Welcome to the World''s Clubbing Capital
There are beach clubs, and then there''s Ibiza. For decades, this small Balearic island has set the global standard for what a night out can be — world-class DJs, production values that rival stadium concerts, and a crowd that arrives from every corner of the planet ready to dance until the sun comes up. If you''ve never done it before, it can feel a little intimidating. Don''t worry. I''ve been living here long enough to know the difference between a brilliant Ibiza night and an expensive disappointment — and I''m going to make sure yours is the former.
When Does the Season Start?
The main club season runs from late May through early October, with the real intensity from June to September. Right now in March, the island is beautifully quiet — one of the best times to visit for a completely different side of Ibiza. But if you''re planning ahead for summer, the opening parties in late May are legendary. Ushuaïa, Pacha, Hï Ibiza, DC-10, and Amnesia all throw massive opening nights that sell out fast. Keep an eye on the Ibiza Calendar and grab tickets the moment they drop.
The Five Clubs You Need to Know
Ushuaïa Ibiza — The open-air mega-club at Playa d''en Bossa is as much a spectacle as a night out. With resident DJs like David Guetta and the kind of production that belongs in a stadium, it''s big, flashy, and unapologetically commercial. Everyone should experience it at least once.
Pacha Ibiza — The iconic cherry logo, the old town location, the glamorous crowd. Pacha attracts a well-dressed mixed audience and hosts everyone from Peggy Gou to Honey Dijon. Arrive before midnight if you want to avoid the worst of the queues.
Hï Ibiza — For sheer production quality, nothing on the island quite matches Hï. The Theatre room is a pure sensory experience — lighting and sound that feels almost cinematic. Eric Prydz and Tale Of Us residencies have made it the destination for serious clubbers.
Amnesia — The original superclub. The Terrace at Amnesia is where Balearic Beat was born, and the energy in that room on the right night is still unmatched. The foam parties are a rite of passage, and the Cocoon nights are sacred for techno lovers.
DC-10 — If you''re into deeper, darker music and a crowd there purely for the sound, DC-10 is your place. The Monday Circoloco parties have a raw, no-nonsense energy. Dress down here, not up.
Dress Code: What to Actually Wear
This is where a lot of first-timers get caught out. The general rule is smarter than you think, but nowhere near black-tie. A few firm rules to go by:
- No trainers/sneakers at Pacha, Lío, or the upscale venues — you may simply be turned away at the door
- No sportswear — tracksuits, hoodies, and football shirts won''t get you past the velvet rope anywhere
- For women: you have enormous creative freedom here — elegant, bold, or beach-chic all work brilliantly
- For men: smart casual is your safest bet — a decent shirt, tailored shorts or trousers, and clean shoes
- At DC-10 and underground venues: the opposite applies — going too dressed up will make you look out of place
What Time Should You Actually Arrive?
This is the question everyone gets wrong on their first visit. Ibiza nightlife doesn''t really start until midnight — and even that''s considered early by local standards. Most clubs hit their stride between 1am and 3am, with nights often running until 8 or 9 in the morning. A good rule of thumb: have dinner at 10pm, start at a bar or pre-club around midnight, and head to your main venue around 1:30am.
For pre-drinks, the bars along the West End in San Antonio are lively and budget-friendly. In Ibiza Town, the Marina area and the streets around Dalt Vila have excellent cocktail bars that feed naturally into the club circuit later. Nassau Beach Club and Sunset Ashram are beautiful if you want something more chilled to start the night.
Buy Tickets in Advance — Always
The biggest mistake first-timers make is assuming they can just turn up on the door. During peak summer, this either gets you turned away or hits you with a painful walk-up premium. Buy in advance through official channels or via the Ibiza Calendar listings, where you can compare lineups and prices across every venue before you commit.
VIP tables are worth considering if you''re in a group of four or more. A table with bottle service in a good position often works out surprisingly affordable per head — and you skip the entry queue entirely, which on a busy Saturday is worth its weight in gold.
Getting Around Safely at Night
The Discobus is your best friend. It runs all night along the main routes — Ibiza Town to Playa d''en Bossa to San Antonio and back — and costs just a couple of euros. It stops right outside most of the major venues. Never drink and drive, and be cautious with unlicensed taxis; the official cabs are white with a green stripe and always have a meter.
A Few Things Locals Want You to Know
The island runs on its own time — don''t stress when things start late or run longer than planned. Stay hydrated, especially in summer when it''s genuinely hot at 3am inside a packed room. Keep your belongings secure (inside pockets are your friend, and phone pouches are increasingly popular). And if you have the chance to catch a sunrise set — at DC-10, at a beach chiringuito, or watching the light come up over the sea from Cala Comte — don''t miss it.
That moment, when the sky turns pink and the music is still playing and nobody wants it to end, is what Ibiza is really about. The season is just around the corner. Start planning now.