Berlin / Venue guide
KitKatClub: a guide to dress code, consent, and the sex-positive floor
KitKatClub is Berlin sex-positive nightlife at scale. Dress code matters, consent matters more, and the floor changes sharply by promoter.
Greenroom editorial / June 5, 2026
KitKatClub sits inside the Berlin club map as a sex-positive club complex where the dress code is part of the door. The room matters less as a postcard than as a planning problem: when to arrive, how the door reads you, where the floor actually breathes, and what kind of night the venue is built to hold.
This guide is written for someone already choosing between real listings. Check the current lineup first, then use the notes below to decide whether the room fits the version of the night you want.
The door
Streetwear is the fastest no. The door expects erotic, body-forward, fetish, costume, or club-ready clothing that shows you understand the space.
What works at the door:
- Small groups, or arriving in pairs.
- Knowing the event, promoter, or main room before you reach the front.
- Calm energy in line and a phone that stays in your pocket.
- Cash backup, even when tickets or card payment are listed.
What does not: visible drunkenness, loud group negotiation, filming the queue, or treating the bouncer like a concierge.
When to arrive
Arrive earlier for strict dress-code parties and known promoters. Peak density arrives after 2 AM and the serious floor stretch runs deep into morning.
If the event is ticketed, check whether the ticket has a latest-entry rule. Berlin listings hide a lot of practical information in small print.
Inside
The complex can include pools, several floors, performance corners, and side spaces that are not all dance-floor territory. Consent defines how the room works.
The right move is to learn the room before committing to it. Find water, find coat check, find the quieter edge, then decide where the night wants to live.
What it costs
Cover varies heavily by party and ticket tier. Budget higher than a small club, and keep money aside for water and coat check.
Budget for cloakroom, water, and the trip home. The cheapest night becomes expensive fast when the exit plan is a 6 AM rideshare panic.
Rules
Consent first. No photos. No staring. No touching without clear permission. Staff instructions are not debate prompts.
Berlin rooms run on small social contracts. If staff correct you once, take the correction and keep the night moving.
Why it matters
KitKat matters because it turns permission, exposure, and club music into one shared social code. That code only works when people respect it.
Treat the night less like spectacle and more like participation. The room rewards confidence, patience, and reading other people clearly.