hen party venues london

7 Top Hen Party Venues London for 2026

Planning a celebration? Discover the 7 best hen party venues London has to offer, from activity bars to private hire. Find your perfect spot for 2026!

By Hannah Foster20 min read
7 Top Hen Party Venues London for 2026
Hannah Foster
Hannah Foster

Nottingham & East Midlands Hen Party Specialist

Nottingham-based contributor covering vibrant student nightlife, Robin Hood heritage, and budget-friendly city breaks.

By the time a London hen gets serious, the usual problems show up fast. Half the group wants a big night out, a few want something polished, someone is watching the budget, and the bride says she wants it fun without feeling forced. London can handle all of that, but only if the plan is built in the right order.

Start with the shape of the weekend, then choose the venue. A karaoke room works for one group and falls flat for another. Competitive games are great for mixed friendship groups because they give people something to do straight away, but they can feel full-on if the brief is cocktails and catch-up. The same goes for location. A venue that looks perfect on paper can become a pain if half the group is staying across the city.

It also helps to decide early whether you need a base as well as a night out. If everyone is travelling in, booking one of these London hen party houses often solves more than the sleeping arrangements. It gives you a place for welcome drinks, games, brunch, and the bits in between that usually get overlooked.

That is the point of this guide. It does not just list popular spots. Each venue comes with a practical planning kit, including the kind of group it suits, rough capacity, price band, booking pointers, and nearby ideas, so you can build a night that works in real life, not just on Instagram.

Table of Contents

1. Hen Party Ideas London The Insider Planning Guide for 2026

You've got twelve people in the WhatsApp, three different budgets, two guests arriving by train, and one bride who wants the weekend to feel organised without feeling scheduled to death. That is usually the point where Hen Hideaways' London hen party ideas guide becomes useful. It helps organisers match the stay, the area, and the main activity before the plan turns into a messy chain of separate bookings.

Hen Party Ideas London: The Insider Planning Guide for 2026

What I like here is the planning logic. London works best when the accommodation and the headline event support each other, not when they sit on opposite sides of the city and look good only on a moodboard. A strong hen plan usually needs four things sorted early: where everyone is sleeping, how far the main venue is, what the spend looks like, and what you can do nearby if the group wants to keep going.

Start with the stay, not just the night out

For most groups, the base comes first. If you want space for drinks, getting ready, party games, food deliveries, and a proper catch-up before everyone splits off to shower, change, or nap, browse hen party houses in London before you commit to nightlife.

That order saves hassle later. Central venues can be fun, but they rarely give you much room to breathe, and taxis across London after midnight are where tidy budgets start to drift. A good townhouse or apartment gives the bride a home base and gives the organiser some margin for error if dinner overruns, trains are delayed, or a few people want to call it earlier than the rest.

What works best in London

London rewards organisers who keep one main booking at the centre of the day. Add one easy extra, then leave breathing room.

That matters even more with mixed groups. Some hens want karaoke and cocktails. Others would rather do brunch, a workshop, games, or something low-pressure in the afternoon before the evening starts. If you need options that fit around a venue booking, London hen party activities are easier to assess when you look at them by area, price band, and group energy level, not just by what sounds fun in isolation.

A practical guide should also help with the boring but expensive mistakes. These are usually the ones that catch organisers out:

  • Budget drift: A venue can look reasonable until you add service, minimum spend, taxis, and late food.
  • Poor area pairing: Soho, Shoreditch, Waterloo, Victoria, Hackney, and Canary Wharf all suit different types of hen weekends.
  • Group mismatch: A high-energy activity can flatline if a third of the group really wanted something more relaxed.
  • Overstuffed schedules: Two timed bookings in one day is often enough in London. Three starts to feel like admin.

I also rate guides that make nearby add-ons clear, because that is what turns a list into a working plan. If the main venue only fills two hours, you need to know where to go next without standing on the pavement comparing maps. The same goes for organisers looking for ideas to wow your event guests, especially if the bride wants a weekend that feels thought-through rather than random.

There is a trade-off, and it is better to be honest about it early. London gives you strong nightlife, smart private rentals, and plenty of bookable experiences, but it is not the place to expect a huge country-house setup with lots of outdoor extras in a central postcode. If the brief is city energy, short travel times, and a choice of venues, London is excellent. If the brief is hot tubs, fields, and a big garden, you may need to compromise on location or style.

2. Flight Club Darts

Flight Club is what I'd book for a group that wants instant momentum. Nobody needs coaching, nobody gets stuck watching from the sidelines for long, and the atmosphere does a lot of the work for you from the moment drinks land on the table.

Flight Club Darts

The social darts format is built for hens because it gives the night structure without making it feel corporate or over-planned. Private oches, automatic scoring, table service, and group packages mean the organiser doesn't spend the whole evening herding people. If your group likes a little competition but still wants cocktails and music, it lands well.

