Belgrade nightlife

Inside VVIP · Destinations

Belgrade

Floating river clubs, Balkan stamina and a fixer on the ground — Belgrade parties until sunrise.

10 experiences3 ways to partyPlanned end to end

Why Belgrade

Belgrade runs on its rivers. The splavovi — floating clubs moored along the Sava, now clustered at Sajamski Kej by the Belgrade Fair — set the tempo, while Savamala, Dorćol and the cobbled bars of Skadarlija carry the warm-up. A Belgrade bachelor party here means real range, from riverside dancefloors to late kafane, and a nightlife scene that genuinely doesn't quit before dawn. We handle the logistics so the group just shows up.

Choose your night

Three ways to take on Belgrade.

Pick the occasion and your concierge builds the rest — venues, tables, transport and hosts, night by night.

Good to know

Planning Belgrade — the basics.

Why choose Belgrade for a group party trip?

Few European capitals match Belgrade's combination of all-night stamina, low cost of indulgence and a nightlife format you won't find elsewhere — the splavovi river clubs. The city is built for groups, with everything from yacht parties and villa stays to nightclubs and strip clubs within easy reach. Our concierge ties it together so a stag, hen or mixed crew lands with venues, tables and transport already locked.

When is the best time to go to Belgrade for nightlife?

The summer window from May to October is peak, when the river clubs are open and the action moves onto the water. June and July are the liveliest months, with the warmest nights and the fullest splav lineup along the Sava. Come in winter and you'll still party, but the scene shifts indoors to year-round clubs rather than the famous floating ones.

Where is Belgrade's nightlife actually concentrated?

The headline acts are the splavovi, the floating clubs strung along the Sava — since 2024 most have relocated upstream to Sajamski Kej, by the Belgrade Fair. For bars and the warm-up, Savamala is the edgy riverside district, Dorćol holds the higher-end cocktail spots, and Skadarlija is the old bohemian street for traditional kafane. We map a route across them so no time is wasted on cabs and queues.

How do groups get to Belgrade and get around?

You'll fly into Nikola Tesla Airport (BEG), about 20 km from the centre — a fixed-price taxi runs roughly 25 to 30 minutes door to door. Within the city, distances are short and public transport is free, but for a group we arrange private transfers and limousine pickups so everyone moves together. The riverside clubs are close enough that a planned car run between venues keeps the night seamless.

What should groups know about safety, payment and entry?

Belgrade is one of Europe's safer party capitals and welcoming to stag and hen crews, though basic discretion at club doors goes a long way. The local currency is the dinar; cash is widely used and useful for smaller venues, while cards work at most larger clubs and hotels. Higher-end splavovi and clubs expect a smart-casual look, and table bookings are the cleanest way for a group to get in — which is exactly what our concierge secures in advance.

Tell us the dates. We'll run your Belgrade nights.