Skip to main content

The Manual may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.

The 10 best bartending apps to fuel your inner mixologist

Want to improve your bartending? Count on one of these apps to do just that

Making a cocktail

The best bartenders at the best bars in the land make drinks so good you could plan a vacation around them. But sometimes you want to fabricate a good cocktail at home, whether you’re a seasoned mixologist or just looking for a quick, easy, and tasty gin and tonic.

While there’s no harm in setting yourself up with all the proper context — from the best cocktail books to a bona fide home bar setup — oftentimes a simple app will do. A quick download can set you up for better bartending at home, whether it’s fine-tuning your technique or finally conquering that dreaded tiki cocktail recipe.

Cocktail and bartending apps offer real-time instruction and instant accessibility. Even the pros turn to these apps, using them as indispensable tools to create and share new recipes with other bartenders and learn new techniques to take their craft to the next level. Being able to make your favorite cocktails at home will never be a bad skill to have. 

Whether you’re a newbie looking to shake things up a bit by turning your kitchen into your own personal bar or a pro mixologist eager to find new craft cocktail recipes or up your mixing game with new techniques, these are the best bartending apps for the job. 

Cocktail Flow app

Best for at home/beginners

Cocktail Flow

Arguably the quintessential cocktail app, Cocktail Flow’s continually updated selection of hundreds of cocktails, sleek design, attractive interface, and easy step-by-step guides make it the perfect starting point for beginners. You can search for different recipes by name or base spirit and use the “Around the World” collections to find popular cocktails from different countries. 

You can also upload and save your own tasting notes and recipes and use the “My Bar” feature to tell the app what kind of ingredients you have on hand. It will recommend a cocktail based on what you have at home. With endless options, it’s a delight to discover so many different kinds of cocktails you can make on your own. Cocktail Flow is available for free on Apple and Android devices. 

Perfect Drink app

Perfect Drink

One of the most important aspects of making good cocktails is getting the ratios and amounts of ingredients just right, and it can be hard to get the hang of it at first. Perfect Drink is the first app of its kind, offering interactive instructions in real time on how to mix your drink.

The app itself is free and available for Apple and Android, but you do need to purchase an accompanying scale that connects to your phone. Placing your glass on the scale and selecting a recipe, the app shows you how much of each ingredient to pour and in what order, how to mix or stir, and even what to do if you over-pour by adjusting the recipe for you. Extremely user-friendly, it’ll help you gain confidence in your mixing skills, with over 400 in-app cocktail recipes to try. 

Distiller app

Distiller

If you’re new to the world of cocktails, bartending, and liquor, you may feel a little lost going to the liquor store. What is the best kind of whiskey? Would this mezcal work for the cocktail I have in mind? Is this a popular brand of gin? With its thousands of reviews from fellow users, bartenders, and beverage industry pros, Distiller will help you pick the perfect bottle for whatever kind of cocktail you’re looking to make.

Simply look up the type of spirit or brand name you’re looking for, and you’ll find reviews, ratings, tasting notes, flavor profiles, info about the product itself like ingredients and distillation procedure, and sellers. And as you find bottles you do or don’t like, you can also leave your own reviews and tasting notes to help others in the future. It’s free on Android and Apple, but you do have to create a profile. 

Highball app

Best for pros

Highball

As a bona fide mixologist, you’ve graduated from mixing staple cocktails to crafting your own unique creations, which you can now share with fellow bartenders and the world on Highball, available for free on Apple’s App Store. Organized into stylish virtual recipe “cards,” you can upload your own cocktail recipes — complete with ingredients, measures, and technique notes — and once it’s saved on the app’s platform, others can also add edits and suggestions. You can also store favorite recipes to come back to. 

Modern Classics

Modern Classics app

Any app can show you how to make an old-fashioned or dry martini. What about a barrel-aged Negroni by Jeffrey Morgenthaler, or a Paper Plane? 99 of these “modern classic” cocktails are compiled here in this $10 iPhone app created by legendary cocktail and drinks writer Robert Simonson.

To determine what essential contemporary cocktails made the cut, Simonson evaluated them based on three criteria: they must be widely known outside of their home bar, they had to be venerated by the bartending community, and they had to be available on cocktail menus far and wide. For bartenders looking to master all the true classics of the modern craft cocktail movement, this is a must-buy. 

Screenshots from the PDT cocktail app.

For both

PDT

The official app from one of the best bars in NYC, if not the nation, PDT is fun to use and houses hundreds of quality and tested recipes. It’s a great place to find an inventive new cocktail, riff on a classic, or mess around with a lesser-known liqueur or spirit (shochu, anyone?).

The app functions a bit like a digital bar, allowing you to take and keep stock of what you have and even pack it along the next time you’re at the bottle shop or liquor store and need to be reminded of what’s missing or what complementary ingredients you might need. It’s like your very own highly trained bar back, only digital.

Screenshots from the Total Tiki app from Beachbum Berry.

Beachbum Berry

Tiki is tough but a lot less so with this helpful app. This is a sequel to an already-great app, adding many more recipes and giving the user a real taste of the rich history surrounding tiki culture. A complex category, the app makes things approachable and even allows you to mix up great tiki drinks with minimal ingredients at home (no, you don’t have to have six kinds of orgeat).