Why it works for hen groups

Flight Club has several London locations, including Victoria, Shoreditch, Bloomsbury, and Angel, which makes it one of the easier picks if your group is arriving from different parts of the city. Victoria is particularly handy when you've got out-of-town guests coming in by train and don't want the first hour of the hen spent on directions.

The game time is fixed, which is both a benefit and the main drawback. It keeps the booking tidy, but latecomers won't get that time back. For groups with one famously unreliable friend, book a slot later than you think you need.

If you want to pair it with a full day plan, London hen party activities on Hen Hideaways gives you plenty of nearby add-ons, and if you're looking beyond standard drinks-and-dinner ideas, these ideas to wow your event guests can help with extras.

Planning kit

  • Best group shape: Medium to large groups who want everyone involved quickly.
  • Price band: Package-based. Expect peak times to be more competitive than weekday or daytime bookings.
  • Capacity feel: Works well because private oches naturally create smaller play zones inside a bigger celebration.
  • Booking tip: Pick your location based on where you're eating after, not just where the activity is.
  • Nearby activity match: Dinner in Shoreditch, drinks in Soho, or a station-friendly start in Victoria.

Book Flight Club when the group doesn't know each other that well. Social darts is a very good icebreaker and much easier than trying to force conversation in a loud bar from minute one.

Use Flight Club's hen party booking page for current options, packages, and location details.

3. Lucky Voice

Some groups don't want a venue where the fun depends on competing for space with everyone else in the room. Lucky Voice solves that neatly. You get your own pod, your own guest list, and an activity that works whether the group is full theatre-kid energy or full “I'll sing after two cocktails”.

Lucky Voice

That private-room model is why it stays high on any real shortlist of hen party venues in London. Soho, Holborn, Liverpool Street, and Waterloo all make sense for a central plan, and the food and drink packages keep the admin manageable.

Best for groups that want privacy

Lucky Voice works best when your hen has a mixed-energy crowd. The outgoing people can grab the microphones immediately, while the quieter ones can settle in without feeling like they're performing to a whole venue. It also gives you control over the mood in a way open-floor venues can't.

The main watchout is budgeting. Room hire can sit separately from food and drink packages, and peak sessions can push you towards higher package tiers or minimum-spend expectations. That's normal for London, but it's worth checking line by line before anyone says, “Oh, this looks cheap.”

According to Tagvenue's London hen venue listings, private-hire formats in London come with very different spend bands depending on layout and capacity. Restaurants average £1,125 minimum spend for 25 to 35 guests, dining rooms average £750 for 25 to 30, and function rooms, pubs, and lounges tend to sit around £400 to £500 for 30 to 70 guests. That's useful context when you're comparing a karaoke pod to a broader private-space booking.

Planning kit

  • Best group shape: Small to medium groups, or larger groups split across pods.
  • Price band: Moderate to premium, depending on slot, room hire, and package layer.
  • Capacity feel: More intimate than big shared-activity venues.
  • Booking tip: Confirm whether your package includes room hire, drinks, and food, or just one part.
  • Nearby activity match: Soho dinner, Liverpool Street bars, or Waterloo for a theatre-adjacent plan.

If your group wants ideas before or after karaoke, Hen Hideaways' London hen do activity guide is a good companion browse.

For direct booking details, head to Lucky Voice hen and stag packages.

4. Bounce

Half the group has landed on time, the bride wants something fun straight away, and nobody wants to lose an hour hovering around a bar waiting for late arrivals. Bounce solves that better than a dressed-up lounge booking. People can join the game as they come in, the room already has energy, and the night starts without a big reset.

Bounce

It works well for hens who want a social activity but do not want anything too technical or performance-heavy. Ping pong is easy to pick up, so the group gets the shared-event feel without the awkward learning curve you can get with some competitive venues. Bounce also gives organisers a few ways to shape the night, from standard table bookings to beer pong, brunch sessions, and more structured hosted formats.

For groups that need movement and momentum

What Bounce does well is keep the evening from going flat. If you have a mixed group, a Games Guru or hosted session can carry the pace and save the organiser from having to fill every silence or shepherd people from one part of the night to another. I usually rate it strongest for groups who want chatter, drinks, and activity happening at the same time, rather than a single focal event.

The trade-off is noise and pace. Good photos are possible, but this is not the venue I would choose for a polished, glam-first hen. It suits playful groups better than groups who mainly want to sit down, catch up properly, and hear every conversation.

A smart format is Bounce first, dinner second. You get the high-energy part of the night while everyone is fresh, then move somewhere calmer once the group has loosened up.

