Location: Hanover Square, Mayfair
Music: Hip-Hop, RnB, Commercial
Opening Nights: Thursday – Saturday
Dress Code: Smart & stylish. No sportswear, no trainers.
Tables From: £1,500
There are exclusive clubs in London, and then there is Tape. Tucked behind an unmarked door on Hanover Square, this is the venue that genuinely operates on a different level of access. You will not find Tape advertising on Instagram. You will not stumble across it on a Friday night walk through Mayfair. It exists for people who already know about it, and that deliberate invisibility is precisely what makes it magnetic.
Walking Into Tape London
The entrance sets the tone immediately. There is no velvet rope theatre, no queue snaking down the pavement. A discreet doorway, a brief exchange with security who clearly know every face they are expecting, and then a descent into one of London's most intimate nightclub interiors. The staircase is narrow, deliberately so. It funnels you downward into a space that feels closer to a private recording studio lounge than a traditional club.
The room itself is compact, dark, and meticulously designed. Rich leather seating, low ceilings that trap the bass, and a sound system that was clearly specified by someone who actually cares about music. Every surface absorbs light. The overall impression is of being inside something private, something not meant for the general public. That impression is accurate.
The Atmosphere and Crowd
Tape attracts a crowd that skews heavily toward the music industry, professional athletes, and actors who want to be off-duty. This is not a place where people come to be seen. It is a place where people come specifically because they will not be photographed, will not be tagged, and will not end up on someone's story. The phone-away culture here is real and enforced, and it creates an atmosphere that is almost impossible to replicate elsewhere in London.
On a good night, you might recognise several faces from music, sport, or film. But the unwritten rule is clear: nobody acknowledges it. The energy is relaxed, convivial, conspiratorial. Groups lean into each other across tables. The dancefloor is small but intense. People actually dance here, properly, because the self-consciousness that plagues most Mayfair clubs simply does not exist at Tape.
The Music
The sound system at Tape deserves special mention. In a city where most clubs treat audio as an afterthought, Tape invested seriously in acoustic engineering. The bass is physical without being punishing. The mids are warm. You can feel the music in your chest, but you can still hold a conversation at your table. The DJs lean heavily into hip-hop, RnB, and afrobeats, with sets that feel curated rather than algorithmic. Expect deep cuts alongside the anthems. The musical knowledge in the DJ booth matches the musical knowledge in the crowd.
What Makes Tape Unique
Every club in Mayfair claims exclusivity. Tape actually delivers it. The capacity is deliberately kept low. The membership list is genuinely vetted. And the result is an atmosphere that feels less like a nightclub and more like a very well-connected house party. The staff are exceptional too, striking that rare balance between attentive and invisible. Your table will be looked after without anyone hovering.
The other factor that separates Tape from competitors like Libertine or Cirque Le Soir is the absence of spectacle. There are no performers, no LED shows, no theatrical elements. The entertainment is the room itself, the people in it, and the music. It is nightlife stripped back to its most essential ingredients, and it works precisely because every ingredient is best-in-class.
What to Expect
Tables at Tape start from £1,500, which places it at the higher end of London's nightlife pricing. But the minimum spend reflects the exclusivity of the space. You are not paying for fireworks or a stage show. You are paying for access to a room that most people in London will never enter. Bottles are premium, service is seamless, and the table experience feels personal rather than transactional.
Dress code is smart and stylish but not stiff. Think designer, think considered, but leave the three-piece suit at home. The crowd dresses like people who spend real money on clothes but do not need to prove it. For more detail, read our guide to what to wear at London clubs.
Tape is not the club you go to for a big, loud, theatrical night out. It is the club you go to when you want to feel like you have been let into something that most people do not even know exists.
Who Tape London Is Best For
- Music industry professionals and creatives
- High-net-worth individuals who value genuine privacy
- Groups who want an intimate, high-quality night without spectacle
- Anyone who has outgrown the flashier side of Mayfair nightlife
If you are visiting London and want the celebrity club experience, check our guide to celebrity clubs in London. Tape sits at the very top of that list, but venues like Cirque Le Soir and The London Reign offer a completely different flavour of high-end nightlife.
Is Tape London Worth It?
If exclusivity, privacy, and world-class music are your priorities, Tape London is unmatched in London. It is not the right choice if you want visual spectacle, a large dancefloor, or a party atmosphere driven by performers and production. But for those who understand what it offers, Tape is the gold standard. The £1,500 minimum spend buys you entry into a genuinely rarefied world, and the experience justifies every penny.
For first-time visitors to London's luxury nightlife scene, our complete guide to London luxury nightlife covers everything you need to know before booking.