
Yalta Club
Yalta Club has been a fixture of Sofia's nightlife since the 1980s, surviving regime changes, economic crises, and multiple renovations to remain the city's biggest and most recognized club. The venue sits just northeast of the NDK building at bul. Tsar Osvoboditel 20, occupying a space that holds upward of 1,500 people across three distinct rooms. The main hall plays commercial house and international pop, the second room runs Bulgarian pop (chalga and pop-folk), and a third, smaller space handles R&B and hip-hop. Production values are solid: LED walls, CO2 cannons, and a lighting rig that matches the room's scale. Bottle service culture runs deep here, with reserved tables ringing the dance floor. Friday and Saturday nights hit capacity by 1 AM, and the energy stays high until closing. The crowd is mixed: Sofia professionals, visiting tourists, expat groups, and students who saved up for a big night out.
What to Expect
Walking in through the entrance corridor, the bass hits you before you see the main room. The scale is immediately apparent: high ceilings, a large central dance floor, and tables with bottle service arrangements stacked along the walls. Lights sweep the room in synchronized patterns. The crowd is well-dressed by Sofia standards, with groups clustered around tables and a dedicated dance floor crowd in the center.
High-energy, loud, and social. The kind of place where tables compete on bottle presentation and the dance floor gets packed shoulder-to-shoulder after midnight.
Commercial house, EDM, and international pop in the main room. Bulgarian chalga and pop-folk in the second room. R&B and hip-hop in the third.
Smart casual minimum on weekends. No sportswear, flip-flops, or shorts. Jeans with a collared shirt work. Women dress up more than men. Weekday events are more relaxed.
Groups looking for Sofia's biggest night out. Bottle service crowds. First-time visitors who want to experience the city's flagship club.
Cash (BGN) and cards accepted at all bars. Bottle service usually requires a card for the tab.
Price Range
Entry BGN 15-25, beer BGN 6-10, cocktails BGN 12-20, bottle service BGN 150-400
Entry ~EUR 8-13/~$9-14, beer ~EUR 3-5/~$4-6, cocktails ~EUR 6-10/~$7-11
Hours
Thu-Sat 22:00-06:00
Insider Tip
Arrive before midnight on Saturdays to avoid the queue. The main room fills first; check the second and third rooms if you want space to breathe. Table reservations include bottle service and guarantee entry without waiting.
Full Review
Yalta is a name every Sofia resident knows. The club has outlasted trends, recessions, and competitors by consistently delivering big-room nightlife at a scale no other venue in the city matches. The entrance opens into a corridor that funnels you past security and coat check before the main room reveals itself.
The main hall is the centerpiece: a wide dance floor surrounded by tiered seating and bottle service tables, with a DJ booth elevated at one end and a massive LED wall behind it. The sound system fills the room evenly, though conversations near the speakers require shouting. On peak nights, the crowd hits capacity and the energy is undeniable. Staff manage the flow well, keeping the bars accessible even when the floor is packed.
The second room draws the chalga crowd, a distinctly Bulgarian experience that foreign visitors either embrace or avoid. The music is louder relative to the room size, the dancing is more physical, and the atmosphere feels less international. The third room runs quieter, with R&B and hip-hop attracting a smaller, more relaxed crowd.
Compared to Bedroom or Terminal 1, Yalta trades intimacy for scale. It's not the place for underground credibility or craft cocktails. It's where Sofia goes when Sofia wants a big, loud, memorable night. The cover charge is reasonable, drinks are priced for the experience level, and bottle service, while not cheap, costs a fraction of what equivalent clubs charge in Western Europe. Go on a Saturday, bring a group, and commit to staying past 2 AM.
The Neighborhood
Yalta sits adjacent to NDK, Sofia's main cultural and social landmark. The surrounding area includes the South Park, several restaurants along bul. Vitosha, and easy access to the Vitosha Boulevard bar scene. Post-club food options include late-night kebab shops on the streets south of NDK.
Getting There
NDK metro station is a 5-minute walk. Taxis from Vitosha Boulevard cost BGN 3-5. From Studentski Grad, a taxi runs BGN 6-10. The club is easily visible from the NDK plaza.
Address
bul. Tsar Osvoboditel 20, Sofia 1000
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