Planning kit

  • Best group shape: Medium to large groups, especially if not everyone already knows each other.
  • Price band: Mid-range, with better value in daytime and off-peak slots than prime weekend evenings.
  • Capacity feel: Open and active, with enough room for groups that hate being pinned to one table all night.
  • Booking tip: Decide early whether you want simple table access or a hosted package. That choice changes the atmosphere, the pacing, and the budget.
  • Nearby activity match: Strong for dinner-and-drinks plans around Farringdon or Old Street, or as the active part of a broader London hen party ideas guide.

Check current packages and formats at Bounce group bookings.

5. Hijingo

Hijingo is what I'd call the easiest “one big event” venue on this list. If your group wants something theatrical, seated, social, and a bit ridiculous in the best way, it's a strong answer. You book a show slot, people arrive, drinks turn up, and the evening already has shape.

The immersive bingo format matters here. Traditional bingo sounds mild. Hijingo isn't mild. It leans hard into sound, lighting, DJs, prizes, and a full-production feel that makes the night feel like a proper occasion rather than just another bar booking.

The strongest one-venue night

This is one of the best hen party venues in London for mixed ages because everyone can take part without needing to be sporty or massively extrovert. The seated format also means the group stays together, which isn't always guaranteed once a hen night spreads across multiple bars.

Its main limitation is timing. Show slots are fixed, and late arrivals will miss rounds. If your group tends to run behind, build in more travel buffer than you think you need, especially if people are coming from accommodation outside Shoreditch.

Planning kit

  • Best group shape: Mixed-age groups or hens who want one polished main event.
  • Price band: Mid to premium depending on slot, brunch versus evening, and package inclusions.
  • Capacity feel: Good for keeping everyone together at one table or section.
  • Booking tip: Treat it like a theatre booking, not a casual bar meet-up. Tell everyone the actual arrival time, not the optimistic one.
  • Nearby activity match: Shoreditch bars, dinner nearby, or a full East London night.

A second planning plus is that it removes pressure from the organiser. You're not creating the entertainment. You're buying into one that's already built. For many hens, that's worth a lot.

For booking information and current hen options, use Hijingo's hen and stag page.

6. Ballie Ballerson

Ballie Ballerson only works when the bride is enthusiastic about playful chaos. If she is, it's a very funny night. If she isn't, don't try to sell it as “quirky”. This is an adult ball-pit cocktail bar, and the whole point is that it doesn't take itself seriously.

Ballie Ballerson

That's also why it works so well for certain groups. It's visual, social, and easy to fold into a bigger night out. Shoreditch and Soho both suit hens who want to do an activity first, then continue elsewhere without a complicated transfer across town.

Best when the brief is playful and chaotic

Ballie Ballerson is strongest as part of a bigger plan, not necessarily the full plan by itself. Timed ball-pit sessions and brunch bundles are fun, but most groups won't want to spend an entire long evening there unless the bride is especially into novelty nightlife.

The venue can feel crowded at busy times, and it's not the pick for anyone wanting a proper sit-down catch-up. But if your group likes silly photos, strong cocktails, loud music, and a quick switch into party mode, it delivers.

Planning kit

  • Best group shape: Small to medium groups with a high-energy, late-night mood.
  • Price band: Moderate to premium depending on brunch, party package, and session timing.
  • Capacity feel: Better for groups happy to rotate between pit time, drinks, and dancing.
  • Booking tip: Pair it with dinner before, not after. People usually want food first and chaos second.
  • Nearby activity match: Soho bars, Shoreditch clubbing, karaoke, or cocktail stops.

Don't choose Ballie Ballerson because it looks good on social media. Choose it because the bride actually likes that kind of venue.

For current access options and packages, visit Ballie Ballerson's booking page.

7. Fairgame

Fairgame is one of the better modern group venues for hens who want something competitive without it feeling too athletic. The fairground concept keeps people moving, talking, and laughing without requiring anyone to be especially good at anything, which is exactly what you want in a mixed group.

Fairgame

This is also a practical choice when you need food, drinks, and activity under one roof. The combination of games, bars, DJs, and street-food partners makes it easier to keep the group in one place without the night feeling static.

For competitive groups who want movement

Fairgame's structured gaming sessions are great for icebreaking. If your hen includes school friends, uni friends, work friends, siblings, and plus-ones all meeting for the first time, games remove a lot of awkwardness. People get something to react to immediately.

The variable part is pricing. Different zones, dates, and private-area options can mean final quotes vary more than at a simpler package venue. That doesn't make it bad value. It just means you need to ask the right questions early.

The wider budget context matters here. Party Houses' hen party statistics reports the average UK hen party cost at £187 per person in 2024 for accommodation, activities, and nightlife, up from £157 in 2022, with a typical group size of 13. That implies roughly £2,431 per group before transport, food, drink, and extras, which is exactly why clear package pricing and minimum-spend visibility matter when you're comparing venues like Fairgame.

