
Infernos Nightclub London: A Complete Guide to Clapham's Iconic Disco — Tickets, Booths and the Night Itself
6 min read

Raj Varma
Author
Travel & Tourism Expert Ex-Thomas Cook, Kuoni, Times of India & Travel Triangle.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Key Highlights
- Where and how to arrive: 146 Clapham High Street (SW4 7UH), a two-minute walk from Clapham Common Underground.
- The sound: pop, retro and unapologetic "cheese" — 80s and 90s party hits, noughties anthems and sing-along top 40.
- When it runs: Friday and Saturday nights, roughly 10–11pm until around 4am; private hire midweek.
- The rules: strictly over-21s, original photo ID only, and a no-single-entry policy — arrive as a pair or group.
- The smart move: book an advance ticket, or a booth or party package, for a reserved base and priority entry.
Infernos nightclub London is Clapham's long-running disco at 146 Clapham High Street, open Friday and Saturday nights with two carpeted floors of pop, retro and party anthems, podiums, booths and private karaoke rooms. It is an over-21s, smart-casual venue best suited to groups and celebrations rather than a serious electronic dance crowd. The easiest way to enjoy it is to buy an advance ticket — or book a booth or party package for a guaranteed base and priority entry.
Some London clubs trade on a velvet rope and a guest list you will never quite crack. Infernos trades on the opposite: carpeted floors, a giant disco ball, a midnight balloon drop and a room full of people who came to sing every word. For more than twenty years, Infernos nightclub London has been Clapham's reliable answer to where to actually have fun on a Saturday.
Part of the pull is the lore. The Sex Pistols recorded on the site now occupied by its karaoke rooms, the upstairs floor hosted that dancing scene from The Inbetweeners, and Margot Robbie has named it a favourite London haunt. None of that is why people return — they return because the night delivers.
This guide covers what a night here is actually like, who it suits and who should look elsewhere, the entry and booth options compared side by side, what it all costs in 2026, and how to get in smoothly and home safely. By the end you will know exactly how to do Infernos well.
What is Infernos, and is a night here worth it?
A night at Infernos is worth it if you want unfiltered fun over polish. This is a club in Clapham built for dancing, sing-alongs and celebrations — not for bottle-service posing or a credible DJ-led electronic set. The music runs from 80s and 90s party hits to noughties anthems and current top 40, played loud across two carpeted floors with podiums made for the spotlight.
Worth it if…
- You are planning a birthday, hen, stag or any group celebration — the venue caters to parties of two to nearly 2,000.
- You would rather sing along to songs you already know than decode an unfamiliar DJ set.
- You like the idea of carpeted floors, balloon drops and full-volume nostalgia over a minimalist warehouse.
Not ideal if…
- You are after underground house or techno and a serious soundsystem — Brixton and Shoreditch serve that better.
- You want a quiet, conversation-led evening; this is loud and busy by design.
- You are travelling solo and hoping to enter alone — the no-single-entry policy means you will need at least one other person with you.
If you are still weighing it against other venues, our roundup of the best nightclubs in London puts Infernos in context alongside the city's grander and more underground options.
Insider reality check: it is gloriously unpolished
- The carpets are sticky by 1am, the décor leans fun-fair rather than design hotel, and that is the point.
- The crowd skews celebratory and dressed-up rather than scene-y; expect sashes, fancy dress and a lot of singing.
- Arrive expecting a sleek Mayfair lounge and you will be disappointed; arrive expecting a party and it rarely misses.
What a night at Infernos is actually like
Expect two carpeted floors, podiums, a midnight balloon drop and private karaoke rooms wrapped around a packed, sing-along dance floor. A night at Infernos nightclub London plays out across a dual-floor, multi-room venue with a rooftop terrace for a breather, two sets of podiums for the spotlight, and VIP booths that keep a group together through the night.
The set pieces are part of the appeal. There is the midnight balloon drop, regular themed parties and takeovers, and the Forbidden Nights revue — a show blending dance, acrobatics, fire and aerial acts that lands well with hen and birthday groups. During major tournaments, the club also runs a giant-screen fanzone pop-up, complete with a live brass band, for the World Cup '26 summer.
Here is what the layout gives you:
- Two carpeted dance floors and multiple rooms, plus a rooftop terrace to cool down.
- Two sets of podiums for the spotlight, and VIP booths to keep your group in one place.
- Private karaoke suites where you can pre-order drinks and belt out the classics.
- A midnight balloon drop, regular themed takeovers, and the Forbidden Nights revue for celebration groups.
The themed nights are a real draw — browse more of London's themed nightlife experiences for similar one-off party formats across the city.
Entry, tickets and booking options compared
Infernos sells entry in timed tiers, with optional Q-Jump priority and booth or party packages layered on top. Advance tickets are less than the door price and get you in faster; timed tickets carry different price points and limited allocations to manage the queue. On-the-night entry is usually available unless an event is capped or sold out, and table, booth and karaoke bookings all still require an entry ticket.
| Option | Access & timing | Price guide (2026, GBP + USD) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Early Admission ticket | Cheapest tier; standard queue; arrive before peak | From ~£8–£12 / $10–$16 | Arriving early and getting settled |
| General Admission ticket | Standard queue; available on the night | From ~£12 / $16 on the night | Flexible, last-minute plans |
| Q-Jump | Priority entrance before 2am; standard ticket still required | Add-on, quoted per night | Skipping the 11:30pm–1am queue |
| Table / Booth | Reserved base; auto queue-jump with advance booking | Package, quoted by group size | Birthdays and groups wanting a base |
| Private Karaoke | Private suite; pre-order drinks; priority queue before midnight (advance) | Package, quoted by room/time | Singing crews and smaller groups |
| Party Package | Bundles entry, drinks and a floor base | Package, quoted by group | Hassle-free group celebrations |
Insider reality check: the queue peaks 11:30pm–1am
- At peak times the line looks long but moves fast; the bigger risk is being sent to the back for arriving outside your ticket's time slot.
