Planning a bachelor party usually falls to the best man, and the strip club portion is where most plans go sideways. Either the night runs over budget, the groom ends up uncomfortable, the group gets kicked out, or one guy makes the whole crew look bad. None of that has to happen.

Here's how to organize a strip club night that the groom actually enjoys, the rest of the group doesn't regret, and the staff doesn't blacklist.

Step 1: Talk to the Groom Before You Book

This is the single most important thing and it's the step most best men skip. Some grooms genuinely don't want a strip club night. Some only want it if specific limits are set. Some are completely on board.

Ask directly:

You're not killing the surprise — you're making sure the surprise lands. A groom who feels ambushed at a strip club isn't having fun, and one bad photo on someone's phone can blow up a marriage before it starts.

Step 2: Pick the Right Club

Not all clubs are equal. For a bachelor party you want:

Avoid clubs with persistent complaints about overpriced champagne rooms, aggressive upselling, or suspicious credit-card charges. Those are the classic bachelor-party traps.

Step 3: Call Ahead and Book

Walking into a busy club with a group of 8 on a Saturday is asking to be seated badly or turned away. Call 48 hours ahead minimum. Ask:

If they have a bachelor host or manager, get their name and ask for them when you arrive. You'll get better service and they'll watch out for the group.

Step 4: Set the Budget — and Communicate It

Strip clubs are where casual budgets die. A typical bachelor party at a mid-tier club runs $150–$400 per person for a few hours. High-end clubs can hit $600+ easily, especially if VIP rooms are involved.

Before you go:

Bring cash. A lot of cash. Tipping is in singles, fives, and tens, and most clubs charge an ATM convenience fee that's brutal. Pre-pull what you'll need. Our strip club tipping guide has a full breakdown of who to tip and how much.

Step 5: Eat First. Pace the Drinks.

Sloppy bachelor parties are bad bachelor parties. The groom doesn't remember it, half the group is in the bathroom by midnight, and the dancers don't want to deal with you. Make sure everyone reads our dress code guide before the night too — getting turned away at the door kills the momentum.

Have a real meal before you go. Drink water in between rounds. Pace yourselves — a club night is a marathon, not a sprint. The crew that arrives at 9pm and leaves at 11pm because everyone got wrecked is wasting the bachelor package.

Step 6: Know the Etiquette

Most strip club rules are common sense, but bachelor parties are where they get broken. Quick refresher (and read our full etiquette guide for more):

Step 7: Manage the Drunk Friend

Every bachelor party has one guy who can become a problem. Decide in advance who's babysitting him. If someone gets aggressive with staff or dancers, the group leaves — that's the rule. Bouncers won't just kick him out, they'll kick all of you out, and a refused-entry incident follows clubs across cities.

Step 8: Get the Groom Home Safe

End the night with a plan. Pre-book rideshares or have a designated driver. Don't let the groom walk home alone, and absolutely don't let him drive. The "leaving the strip club at 2am" segment is where bachelor party stories turn into bachelor party tragedies.

What to Skip

A few things to actively avoid:

The Quiet Truth

The best bachelor parties at strip clubs are the ones where the group spends a couple of hours, tips well, treats the staff like humans, gets the groom a few well-aimed lap dances, and leaves before anyone gets sloppy. They're not the all-night ragers. The all-night ragers are the ones with the disaster stories.

If the groom and his partner are open to it, an OnlyFans or cam-show subscription as a bachelor gift is also a thing now — lower-stakes, fully private, and doesn't require Ubering anyone home. Browse our creator directory if that's the route you want to take instead.

Whatever you pick, the best man's job is the same: deliver a great night, not a memorable disaster.