Dance clubs, live music, rooftop bars, speakeasies, LGBTQ+ nightlife, listening bars and late-night dives across London, with where to go and what is worth the late night.

Dance Clubs in London

Fabric ★ 4.8

££FarringdonFri 23:00-06:00, Sat 23:00-08:00, Sun 22:00-06:00 (varies by event)

The 1999-opened Farringdon warehouse with three rooms and a Bodysonic dancefloor is still the global benchmark for how a serious dance club should sound, programme and last the night.

Tip: Buy in advance, the door queues on Saturday curl down Charterhouse Street by midnight. Room One is the bass-rattled main floor.

Ministry of Sound ★ 4.4

££Elephant and CastleFri 23:00-05:00, Sat 23:00-06:00 (event dependent)

The 1991 Elephant and Castle warehouse that exported British clubbing as a global brand is still pulling tier-one DJs into the Box, with a sound rig that earns its reputation.

Tip: The Box main room sound is the experience, do not get sidetracked into the smaller rooms before midnight.

Phonox ★ 4.5

££BrixtonThu-Sat 21:00-04:00

The Brixton Road club run by the Mixmag-tested Phonox crew runs a no-headliner format where one resident plays the whole night, and the Saturday booking policy has built a loyal regular crowd.

Tip: Get there before midnight, the door cuts off well before close and the queue gets brutal on a name Saturday.

Drumsheds ★ 4.4

£££TottenhamEvent nights only, typically Fri 22:00-06:00 and Sat 14:00-late

The 14,999 capacity warehouse in the former Meridian Water IKEA is the country's biggest indoor club, run by Broadwick, and is where the touring superstar electronic sets land in north London.

Tip: The Overground to Meridian Water is the only sensible way in, taxis pile up on Glover Drive and the walk from Tottenham Hale is long after a 10-hour set.

FOLD ★ 4.5

££Canning TownEvent nights, typically 23:00 to late, 24-hour license

The Canning Town warehouse with a 24-hour license has built a reputation for serious techno bookings and a strict no-phones-on-the-floor policy that protects the room from becoming an Instagram set.

Tip: Phones go in pouches at the door, that is the rule and it is enforced. Cash for the cloakroom moves the queue.

E1 ★ 4.3

££WappingFri 22:00-06:00, Sat 22:00-08:00 (event dependent)

The Wapping warehouse on Pennington Street runs a multi-room curated programme of techno and house with the kind of long-form bookings that pull in international touring DJs and Sunday-morning crowds.

Tip: Wapping Overground is the quickest way home at 7am, the night buses out of Shadwell are a long wait after a closing set.

Live Music in London

Ronnie Scott's ★ 4.8

£££SohoDaily, doors 18:00, first set typically 20:00, late set 23:30

The Frith Street basement opened by tenorist Ronnie Scott in 1959 is the central canon of British jazz, with two sittings a night and the late show that real heads come for.

Tip: Book the late show, the room thins out and the playing loosens. Standing bar tickets are the cheapest way in if you do not need a table.

Vortex Jazz Club ★ 4.6

££DalstonTue-Sun 19:45-23:00, doors 19:45

The Gillett Square upstairs room is where London's improvised and contemporary jazz programmes when it wants to be honest about what it sounds like, with a regular Tomorrow's Warriors slot for the next generation.

Tip: Book direct, the room is small and an in-demand quartet sells out in days. The downstairs cafe is the warm-up.

PizzaExpress Jazz Club ★ 4.5

£££SohoDoors typically 18:30, first set 19:30, late set 21:30

The Dean Street basement opened by Peter Boizot in 1969 sits under a working pizzeria and runs a quietly serious nightly programme that has hosted Diana Krall, Norah Jones and Kurt Elling at room scale.

Tip: The pizza is fine, the room is the point, ask for a table on the front banquettes for sightlines to the piano.

Cafe OTO ★ 4.7

££DalstonCafe daily 09:30-17:30, gigs typically 20:00 onwards

The Ashwin Street room programmed by Hamish Dunbar and Keiko Yamamoto is the central venue in Europe for experimental and improvised music, and the calendar is the single best test of what is current.

Tip: Members get advance ticket access, the Eddie Prevost and Arto Lindsay weeks sell out fast.

O2 Academy Brixton ★ 4.4

£££BrixtonEvent nights, doors typically 19:00, curfew 23:00

The 1929 art deco theatre on Stockwell Road reopened in April 2024 with 77 new safety conditions after the December 2022 crush, and it remains the most resonant mid-size touring room in the country.

