Strip club VIP pricing is one of those things nobody explains to you. You walk in, the dancer mentions a "VIP package," and there's a sudden choice between $500 and $2,000 with no menu and no clarity. So what's actually different at each tier? This is what your money buys in 2026 — and what it doesn't.

How VIP pricing actually works

Most clubs in 2026 structure VIP around three things: time, dancer attention, and drinks. The package price bundles these in different ratios, and almost every club's tiers come down to multiples of the same base unit (typically 15 or 30 minutes).

That base unit varies wildly by city. A 30-minute VIP unit in a mid-tier Vegas room is around $400–$600. The same 30 minutes in a top-tier Manhattan room can run $800–$1,200 before tips. Drink minimums and "bottle service" stack on top of the package price and are usually where unexpected costs come from.

The $500 tier — quick room, single dancer

The entry tier almost always gets you:

What it doesn't get you: bottle service, multiple dancers, premium seating, or any of the "ultra-VIP" backroom experience. This is a perfectly fine option for someone who wants a focused experience for half an hour and doesn't need theater around it.

What to actually spend at this tier: $500 package + $100–150 tip = ~$650 total. If the dancer was great, more.

The $1,000 tier — extended room, drinks included

At the middle tier, things expand:

This tier is the sweet spot at most clubs. You're paying enough that the staff invests in your experience but not enough to be funneled into the room they push hard. The dancer-time-to-cost ratio is the best.

What to actually spend: $1,000 package + $200–300 tip = ~$1,250 total. Bartender and waitress tips on top.

The $2,000+ tier — bottle, multiple dancers, real time

The high tier is a different category of experience:

This tier is theater. It's not just about the dancers — it's about being treated as the main event by the staff for the entire evening. For bachelor parties, big celebrations, or business entertaining, it can absolutely be worth it.

What to actually spend: $2,000 package + $500–800 tip across multiple dancers + bartender/waitress + bottle gratuity = ~$3,000–$3,500 total. Higher in major cities.

What's NEVER included at any tier

This part trips up newcomers. None of the tiers, ever, include:

The hidden costs that surprise people

The package price is rarely the actual price. Be ready for:

The math that actually matters

The cleanest way to think about VIP value is dollars per dancer-minute. At $500 for 30 minutes with one dancer, that's $16.67/minute before tip. At $1,000 for 60 minutes, $16.67/minute again. At $2,000 for 90 minutes with two dancers averaged, you're closer to $11/minute. The high tier is genuinely more efficient per minute — but you're committing more total dollars to capture that efficiency.

If you'd rather skip the in-person economics entirely, the equivalent experience online — direct, private, repeated — is a strong relationship with a creator. Our creator directory has performers with cam-private rates, live show schedules, and custom availability that work out to a fraction of in-club VIP for similar dedicated attention.

The bottom line

VIP pricing tiers aren't really about more content — they're about more time, more theater, and more bundling. The $500 tier is fine for focused 30 minutes. The $1,000 tier is usually the best value. The $2,000+ tier is an experience purchase and only worth it for a real occasion. Whatever tier you pick, the tip on top is what determines whether the dancer remembers you. Always budget for that separately.