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The flashy interior of Anomalie Art Club in Berlin
Photograph: Anomalie Art Club

The 17 best clubs in Berlin

If you’re after a wild night out (or three straight days of partying), the very best clubs in Berlin will sort you out

Nathan Ma
Written by
Nathan Ma
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Berlin has a reputation for insanity when it comes to nightlife, and that reputation is well and truly earned. Clubbing in the German capital is not for the nervous, and neither should it be. When people say they partied all weekend in Berlin, the chances are they literally did 72 hours of straight madness before heading back to work on Monday morning. A couple of beers and an early night, this is not.

With that in mind, the best clubs in Berlin are among the best clubs on the planet. You can find the stereotypical techno warehouses here, but Berlin’s reputation for innovation and creativity is very much alive when it comes to nightlife too. Sleek modern clubs, squat raves, bunker parties, if you can conceive of it, it is probably happening in Berlin. Drink plenty of water, folks.

Best clubs in Berlin

  • Clubs
  • Friedrichshain

Easily the city’s most famous club – and some would say the world’s best – Berghain is not just for world-class techno: it’s a way of life for many of the tireless regulars who call it a ‘church’. Housed within an imposing former power station, it emerged in 2004 from the ashes of its legendary gay predecessor, Ostgut, which had fallen victim to the city’s massive infrastructure projects. Even ‘non-club’ people will be intoxicated by the open atmosphere, liberal attitudes, eccentric characters, the carefully preserved industrial fabric of the building, and, of course, the gargantuan sound system. It is open, complete with dark rooms, from Friday midnight until well into Monday morning. The club’s reputation for a difficult and random door policy is not entirely undeserved. Once inside, a zero-tolerance camera ban is enforced; expect to be immediately ejected if you flout the rules. Other than that, you can go wild, safe in the knowledge that nothing you get up to will ever return to haunt you on social media. 

Come for the clubbing, and stay for the art: Anomalie Art Club is home to some of the most spectacular visual designs on Berlin’s club scene. Over the past two years, this place has played host to techno DJs from around the world, alongside artists working in sound, light, and installation. Anomalie also hosts film screenings, art exhibitions, and open-air raves.

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This is the X-rated part of the expansive, family-friendly Holzmarkt development. With a moored boat, a roaring fire at night and many hammock-like features, the potential for alfresco relaxation is high. Meanwhile, a fine roster of electronic DJs spins away unendingly – sometimes for four days straight. The vibe is more crusty than chic, and increasingly so as the weekend unravels. If you have the stamina (and courage) to last well into Monday afternoon, expect to encounter some of Berlin’s strangest creatures.

Yet another victim of Berlin’s Mediaspree development, YAAM was forcibly evicted from its previous home – but you can’t keep a good reggae club down. It quickly found another riverside spot, so it’s business as usual for this legendary beach bar and cultural centre. By day, there might be kids playing a laid-back game of volleyball, with a jerk chicken stall on the side. Then, as the light fades, things keep up a leisurely pace with concerts and parties bouncing to an Afro-Caribbean beat.

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One of the first and best, this summer-only canal-side club is nestled under an enormous weeping willow. There’s a small indoor dance floor and a rickety open-air wood-deck terrace with a large jetty stretching out across the water. You can drop in during the week for a beer, but the place comes to life at the weekend, filling up with an after-hours crowd, happy to chill, drink and dance the day away. Winter parties are now held in the nearby Hoppetosse boat at Arena Berlin.

This enormous old factory has become a party hotspot thanks to its imaginative décor and reliable booking policy; events include the hedonistic GMF party series and other techno-centric offerings. Ritter Butzke held illegal parties for years but has now gone legit and even allows its parties to be promoted in listings mags from time to time. It’s the antithesis of Berghain, with crowds of locals and amiable bouncers who are occasionally dressed as knights (Ritter means ‘knight’). Brace yourself for a massive queue if you arrive between 1am and 3:30am.

