Tonight in New York City
What's happening right now
Plan your nights before you land — browse upcoming events by area, genre, and venue.
The East Village has been NYC's bohemian nightlife hub for decades, with legendary dive bars, intimate live music venues, and a gritty, authentic vibe.
Read →Bushwick is Brooklyn's underground nightlife scene, home to warehouse clubs, art-bar hybrids, and some of NYC's most adventurous nightlife.
Read →The Lower East Side is one of NYC's most vibrant nightlife neighborhoods, packed with indie bars, live music venues, and underground clubs.
Read →Weekly picks from people who actually live the scene
Unsubscribe anytime
New York City nightlife is arguably the most legendary in the world — and the most diverse. From the high-energy megaclubs of Manhattan to the underground warehouse raves of Brooklyn, the cutting-edge Bronx Latin scene, and the eclectic bars of Queens, NYC has it all. With no statewide last-call curfew like California and a culture that genuinely never sleeps, NYC nightlife operates at a different scale from any other American city.
Brooklyn is the epicenter of the underground. House of Yes in Bushwick throws the city's most inventive themed parties. Avant Gardner and its sub-venue Brooklyn Mirage host festival-scale outdoor events in summer. Output, though closed, defined an era — and the venues that replaced it (Nowadays, Bossa Nova Civic Club) continue Brooklyn's commitment to serious dance music. Manhattan still has its landmarks: Marquee and 1 OAK for the celebrity circuit, Le Bain at The Standard for rooftop views, and Webster Hall — America's oldest nightclub brand — for a mix of everything from EDM to Latin nights.
NYC nightlife has no legal closing time — bars can serve until 4 AM, and some after-hours venues run past dawn. The subway runs 24/7 (though weekend night service is unreliable), making it the rare city where you don't need a rideshare to get home at 3 AM. Dress codes are relaxed compared to LA or Miami — the Brooklyn underground has zero dress code; Manhattan clubs vary by venue. Cover charges range from $10–$30 at most clubs; major headliner events at Brooklyn Mirage can run $40–$80+.
Friday and Saturday are peak. Thursday is the insider's night — local DJs, smaller crowds, better conversations. Sunday sessions (particularly in Brooklyn) have their own devoted following. The summer months bring outdoor festival season: Governors Ball, Electric Zoo, and Brooklyn Mirage's season opener all draw massive crowds. Winter is underground season — the best warehouse and loft parties happen November through February when promoters don't have to compete with outdoor events.