- Timed tickets are allocated to manage the queue — turn up within your window or risk refusal.
- Q-Jump or an advance booth booking is the difference between dancing by 11:45pm and waiting in the cold.
What Infernos costs in 2026
Entry to Infernos nightclub London is modest by London standards; the spend that matters is on a booth, a package or drinks. The ticket tier you choose, whether you add Q-Jump, and whether your group books a base together will shape the bill far more than the cover charge itself.
Here is the cost picture for 2026:
- Advance / early admission: from around £8–£12 ($10–$16), less than the door price and with a guaranteed time slot.
- On-the-night entry: from around £12 ($16), subject to availability and capping at peak.
- Q-Jump priority: an add-on priced per night — worth it on a busy Saturday.
- Tables and booths: sold as packages scaled to group size, typically starting in the low hundreds of pounds for a group, including a reserved base and automatic queue-jump when booked ahead.
- Drinks: standard central-London club prices, broadly £7–£14 ($9–$18) from beers to cocktails.
- Cloakroom: paid, roughly £2–£3 ($3–$4) per item.
An entry ticket is always required, even with a table, booth or karaoke booking; packages bundle the base and often a drinks element, while Q-Jump and the cloakroom sit on top. There is also a birthday perk worth knowing about: free entry for the birthday guest, Q-Jump for the group, and a complimentary booth plus arrival prosecco for groups of six or more. All figures are a guide for 2026 (USD converted at roughly £1 = $1.30) and vary by night, event and how far ahead you book — confirm the current rate at checkout.
Insider reality check: the booth is the upgrade that pays off
- For a group, a booth or party package removes the night's two friction points — the queue and nowhere to put coats and drinks.
- The birthday perk (free entry, group Q-Jump, complimentary booth and prosecco for six-plus) is the best-value way in if anyone in your party has a birthday that month.
- Booth areas are requested rather than guaranteed by location, so book early for the spots beside the floor.
Which Infernos option should you choose?
The right option comes down to your group and the night you want. Use these if/then calls to decide quickly.
- Choose a standard advance ticket if you are a couple or a pair on a date night who just want to dance — pick an early-admission slot and arrive before the queue builds.
- Choose a booth or party package if you are a birthday or celebration group of six or more — the reserved base, priority entry and birthday perks make it the easiest call.
- Choose private karaoke if your crew would rather sing than dance, or wants a base away from the main floors before joining the party.
- Add Q-Jump on top of any ticket if you are out on a peak Saturday and value your time over the saving.
- For visitors after one uncomplicated, fun London night, Infernos nightclub London pairs a low entry price with a high fun ceiling — book ahead, dress smart-casual, and treat it as the anchor of a Clapham evening.
Every nightlife option on Travjoy is researched and approved by local experts, so you can weigh Clapham's disco against the rest of London's nightlife experiences and book with confidence.
Getting in smoothly, getting there and getting home
The three rules that decide your night are the dress code, the ID policy and the no-single-entry rule. Get those right and entry is quick; get them wrong and you can be turned away at the door. Infernos is an over-21s venue with a strict no-ID-no-entry policy, and it does not admit single entrants.
The practical details for arriving and leaving:
- Address: 146 Clapham High Street, London SW4 7UH.
- Nearest stations: Clapham Common (Northern line), about two minutes' walk; Clapham North is close by.
- Late transport: Night Tube on the Northern line and night buses along the High Street on Friday and Saturday; pre-book a car for a 4am finish.
- Dress code: smart casual or fancy dress; no sportswear, casual shorts, headwear or work wear.
- ID: over-21s only, original photo ID required, and no single entry — arrive with at least one other person.
Infernos works best as the anchor of a wider Clapham evening. Start with cocktails or a meal nearby — our pick of the top bars in London covers the strongest pre-club options — or build the whole night around one of London's guided nightlife tours if you would rather have the route planned for you.
Insider reality check: the three things that get people turned away
- Trainers and sportswear: the dress code is enforced at the door, so leave the gym kit at home.
- No original photo ID: screenshots and photocopies are at the door staff's discretion and often refused — bring a passport or photo driving licence.
- Arriving alone: the no-single-entry policy is firm, so meet your group before you join the queue.
Plan your night at Infernos
Infernos endures because it knows exactly what it is: a loud, warm-hearted Clapham disco where the carpets are sticky, the balloon drop lands at midnight and nobody is too cool to sing. Do it well and the formula is simple — book an advance ticket or a booth, dress smart-casual, bring photo ID and a friend, and time your arrival around your ticket slot. Whether you are marking a birthday, showing visitors a proper London night, or just dancing to songs you know, Infernos nightclub London rarely disappoints the people who come for what it actually offers. Start planning your night out on the top 20 things to do in London and build the evening around Clapham's disco on Travjoy.