Tip: The raked floor gives sightlines from anywhere, but front-of-stage on a sold-out night is a serious push, take a balcony seat for comfort.

Roundhouse ★ 4.6

£££CamdenEvent nights, doors typically 19:00

The Victorian railway engine shed converted in 1964 is Camden's circular theatre with a programme that runs from Glen Hansard and Rilo Kiley to the Roundhouse Comedy Festival in August.

Tip: The standing pit is the only place to be for a guitar band, the upper circle has obstructed views from the back rows.

KOKO ★ 4.4

£££CamdenEvent nights and club residencies, typically doors 19:00

The 1900 Camden Hippodrome reopened in 2022 after a fire and a top-to-bottom rebuild, and is now a five-floor venue with a theatre, a members club and a domed roof terrace.

Tip: The Saturday DISKOKO electronic night is the way to see the rebuilt room without paying touring-show prices.

The 100 Club ★ 4.5

££FitzroviaEvent nights, doors typically 19:30

The Oxford Street basement that hosted the 1976 Punk Festival is the longest continuously running music venue in London and still books across genres from punk through Northern Soul.

Tip: There are no bad sightlines, the stage is at floor level. Get a drink before the headline, the bar queues 12 deep on a sold-out night.

Rooftop Bars in London

Frank's Cafe ★ 4.6

££PeckhamMid May to mid September only, Wed-Sun 11:00-23:00

The 10th-floor multi-storey carpark bar built by Practice Architecture for Bold Tendencies in 2009 is the summer fixture, with a Negroni view across south London and zero pretense to anything more.

Tip: Card only, no advance bookings, no table service. Get there before 18:00 on a Friday or you queue down the ramp.

Coq d'Argent ★ 4.2

££££City of LondonMon-Sat 12:00-00:00, Sun closed

The James Stirling postmodern roof garden above No.1 Poultry is the City rooftop institution, with a sunken lawn, a French restaurant and a bar terrace that catches the Bank of England light.

Tip: The garden is the bar, the restaurant is the formal room, sit in the garden for a drink and skip the menu unless you are expensing.

Aviary ★ 4.2

£££FinsburyMon-Fri 06:30-00:00, Sat-Sun 07:00-00:00

The 10th-floor terrace on Finsbury Square belongs to the Montcalm Royal London House and runs an all-day operation with City skyline views and a weekend Birdsong brunch that gets a DJ in.

Tip: Sunset slot 18:30 to 20:00 is the best light, book the terrace not the indoor section.

12th Knot ★ 4.5

£££South BankTue-Wed 17:00-00:00, Thu-Sat 17:00-00:30

The Sea Containers 12th-floor cocktail bar on the South Bank looks out at St Paul's and the river, with a cocktail programme that earns its rooftop premium and small plates that justify staying for dinner.

Tip: The window seats book out for sunset, request one when you reserve. The corner with the Blackfriars view is the prize.

Madison ★ 4.1

£££City of LondonMon-Sat 12:00-00:00, Sun and bank holidays 12:00-22:00

The One New Change rooftop bar and restaurant runs eye-level with the St Paul's dome, with a modern American menu downstairs and a long terrace bar that is the closest seat to the cathedral.

Tip: Walk straight through the restaurant to the bar terrace, the queue at the front desk is for diners only.

Radio Rooftop ★ 4.1

£££Covent GardenSun-Wed 12:00-00:00, Thu-Sat 12:00-01:30

The 10th-floor terrace at ME London is the central rooftop with the 360-degree West End view, and the gin-and-tonic list and modern Asian plates keep it from being only a view bar.

Tip: Book a window banquette on the north side for the Trafalgar and St Martin's view, the south side gives the river.

Speakeasies in London

Nightjar ★ 4.7

£££ShoreditchTue-Thu 18:00-01:00, Fri-Sat 18:00-02:00, Sun 18:00-00:00

The basement on City Road behind an unmarked door is the standard against which every London speakeasy is measured, with nightly live jazz and a cocktail menu that takes the prohibition era seriously.

Tip: Bookings only, walk-ins are turned away after 19:00. The 22:30 second set is when the band loosens up.

Happiness Forgets ★ 4.8

££HoxtonDaily 17:00 onwards

The Hoxton Square basement run by Alastair Burgess pairs a tight rotating cocktail list with a no-nonsense room policy that has kept it on the World's 50 Best Bars list more or less continuously since 2014.

Tip: Bookings open one week ahead at 12:00 sharp, set a reminder. Walk-ins get the bar if anything.