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  • Clubs
  • Mitte

For a taste of Berlin nightlife from a different era, head to this wonderfully original dance hall located in the middle of Mitte’s gallery district. In operation since 1913, it’s had its fair share of ups and downs, but one thing has stayed constant – the familiar tappety-tap of a ballroom quickstep or foxtrot. The Ballhaus actually has two ballrooms: the vast ground-floor space is lined with silver tinsel streamers, and a spacious dance floor is ringed by wooden tables bedecked with white tablecloths and candles, a disco ball spinning overhead. Upstairs is another room that never fails to elicit gasps of awe from first-time visitors. There’s a full roster of events throughout the week with lessons available, tango on Tuesdays or waltz on a Wednesday, while weekend evenings descend into more of a free-for-all with a live band performing to the mixed crowd.

Walking down the concrete underpass to the entrance, it feels more like the approach to a car park than a trendy club. The Prince Charles is situated in a former swimming pool, and the tiled walls and soft lighting create an intimate atmosphere. Artfully dishevelled young things bop along to the house-heavy soundtrack, pausing for a breather outside on the extremely lounge-worthy wooden decking.

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  • Clubs
  • Friedrichshain

This knackered old house was perennially at risk of being torn down and turned into – of course – trendy apartments. Once-sporadic parties follow a regular weekend rhythm these days, usually running till the last man stands. Students and wasted ravers press up against expats from Mitte in the reliably crowded rooms, which are still set up like the flats they once were – complete with the odd bed. On languid summer afternoons, the club hops across the river to an intimate open-air wonderland called Else.

You don’t make the trek out to Sisyphos just for a snoop and a couple of beers. It’s an ‘in for a penny, in for a pound’ sort of place, where the party begins on Friday and trundles on non-stop until Monday. Vast indoor and outdoor spaces at this former dog biscuit factory help create a festival-like atmosphere that’s pitch-perfect for sunny weekends. Music ranges from pumping techno inside to house tunes out by the ‘lake’ – more of a scummy pond, really. Crowd-wise, expect it all; fresh-faced student revellers and wizened ravers of a dreadlocked persuasion are among the regulars.

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  • Clubs
  • Kreuzberg

This slick two-floor club was a driving force behind the rise of minimal techno in mid-2000s Berlin, as well as the first to invest in a ceiling-mounted responsive LED lighting system, now copied all around the world. The downstairs Water Floor is particularly impressive, with its panorama windows looking directly onto the Spree and a floating deck terrace for watching the sunrise over Kreuzberg. It can feel too touristy at weekends – increasingly populist bookings don’t help – but pick the right night, and you’ll still feel the original magic.

This legendary sex and techno club for all is a labyrinthine complex of half a dozen dancefloors, a dubious swimming pool and a grimy mock-operating room. Saturday nights feature the club’s flagship CarneBall Bizarre, with an after-hours event that runs through Sunday. For pure polysexual hedonism, look out for cult party Gegen every two months. Most nights have a fetish dress code – except Electric Mondays – so if you arrive wearing jeans, you’ll have to leave them in the cloakroom and dance in your knickers.

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With a name meaning ‘yesterday was sweet’, the 1970s-style décor comes as no surprise. What is a surprise is the free entrance and cheap beers. There are three areas for dancing, drinking and hanging out, with each room playing a different genre of music, from conventional techno to novelty hip hop.

  • Clubs
  • Mitte

Once home to a rather hit-and-miss music policy, with the occasional live show, this grimy little club has now settled firmly into a series of all-weekend techno parties. Its location – smack bang in the middle of a motorway – means it has no issue with noise. The Thursday night parties are particularly raucous, with the club carrying on until pretty much Monday afternoon. The atmosphere is extremely relaxed and positive, staying true to the Berlin party ethos of egalitarian fun with no fashion police or posing allowed.

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One of Berlin’s longest-running dance institutions, SchwuZ moved into the old Kindl brewery in 2013. A variety of mainstream and underground events take place throughout the week, attracting a mixed and ready-to-mingle crowd who take full advantage of the warehouse.

Feeling the effects of last night? Here’s an idea...

  • Restaurants

Berlin’s usually the first to jump on any bandwagon. But this trend-obsessed city is only just waking up to the brunch revolution that swept other metropolises half a decade ago. From high-quality cold cuts to gourmet vegan doughnuts, finding a genuinely exciting brunch here has never been easier.

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