Best house clubs in London (and how the door, tickets and last trains work)

Inside fabric, the long-running London nightclub in Farringdon
Dimi / CC BY 2.0

The short answer

London has one of the deepest club scenes on earth, but it's spread across a huge city and the listings change weekly. For house specifically, the dependable rooms are Phonox in Brixton (a single-room, resident-led house club), fabric in Farringdon (the institution, with a Funktion-One Room One), FOLD in Canning Town (a 24-hour, artist-led warehouse), plus Ministry of Sound, XOYO, the giant Drumsheds and the terrace at Studio 338. Buy tickets in advance on Resident Advisor or DICE, expect a relaxed-but-real door, and plan your route home — the Night Tube only runs on Friday and Saturday.

Who it's for: visitors who want real house and underground dance music, not a West End bottle-service bar. Budget: roughly £15–35 entry (more for marquee names), drinks are London-expensive. How to get in: book ahead; the best nights and smaller rooms sell out.

The clubs worth your night

Line-ups rotate constantly, so always confirm tonight's programme on RA London before you travel across town. As long-running anchors for house:

ClubAreaBest forGood to know
PhonoxBrixton (south)House & disco, long resident setsOne room, one focus; quality sound, resident-led Saturdays
fabricFarringdon (central)House, techno & bass across three roomsThe institution; Room One's body-kick sound system is legendary
FOLDCanning Town (east)Underground house & techno, marathon nightsIndustrial 24-hour licence, no-photos, community feel
Ministry of SoundElephant & CastleClassic house & big bookingsFour rooms, a serious sound system, house heritage
XOYOShoreditch (east)Curated residencies, house & beyond13-week resident series are a London signature
DrumshedsTottenham (north)Huge house/techno takeovers (Defected, Glitterbox)A vast former gasworks; festival-scale crowds
Studio 338Greenwich (south-east)Terrace house & melodic in summerOutdoor terrace; daytime-into-night parties

For disco and classic house specifically, watch for Glitterbox and Defected events (often at Drumsheds or Ministry), and the city's roaming warehouse parties advertised on RA.

How the London door works

London doors are friendlier than Berlin's, but the basics still matter:

  • Buy in advance. Smaller rooms (Phonox, FOLD) and big-name nights sell out on RA/DICE; on-the-door sales are limited or non-existent.
  • Bring photo ID. Most clubs are 18+, but many ask for ID regardless of age — a passport or UK/EU photo card; some won't accept a photo of your ID.
  • It's contactless. The UK is heavily card- and phone-based; you rarely need cash, though a little for the cloakroom is handy.
  • Be relaxed at the door. Big lairy groups and obvious stag/hen parties get knocked back at the underground rooms; go in a small group.
  • Respect no-photo floors. FOLD and several others ask you to keep your phone down — it keeps the room free.

Getting home (the London catch)

  • The Night Tube runs on Friday and Saturday nights on the Victoria, Central, Jubilee, Northern and Piccadilly lines — perfect for fabric (Farringdon), Phonox (Brixton, Victoria line) and Ministry (Elephant & Castle).
  • Night buses (the N-prefixed routes) cover the whole city every night, including to Tottenham (Drumsheds) and the east.
  • For midweek or far-flung warehouses, budget for a licensed taxi or ride-hail; minicabs must be pre-booked.

Keep reading

New to the sound? Read deep house vs tech house and the history of house music. Comparing club capitals? Our Berlin house clubs guide breaks down that famously strict door, and Amsterdam is a short hop for a weekend. Planning a festival around your trip? See the house & techno festival calendar.

The HOUSE ATLAS Desk
  • House & club-culture editor

On-the-ground coverage of the world's house scene — clubs, festivals, the sound.