The Connaught Bar ★ 4.9

££££MayfairMon-Sat 16:00-01:00

Agostino Perrone's bar inside the Connaught in Mayfair has won World's Best Bar more than once and runs the table-side martini trolley service that the rest of the industry copies.

Tip: Order the martini trolley, the choice of vermouth and bitters at the table is the experience. Reservations open one month ahead.

Lyaness ★ 4.7

£££South BankMon-Thu 17:00-00:00, Fri 16:00-01:00, Sat 13:00-01:00, Sun 13:00-00:00

Ryan Chetiyawardana's ingredient-led bar at Sea Containers is built around the seven Pinnacle Guide ingredients that change every year, and the menu reads like a chef's tasting more than a drinks list.

Tip: Sit at the bar, the conversation with the bartenders is the menu's commentary track. Saturday afternoons are the quietest slot.

American Bar at The Savoy ★ 4.7

££££Covent GardenMon-Sat 12:00-00:00, Sun 12:00-22:00

The 1893 cocktail bar inside the Savoy is the oldest surviving American-style cocktail room in London, with the legacy of Harry Craddock's Savoy Cocktail Book still on every back-bar shelf.

Tip: Listen for the live piano from 18:30, the room transforms. The age limit is 14 plus accompanied, dress code is enforced.

Discount Suit Company ★ 4.6

££WhitechapelMon-Tue 17:00-23:00, Wed 17:00-00:00, Thu 14:00-00:00, Fri-Sat 14:00-01:00, Sun 17:00-23:00

The Wentworth Street basement opened in 2014 in a former tailor's stockroom, with a Northern Soul and rock and roll soundtrack and a price list that undercuts the rest of the central speakeasy scene.

Tip: Walk in early, the room is small and they do not take bookings past 19:00. Cash and card both work.

Lgbtq in London

Heaven ★ 4.5

££Charing CrossEvent nights, typically doors 22:30, close 04:00

The 1979 club under the railway arches by Charing Cross remains the central gay nightclub in London, hosting both club nights and a live programme that runs from MUNA through G-A-Y Saturdays.

Tip: G-A-Y Saturday is the long-running pop room, Porn Idol on Thursdays is the institution night for first-timers.

Royal Vauxhall Tavern ★ 4.7

£VauxhallEvent nights, typically 19:00-00:00 weekdays and later weekends

The Grade II listed Victorian pub on Kennington Lane is the oldest surviving LGBTQ+ venue in the country, with the Friday Duckie cabaret since 1995 and a programme that protects what Vauxhall used to be.

Tip: Duckie on Saturdays is the institution. The Sunday Bingo Lingo and panto seasons sell out months ahead.

Dalston Superstore ★ 4.6

££DalstonWed-Sun, typically 18:00-02:00 upstairs, basement later

The Kingsland High Street two-floor bar and basement club is the east London queer institution, with a calendar that runs from Horse Meat Disco-school disco nights through underground techno parties.

Tip: The upstairs bar is the warm-up, the basement does not really get going until midnight. Sundays are the lock-in.

Eagle London ★ 4.6

£VauxhallThu 20:00-02:00, Fri-Sat 21:00-04:00, Sun 20:00-03:00, Mon-Wed closed

The Kennington Lane gay bar established in 2004 is home to Horse Meat Disco on Sundays, the long-running global disco residency that defines what Vauxhall sounds like at 3am.

Tip: Sunday Horse Meat Disco is the night, not Saturdays. Get there by 22:00 or queue down the road.

Two Brewers ★ 4.4

££ClaphamMon-Tue 17:00-01:00, Wed 17:00-02:00, Thu-Fri 17:00-02:00, Sat 17:00-04:00, Sun 16:00-02:00

The Clapham High Street double-room bar and cabaret club is the south London institution, with nightly drag shows in the front room and a club floor in the back that runs until 4am at weekends.

Tip: The Friday and Saturday late shows are the draw, get a wristband for the back room before midnight.

She Soho ★ 4.4

££SohoMon-Thu 17:00-23:30, Fri-Sat 17:00-00:30, Sun 17:00-23:00

The Old Compton Street basement is the only dedicated lesbian bar on the Soho strip, run by Ku Bar with a vaulted basement sound system and a calendar of community nights for women and non-binary people.

Tip: Wednesday Butch Please and the weekend basement parties are the regular highlights, the upstairs bar is the chat room.

Listening Bars in London

Brilliant Corners ★ 4.8

££DalstonWed-Thu 18:00-23:30, Fri-Sat 18:00-00:30, Sun 18:00-23:00

The 2013 Kingsland Road room founded by Amit and Aneesh Patel is the original London listening bar, built around a horn-loaded vinyl-only sound system and a Japanese-influenced izakaya menu.

