
From Little Havana to Miami Beach, Coral Gables, Sunrise, Pompano Beach, and West Palm Beach, South Florida remains one of America’s great listening rooms for Latin jazz, Afro-Cuban rhythms, Brazilian grooves, salsa-jazz, and tropical improvisation.
Latin jazz in South Florida is not limited to one kind of club. Sometimes it appears in a proper jazz lounge, sometimes in a Cuban restaurant, sometimes in a hotel piano bar, and sometimes at a cultural center or outdoor amphitheater. The best approach is to check each venue’s calendar, because Latin jazz nights often rotate with salsa, straight-ahead jazz, samba, bolero, flamenco, funk, and world music.
One of the most natural homes for Latin jazz in Miami. Located on Calle Ocho, Ball & Chain blends Cuban dining, cocktails, salsa, jazz, and live Latin entertainment. A strong choice for visitors who want the Little Havana atmosphere with real musical history.
A classy Ocean Drive setting with one of Miami Beach’s most consistent live jazz programs. The programming often includes Latin-flavored jazz, guitar, vocals, piano, and small ensembles. A good option for a refined evening before or after dinner.
A stylish underground Miami Beach lounge with live jazz programming and a late-night cocktail culture. It is not exclusively Latin jazz, but Latin, Brazilian, and Miami-rooted musicians often fit naturally into its scene.
A beloved wine garden and music hangout known for live music every night. The calendar leans jazz, soul, funk, Brazilian, and world grooves, making it a strong place to watch for Latin jazz and Afro-Caribbean influenced sets.
A dedicated live jazz room on Miracle Mile. While the venue celebrates jazz broadly, Coral Gables’ international audience makes it a natural place to watch for Latin jazz, bossa nova, Cuban jazz, and elegant small-combo performances.
A major outdoor cultural venue that frequently hosts global music, Latin artists, Brazilian music, jazz festivals, and special concert events. Not a weekly club, but one of the best South Florida stages to monitor for major Latin jazz and world-jazz performances.
Miami’s major performing arts center occasionally presents jazz, Latin music, flamenco, Cuban music, and international touring artists. Best for larger concerts rather than casual nightclub sets.
A luxury arts-and-entertainment destination where Latin, cabaret, jazz, and world music sometimes overlap. Best checked for special productions and visiting artists.
One of Broward’s clearest choices for live jazz dining. The venue promotes jazz and Latin bands, making it a practical destination for people seeking Latin jazz, dinner, and a listening-room feel west of Fort Lauderdale.
A cultural venue with jazz, heritage programming, and community music events. Watch its calendar for Latin jazz, Caribbean jazz, and special concert series.
Although located in Palm Beach County, Arts Garage is close enough to Broward audiences to deserve mention. It presents jazz, blues, Latin, Caribbean, and world music concerts in an intimate arts venue setting.
A late-night upstairs speakeasy environment where jazz, bossa nova, and stylish vocal music can appear. A good venue to monitor for Brazilian jazz, American songbook nights, and Latin-influenced lounge performances.
A larger performing arts venue that occasionally brings jazz, Latin, world music, and touring performers to Fort Lauderdale. Best for ticketed concerts rather than weekly club nights.
A historic West Palm Beach music venue with jazz heritage and special event programming. A strong calendar to watch for jazz experiences, cultural concerts, and occasional Latin or Caribbean influenced performances.
One of Palm Beach County’s best small concert venues for jazz and global music. Latin jazz, Brazilian, Caribbean, and fusion artists are a natural fit for its programming.
Palm Beach County’s major performing arts center. Look for touring Latin jazz legends, Cuban music projects, Brazilian artists, flamenco-jazz collaborations, and major world music concerts.
Better known as a Colombian and Latin dining destination than a jazz room, but live Latin music appears on select nights. Worth watching for softer Latin sets, bolero, cumbia, and Caribbean rhythms that sometimes cross into jazz-friendly territory.
Tip: Latin jazz is a living, rotating scene. Before going, check the venue calendar, Instagram page, or event listing for the specific artist. Search terms such as “Latin jazz,” “Afro-Cuban jazz,” “Brazilian jazz,” “bossa nova,” “salsa jazz,” “Cuban trio,” “samba,” and “world jazz” will often reveal the best nights.