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Where to Play Pinball in San Francisco: Arcades, Bars, and Breweries with Machines

Where to Play Pinball in San Francisco: Arcades, Bars, and Breweries with Machines

San Francisco's pinball scene centers on a handful of dedicated venues scattered across the city's distinct neighborhoods. The largest collection sits in the Haight-Ashbury district, while barcades in the Mission and Castro offer smaller but well-maintained lineups alongside food and drinks.

Most venues operate on a pay-per-play model with quarters or PayRange, though a few spots focus more on the bar experience with pinball as a bonus. The city also has a competitive pinball community, with leagues running at multiple locations and IFPA-sanctioned tournaments throughout the year.

VenueAreaMachinesType
Free Gold WatchHaight-Ashbury40+Arcade
Alamo Drafthouse CinemaMission10+Movie Theater
Emporium San FranciscoDivisadero10+Barcade
The DetourCastro10+Barcade
GestaltMissionA fewBar
Musee MecaniqueFisherman's WharfA fewMuseum
47 Hills Brewing CompanySouth San Francisco10+Brewery

Here's where to find pinball across San Francisco and the immediate metro area.

San Francisco Arcades

Free Gold Watch

Arcade · Haight-Ashbury

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Free Gold Watch houses the largest pinball collection in San Francisco, operating out of a screen printing shop on a residential stretch of Waller Street. The lineup spans eras from electro-mechanical classics to recent Stern releases, with a side room called the "Secret Ju-Ju Gallery" featuring rotating vintage machines on loan from the Pacific Pinball Museum in Alameda. Free Gold Watch serves as the home venue for the San Francisco Pinball Department league, which runs IFPA-sanctioned seasons in spring and fall.

  • Pinball machines: 40+
  • Practical notes: Pay-per-play (quarters and PayRange), change machines on site, no food or alcohol served, all ages
  • Address: 1767 Waller St, San Francisco, CA 94117

San Francisco Bars with Pinball

Emporium San Francisco

Barcade · Divisadero

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Emporium San Francisco occupies the historic Harding Theater, a 1926 venue that reopened as a multi-level barcade in 2017. The space includes pinball machines alongside arcade games, pool tables, air hockey, shuffleboard, and skee ball. The venue hosts live DJs and musical performances on a dedicated stage.

  • Pinball machines: 10+
  • Practical notes: 21+ only, full bar, no outside food but delivery allowed
  • Address: 616 Divisadero St, San Francisco, CA 94117

The Detour

Barcade · Castro

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The Detour operates as a barcade with an elevated food and cocktail program in the Castro district. The venue offers a mix of pinball, arcade games, skee ball, and basketball games alongside a pan-Pacific street food menu featuring items like ponzu salad, nori tots, and tacos.

  • Pinball machines: 10+
  • Practical notes: 21+ except Saturdays 2-6pm (all ages), full bar and food service
  • Address: 2200 Market St, Suite A, San Francisco, CA 94114

Gestalt

Bar · Mission

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Gestalt is a craft beer bar in the Mission that keeps a row of pinball machines alongside 26 taps and a food menu focused on sausages and German soft pretzels. The bar hosts pinball leagues and tournaments for competitive players, with occasional DJ nights featuring vinyl records.

  • Pinball machines: A few
  • Practical notes: Craft beer focus, serves food, all ages welcome
  • Address: 3159 16th St, San Francisco, CA 94103

San Francisco Entertainment Venues with Pinball

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema

Movie theater · Mission

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Alamo Drafthouse Cinema runs a pinball lineup on the second floor mezzanine of its San Francisco location. The theater combines indie and wide-release film programming with a full-service restaurant and bar, making it possible to catch a movie and play pinball in the same visit.

  • Pinball machines: 10+
  • Practical notes: Pinball on 2nd floor, PayRange accepted, change machine available, full food and bar service
  • Address: 2550 Mission St, San Francisco, CA 94110

Musee Mecanique

Museum · Fisherman's Wharf

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Musee Mecanique at Pier 45 houses a collection of over 300 coin-operated machines, including vintage and classic pinball tables. The family-run museum has operated since 1933, with roots tracing back to San Francisco's Playland at the Beach. The collection focuses on antique penny arcade games and mechanical musical instruments, with pinball as part of the broader historical experience.

  • Pinball machines: A few
  • Practical notes: Free admission, pay-per-play (25-50 cents), open 365 days a year, family-friendly
  • Address: Pier 45, Fisherman's Wharf, San Francisco, CA 94133

San Francisco Breweries with Pinball Machines

47 Hills Brewing Company

Brewery · South San Francisco

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47 Hills Brewing Company keeps a collection of pinball machines at its South San Francisco taproom. The brewery serves a pub food and pizza menu alongside its beer selection. Note that this location is technically in South San Francisco, a separate city just south of San Francisco proper.

  • Pinball machines: 10+
  • Practical notes: Family-friendly, dog-friendly, full food menu
  • Address: 137 S Linden Ave, South San Francisco, CA 94080

San Francisco's pinball options range from the dedicated arcade experience at Free Gold Watch to casual games at neighborhood bars and breweries. Players looking for the largest selection should head to Haight-Ashbury, while those wanting to combine pinball with food and drinks have several barcade options across the Mission and Castro. For family-friendly pinball, Musee Mecanique and Free Gold Watch welcome all ages, and The Detour opens to families on Saturday afternoons.

Last updated: January 2026

Colin Alsheimer
Colin Alsheimer

Colin is the chief pixel pusher at Kineticist. He's a lifetime gamer who became enamored with pinball after taking in a family copy of the 1979 classic Joker Poker (the EM version). Since then he's bought, sold and repaired many machines, competed in all kinds of tournaments, and contributes to This Week in Pinball, the New England Pinball League, and Pin-Masters of New England. Previously, Colin spent over a decade working in marketing for agencies and tech startups. He also started and ran a music blog, happy hour website, and wrote a regular craft beer review column for Central Track in Dallas. Once aspired to be an artsy film director.

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