Planning kit

  • Best group shape: Medium and larger groups, especially if not everyone knows each other.
  • Price band: Flexible, but quote-led for some hires and private areas.
  • Capacity feel: Strong for groups that want zones and movement rather than one table all night.
  • Booking tip: Ask whether your quote covers gaming only, a reserved area, or food and drink too.
  • Nearby activity match: Canary Wharf if you want a contained, polished district night. City location if you want easier onward plans.

Go direct for availability and venue options at Fairgame Canary Wharf.

Top 7 London Hen Party Venues, Quick Comparison

Option Complexity 🔄 Resources & Booking ⚡ Expected Outcome 📊 Ideal Use Cases 💡 Key Advantages ⭐
Hen Party Ideas London: The Insider Planning Guide for 2026 Low, curated toolkit simplifies planning Moderate, time to compare/book; variable costs depending on venue Cohesive, polished weekend itinerary; reduced research time 📊 Full hen weekends; organisers who want an end-to-end planning toolkit Verified venues, transparent pricing, sample itineraries, neighbourhood tips ⭐
Flight Club Darts Medium, structured activity with set slots Moderate, online booking; peak slots sell out early Lively, competitive group play with clear flow and engagement 📊 Medium–large groups seeking an active, social bar experience Auto-scoring oches, highlight reels, multiple central sites, group packages ⭐
Lucky Voice Low–Medium, private pod logistics Moderate, room hire often separate; straightforward packages Intimate, managed karaoke sessions with controlled energy 📊 Mixed-energy groups or those preferring private rooms Private pods, clear per-person pricing, hen/stag add-ons ⭐
Bounce Medium, hosted sessions & equipment Moderate–High, area hire, Games Gurus, peak pricing High-energy, participatory experience; active and social 📊 Active groups wanting games and DJs; daytime/off-peak value seekers Multiple ping-pong formats, hosted activities, good off-peak deals ⭐
Hijingo Low, fixed show format Moderate, timed tickets; some menus require enquiry Entertaining, seated spectacle that keeps groups together 📊 Groups wanting a one-venue show with prizes and brunch or evening options High-production bingo, DJs, dedicated hen/stag packages ⭐
Ballie Ballerson Low, timed sessions, simple access model Moderate, timed tickets; busy peak periods Playful, highly Instagrammable experience with cocktails 📊 Late-night or experiential hens seeking photo-friendly fun Unique ball-pit concept, straightforward booking, signature cocktails ⭐
Fairgame Medium–High, multi-zone coordination and quotes High, minimum spends, area quotes, larger logistical needs Competitive, variety-driven event that encourages mingling 📊 Large groups or hires wanting multiple games and semi/private areas Large venues, multiple bookable zones, street-food bars and DJs ⭐

Bring Your London Hen Party to Life

Friday night, half the group is already in London, two are delayed on trains, and the bride still thinks dinner is at 8 when the activity starts at 7:30. The hen weekends that still feel fun at that point are the ones built around smart choices made early. One area. One main booking. Clear timings. Enough breathing room that nobody spends the day herding people across Zone 1.

Use the venue shortlist as a planning kit, not just inspiration. Capacity affects whether you need a private room or can book standard tickets. Price band affects whether dinner comes before or after the headline activity. Booking format matters too. Fixed-ticket venues are easier for flaky groups. Minimum-spend venues suit organisers who are confident on numbers and want more flexibility once everyone arrives.

Neighbourhood choice does a lot of the heavy lifting. Shoreditch works well for groups who want cocktails, late bars, and a stronger party feel. Victoria and Waterloo are easier for mixed-age groups, earlier starts, and simple travel. Canary Wharf can be surprisingly efficient if the group cares more about a polished venue plan than wandering between bars. I usually advise organisers to pick one pocket of London and stay loyal to it for the day.

Budget needs spelling out early. As noted earlier, London hen costs have climbed in recent years, and the gap between off-peak and Saturday night pricing can be painful. Ask every venue about deposits, minimum spends, service charge, and what happens if headcount drops after payment. That one step saves more arguments than any colour-coded spreadsheet.

A few habits make the whole weekend easier. Get firm RSVPs before any non-refundable booking. Put payment deadlines in writing. Keep one organiser as the venue contact. If your group has 10 or more, avoid plans that rely on walking in anywhere popular after 6pm.

The strongest plans are built backwards from the anchor booking. Start with the venue, then choose a nearby hotel, then add dinner, brunch, or a low-effort second stop that fits the bride's pace. That is usually the difference between a hen do that looks good in the group chat and one that runs well on the day.

Hen Hideaways is a useful starting point if you want the practical bits in one place. Browse Hen Hideaways for verified hen-friendly London stays, activity ideas, and planning tools that help you book a weekend that fits your group, your budget, and the bride's actual style.