The VIP room (also called the champagne room, suite, or back room) is where most strip clubs make their money — and where most customers either have a great time or get dramatically ripped off, depending on whether they understand what they're buying. Here's the real guide.
What VIP Actually Buys You
- Privacy. A private or semi-private room, away from the main floor.
- Time. 15 minutes to several hours, depending on the package.
- Dancer's exclusive attention for that time block.
- Sometimes: bottle service, food, more elaborate dance routines.
What VIP does not buy you (despite what some clubs hint): sex, escort services, anything outside the dancer's posted services. If a club implies otherwise, it's a tourist trap or a sting risk.
The Pricing Reality
| Package | Typical Price |
|---|---|
| 15 min in a private booth | $200-$300 |
| 30 min in a suite | $400-$600 |
| 1 hour, dancer + bottle | $600-$1500 |
| "Full night" packages | $2000-$5000+ |
| Champagne room minimums (NYC, Vegas, Miami) | $500-$1000+ before time/dancer |
Always ask for the all-in price before you walk back. "What's the total — room, dancer, drinks?"
The Bottle Trap
The single most common rip-off: clubs that require a "bottle minimum" to enter VIP. A $300 bottle of champagne in VIP is the same $50 bottle being sold elsewhere. Some Vegas clubs hit you with a $1500 minimum on top of the dancer fee.
Defense: Ask before going back. "What does VIP cost in total — does it include drinks?" If they dodge the question or quote "starts at," it'll be way more than you think.
What's Allowed (and What Isn't)
Varies wildly by club, state, and even individual dancer. Universal rules:
- The dancer sets the pace and the rules
- "Hands at your sides" is the default unless she explicitly says otherwise
- No phones, no recording — getting caught means you're done at every club in the city
- Anything beyond a dance is a different conversation entirely — and most clubs will toss you for asking
The smart move: ask the dancer "what's included?" before you pay, not after.
How to Maximize Value
- Pick the right dancer first. Don't pick a dancer based on looks at the rail — pick based on the floor conversation. The one you're vibing with will give a better VIP experience than the one you find most attractive.
- Negotiate time, not price. Asking for a longer block at the same rate often works. Asking to lower the rate doesn't.
- Skip the bottle if you can. If they don't require it, don't buy it.
- Know your budget before you walk back. The room is designed to make you forget what time it is.
- Tip her on top of the package price. $50-$100 extra at the end of a great VIP buys you regular status.
The Worst-Case Scenarios
- "The clock" — some clubs charge by the minute and "lose track." Always confirm exact start/end time before paying.
- Surprise bottle minimums. Asked for a private dance, was told $200, walked back, surprise — there's a $1500 minimum. Walk away. Pay only for what you agreed to upfront.
- Credit card "errors." Always check the total. Some clubs add 20% "service" or surprise fees.
- The "house mom" tip request. If you're asked to tip $50 to "the house mom" for a private experience, that's the club making up extra fees.
When VIP Is Worth It
- You're celebrating something specific (bachelor party, milestone, etc.)
- You've found a dancer you genuinely connect with and want a longer conversation + dance
- The club is reputable and the all-in price is locked in writing
- You can comfortably afford to walk out having spent the full amount
When It's Not
- You're drunk and being upsold
- The club requires a bottle minimum you didn't anticipate
- You're hoping for "more" than what's actually on offer
- You're trying to impress your friends
Related: Strip Club Etiquette 101 · Tipping Guide · Lap Dance Etiquette
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