Article:
BY DATHAN KAZSUK
White or Black. Male or Female. Single, married, Republican, Democrat—at the end of the day, there’s one universal truth we can all raise a glass to: we love beer.
Especially craft beer. Especially local craft beer. And here in North Carolina, where community and craftsmanship still mean something, drinking local isn’t just a hobby—it’s a lifestyle.
Every April, there’s one event that calls out to every hophead and sour seeker from across the state like a siren song: Brewgaloo. Organized by Shop Local Raleigh, Brewgaloo is not just another beer festival—it’s the beer festival. It’s where brewers, drinkers, and dreamers gather for two straight days of revelry and community, trying not to lose their tiny souvenir glasses after the fourth pour.

It’s almost a seasonal migration at this point. Fayetteville Street in downtown Raleigh transforms into a 10-block beer utopia, and for two glorious days, it’s game on.
And while Saturday’s main event draws over 60,000 people and features over 100 breweries—making it the biggest beer festival in North Carolina—I’m here to tell you why the real magic happens on Friday night.
Look, Saturday has its charms. There’s no entry fee. You buy a stack of tickets, wander around, and cash them in for samples or pints. It’s pure chaos—and if you love massive crowds, lines that snake across the street, and a soundtrack of drunk people shouting into the void, it’s your scene.
But me? I’m old. I’m cranky and prefer my beer events a little less “mosh pit” and a little more “chill block party.” That’s why Friday night is my go-to.

For $45, you get unlimited samples from around 50 handpicked breweries. No tickets. No fuss. No math. Just grab your tiny glass, step up, and start tasting. And because Friday is more curated, many breweries bring out the good stuff—the one-offs, the experimental batches, the “blink and you’ll miss it” (at least they say) beers they’re too smart (or too crazy) to mass produce.
First rule of Brewgaloo Friday Night: Show up early.
I’m serious—this isn’t amateur hour. My wife and I always roll in right as gates open, ready to hit the ground running. This year, we planned to visit only breweries we hadn’t tried before. Expand the horizons. Seek out the new blood.
Naturally, that plan lasted about five minutes.

What can I say? Sometimes you need to start the night with a familiar face—and a familiar beer. First stop: Dirtbag Ales out of Hope Mills. Then, a quick hometown pride moment at Raleigh’s Altered State Brewing. From there, it was a beautiful, hoppy blur: Primal Brewery, Old Hickory, R&R Brewing, Toasty Kettlyst, Crank Arm Brewing, Goldsboro Brew Works…and those are just the ones I remember before my notes started getting a little “creative.”
We sampled hazy IPAs, coffee porters, puckering sours, crisp seltzers and imperial stouts. There was no rhyme or reason—just vibes.
One of the absolute highlights of the night came courtesy of Edit Beer Company out of Raleigh. They poured a s’mores stout so good it felt like you were sitting around a campfire swapping ghost stories. Rich chocolate, toasty marshmallows, a hint of graham cracker—all wrapped in one perfect little glass.


Sneaky Penguin Brewing, another Raleigh newcomer, also impressed with some inventive brews that made us proud to call the City of Oaks home.
It wasn’t all just drink-and-dash. Part of what makes Friday night special is the chance to slow down, chat, and actually connect with the breweries pouring your beer. We caught up with Ben Farrar with Forgotten Road Ales in Graham, whom we haven’t talked to in ages—but catching up is pretty easy when it comes to beer.
We swung by Trophy Brewing and caught up with Les Stewart—Trophy’s head brewer and the North Carolina Brewers Guild’s current president. We talked shop, and he told us how our Midtown Magazine story about NC’s “Ales by Rail” program has been sending new customers into breweries across the state. It’s a small world when craft beer is involved—and a pretty great one, too.
If there’s a word for Friday night at Brewgaloo, it’s laid-back. Sure, there were lines, but everyone knew where the “end” was. No shoving, no side-eye, no chaos. Just easygoing people sharing space and swapping tasting notes.

It felt right. It was like a beer festival should be: community first, beer second (but a very, very close second).
Credit where credit’s due: Jennifer Martin and her crew at Shop Local Raleigh nail it with Brewgaloo every year. From the organization to the energy to the diversity of breweries they bring together, it’s a masterclass in how to run a big event without losing the soul of what made it special in the first place.
I can’t personally vouch for Saturday (maybe one year I’ll brave it again—maybe). But Friday night? That’s our tradition now. And after another fantastic evening, we’re already looking forward to Brewgaloo 2026—and dreaming about what wild new brews we’ll get to discover next.
Until then, cheers to local beer and local people, and a Friday night well spent. We’ll be back!