it knows the words to an Irish drinking song.
Richmond’s Irish Pubs Lean In
Richmond has no shortage of pubs and bars embracing the holiday spirit.
In Shockoe Bottom, Rosie Connolly’s Pub Restaurant at 17th Street Market offers Irish comfort food, whiskey, and pints of Guinness in a traditional pub setting. Nearby, local punk bar McCormack’s Irish Pub keeps things simple with affordable drinks, darts, and live music. Be mindful, the city police will down there in full force.
In Shockoe Slip, Siné Irish Pub will once again host its 27th annual St. Patrick’s Day Block Party, promising 12 hours of live music, green beer, and plenty of traditional Irish food.
Other longtime downtown spots are also expected to see packed houses, including Poe’s Pub, a locals bar on the edge of Shockoe Bottom, and Penny Lane Pub, the British-style pub in the Financial District known for soccer matches and a loyal regular crowd.
Bar Crawls, Rooftop Parties, and Late-Night Events
Conex RVA is throwing its own all-day St. Patrick’s celebration starting at 11 a.m. Expect Irish dancers, food trucks, face painting, bounce houses for the kids, and the kind of mechanical bull that seems like a good idea after your second or third drink.
Elsewhere, rooftops and dance floors will fill up as the night goes on. Venues like Ember Music Hall are keeping the party going with late-night shows for the crowd that isn’t quite ready to call it a night.
That’s usually how the weekend unfolds. Day drinking turns into evening crowds, which slowly becomes the late-night search for one more bar, one more round, and someone insisting they know a place that’s still open.
What to Know Before Heading Out
St. Patrick’s Day weekend in Richmond is a good time, but it comes with a few predictable realities.
Ride shares will take longer.
When several thousand people all decide they’re done for the night at roughly the same time, Uber and Lyft become a bit of a waiting game. Surge pricing tends to follow.
Parking will be tight.
Street parking disappears quickly and garages fill up fast during large downtown events.
Lines happen.
Popular bars and block parties often hit capacity. That means waiting outside while the door staff tries to keep things from turning into total chaos.
Don’t drive drunk.
This one should go without saying, but it still needs to be said. Have a plan to get home safely.
A Richmond Tradition
St. Patrick’s Day in Richmond has always had two sides to it. There’s the traditional side, the pubs, the whiskey, the nod to Irish heritage.
Then there’s the modern version. The bar crawls, the rooftop DJs, the crowds in bright green T-shirts who may or may not know what county their great-grandmother’s cousin once visited. Both tend to coexist on the same streets.
By Saturday afternoon, downtown Richmond will be full of them. Have fun, be safe while doing it.
Photo from Shamrock The Block 2025
Support RVA Magazine. Support Independent Media in Richmond.
At a time when media ownership is increasingly concentrated among corporations and the uber wealthy, RVA Magazine has remained one of Richmond’s few independent voices. Since 2005, the magazine has provided grassroots coverage of the city’s artists, musicians, and communities, documenting the culture that defines Richmond beyond the headlines.
But we can’t do this without you. A small donation, even as little as $2, one-time or recurring, helps us continue to produce honest, local coverage free from outside interference. Every dollar makes a difference. Your support keeps us going and keeps RVA’s creative spirit alive. Thank you for standing with independent media. DONATE HERE.
We’ve got merch HERE
Subscribe to the Substack HERE
And Reddit HERE
And YouTube HERE