Even the layout and feel of the app are breezy and fun, just like a great Mai Tai. It’s what you’d expect from one of the leading names in the trade and takes just about all of the intimidation away from making some of these age-old, tropical hotel-born drinks.

Screenshots from the Make Me A Cocktail app.

Make Me A Cocktail

Boasting more than 3,500 recipes, Make Me A Cocktail could be a place where a wannabe mixologist goes to get lost. Instead, the interface is fairly intuitive and the search functions are strong, allowing you to get just the drink you want, without having to wade through too much else.

The ads can be annoying, but the app makes up for that by being fairly sophisticated in its concoctions. Like the MacGyver of the bartending app realm, it can put something delicious together even out of your cabinet dregs.

8,500 Drinks app

8,500+ Drinks

Available for free on Android and Apple, this handy app is a great go-to cocktail recipe guide, whether you’re an at-home bartender looking to try something new or you’re a pro working behind the bar and just received an order for a cocktail you’ve never heard of.

As the name says, this app has recipes for more than 8,500 cocktails. You can search by name, ingredients, or category of drink, and, if you want a surprise, simply press the “Random” option, shake your phone, and the app will give you a random drink selection to make. 

Bartender's Choice app

Bartender’s Choice

It’s a scenario with which the seasoned bartender is all too familiar. A customer sits down at the bar and doesn’t know what they’re in the mood for. The bartender asks questions to help narrow it down: What’s your favorite kind of liquor, what flavors do you like, what style of cocktail do you prefer? From those answers, the bartender can then make the customer a cocktail tailored to their tastes.

After years of experience with this exact scene at bars like Attaboy and Milk & Honey, renowned bartender Sam Ross created Bartender’s Choice. The app asks you questions about alcohol, sensations, style, and extras, and then recommends the perfect drink; you can also ask the app to surprise you and it will recommend five random recipes. Available on iPhone and Android for $4.99, this is a great app both for bartenders looking for fresh ideas for indecisive customers and for at-home bartenders unsure about what they want to make.

Ready to make a better cocktail? Get your phone out and try one of the above apps. You likely won’t outdo your favorite professional bartender, but you’ll have fun trying.

Editors' Recommendations

Mark Stock
Mark Stock is a writer from Portland, Oregon. He fell into wine during the Recession and has been fixated on the stuff since…
The best mango cocktails to bring the tropics to your glass
Your drinks need more mango. These recipes will show you the way to tropical paradise.
An ice-cold glass of Mango Basil Margarita on black table.

Mango season is here, which means it's time to give your cocktails the tropical fruit treatment. The vibrant yellow stone fruit affords tons of flavor and works well with a number of spirits. Mango is also incredible refreshing sans booze in a mocktail or classic mango lassi.

While we often talk about mango, as in the flavors we're reminded of when sipping an excellent Sauvignon Blanc or Riesling, we don't work directly with the fruit as much as we should. Those who live in sunny states like Florida, California, and Hawaii are fortunate enough to grow their own. But even if you reside elsewhere, mangos are pretty readily available, especially this time of year.

Read more
Study reveals another great reason to follow the Mediterranean diet (that has nothing to do with your health)
Get healthy and save some dough with the Mediterranean diet
Wood board with Mediterranean foods

For years now, it's been pretty widely accepted that the Mediterranean Diet is one of the healthiest diets one can adopt. Not only is this way of eating nearly limitless in its delicious possibilities, but it's fresh and beautiful, easy to stick to, and even allows wine and cheese (within reason). If you ask us, that last reason alone makes it, hands down, the best diet one can stick to.

And while we're at it, the word "diet," as it is currently used in society, isn't the prettiest label to slap on this way of eating. Sure, the word can refer simply to the food one eats, regardless of weight loss implications. But in our toxic diet-culture age, the very word has become one of the uglier four-letter-expletives — one the Mediterranean style of eating is far above. Even without the goal of lowering the number on the bathroom scale, the Mediterranean diet is both a beautifully delicious and healthful way to eat. And, it turns out, in addition to its sea of flavors, long list of health benefits, and bounty of delicious recipes, there's something more to love about this way of eating.

Read more
The best wine picks for summer from our favorite sommeliers
Want a bottle of wine that impresses this summer? Go with one of these sommelier-endorsed options
Clinking glasses of white wine

With summer just around the bend, the time for outdoor gatherings coupled with good food and drink is here. Whether it's a barbecue with the neighbors or a dinner party on the roof, good wine is in order — and because it's summer, only the best wine will do.

What makes a great summer wine? It needs to be something that's light, fresh, food-friendly, and unique enough to wow your guests. When we're talking about good wine to drink sommeliers should have the floor, so we've borrowed some great picks for the best wines of summer 2023 from a few of our top sommelier friends. Specifically, we call upon the expertise of Dale and Stephen Ott, the husband-and-wife team of sommeliers that run Nossa Imports. The winery looks to bring some of the best wines of Mexico and Portugal to the states.

Read more