Tip: Bookings open six weeks ahead, the bar stools take walk-ins. Sundays are the quietest, the playing is at its most adventurous.

Spiritland ★ 4.7

££King's CrossMon-Thu 17:00-00:00, Fri 17:00-01:00, Sat 12:00-01:00, Sun 12:00-23:00

The 2016 King's Cross flagship with a custom Living Voice sound system and a programme of guest selectors built the audiophile-bar template that is now copied across the country.

Tip: The Friday all-night selector sessions are bookable, the standard evening is walk-in. Sit on the velvet bench, the speakers are aimed at it.

mu ★ 4.6

£££DalstonWed-Thu 18:00-23:30, Fri-Sat 18:00-00:30, Sun 18:00-23:00

The Kingsland Road sister room to Brilliant Corners from the Patel brothers and Giant Steps adds live performance to the listening-bar formula, with a Japanese-leaning food menu and a tight gig calendar.

Tip: The Wednesday and Sunday live sets are the most adventurous, weekends lean to DJs. Bookings open three weeks out.

Nine Lives ★ 4.7

££BermondseyTue-Wed 17:00-23:00, Thu-Fri 17:00-00:00, Sat 15:00-00:00, Sun-Mon closed

The Holyrood Street basement just off Bermondsey Street pairs a custom-built sound system with a Mexican taco kitchen and a cocktail programme that has won regular World's 50 Best Bars recognition.

Tip: The mezcal flight at the bar is the way in, the booth at the back of the room is the listening spot. No bookings, walk in early.

Late Night Dives in London

The French House ★ 4.7

££SohoMon-Fri 11:30-23:00, Sat 12:00-23:00, Sun 12:00-22:30

The Dean Street pub run by the de Gaulle-era Free French in the 1940s still pours half-pints only at the bar, hangs the Sylvester Stallone portrait behind it, and remains the central Soho writers' room.

Tip: Half pints only, no phones, cash welcomed. The upstairs dining room runs lunch and dinner if the bar gets too tight.

The Coach & Horses ★ 4.4

£SohoMon-Sat 12:00-23:00, Sun 12:00-20:00

The Greek Street Grade II listed pub was the Private Eye crowd's hangout for decades and Jeffrey Bernard's regular, and the room has resisted the redevelopment pressure on every side of it.

Tip: No bookings, walk in, the back room fills first. Order at the bar, the regulars hold the front stools.

Bradley's Spanish Bar ★ 4.5

£FitzroviaMon-Thu 12:00-23:30, Fri-Sat 12:00-00:00, Sun 13:30-22:30

The Hanway Street basement with the late-70s NSM Prestige jukebox and a 20,000 single collection has been the post-Oxford Street lock-in since long before Fitzrovia got expensive, and the rotation still surprises.

Tip: No food beyond crisps and nuts, the jukebox is the entertainment, drop coins in and the regulars stop minding the queue.

The Toucan ★ 4.5

£SohoMon-Tue 16:00-23:00, Wed-Sat 12:00-23:00, Sun closed

The Carlisle Street Guinness specialist just off Soho Square pours the best pint of stout in central London, with a basement room that fills before 18:00 and spills out onto the pavement once it does.

Tip: Guinness only, do not order anything else. The pavement crowd is the bar, the basement is the conversation room.

Garlic & Shots ★ 4.0

££SohoDaily 17:00-01:00

The Frith Street gothic basement runs a cantina menu of garlic-laced everything and 101 flavoured vodkas through a sound system that is mostly metal, and the upstairs garden patio is the unexpected smoking court.

Tip: The garlic beer is the dare drink, the chilli vodka shot is the warning. Skip if you have a date the next day.

The Phoenix ★ 4.0

££MaryleboneMon-Thu 12:00-23:00, Fri-Sat 12:00-00:00, Sun 12:00-22:30

The Cavendish Square pub with the cellar live music room runs cask ales upstairs and a small-stage programme of rock and indie nights downstairs that costs nothing on the door.

Tip: The cellar gigs are free entry, walk down the side stairs and put a fiver in the bucket for the band.

Nightlife in London, FAQ

When is the best time to eat in London?

Peak food season in London is year-round.

What time do people eat in London?

Local dining hours: lunch around 12:30, dinner from 19:30.

How does tipping work in London?

service is typically included; small extra is welcome but not expected.

What is the one dish to try in London?

Ask the next local you meet what they would order. London rewards trust.

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