
Black & White Club
Black & White Club sits on the western stretch of Cejl street, one of the more established adult venues in the district. The interior runs to a main bar area, a small raised stage, and a handful of booths set back from the performance space. The layout is functional: a long bar runs the left wall, the stage occupies the far end, and the rest of the space is tables and chairs that fill slowly through the evening and reach capacity on Friday and Saturday nights. The club operates without a door fee most nights, relying on drink spend to cover costs. Staff are professional by the standards of the district, posted prices are visible, and there's no particular pressure to keep buying. The clientele is almost entirely local; you won't hear English spoken. The performers rotate through the week, with a fuller lineup on weekends. The club has operated in some form for over a decade, which counts for something in an area where venues open and close with regularity. For the Cejl strip, it represents the more reliable end of what's available.
Where to stay near Black & White Club
Hotels close to Cejl, Brno.
What to Expect
A working strip club operating without pretense. You walk in past a door person, the bar is to the left, the stage is ahead. The space smells of stale beer and cigarette smoke that clings despite the no-smoking policy that exists on paper. The performers are present and working; no one will approach you aggressively. Order at the bar.
Low-lit, functional, local. Not threatening if you're calm, but not comfortable if you're out of your element.
Czech and international pop, some older dance hits. Not curated; it's background to the stage rather than the point.
None in practice. Jeans, tracksuit, work clothes. Whatever you came in.
Budget-conscious visitors looking for a no-frills strip club experience on Cejl. Not suited to anyone uncomfortable with a rough-edged local environment.
Cash only. Czech koruna. No exceptions observed.
Price Range
Beer 70-90 CZK per 0.5L, spirits 80-120 CZK, shots 60-80 CZK, private dances from 500 CZK, no standard entry fee most nights (occasional 100-150 CZK on busier weekends)
Beer ~3-4 EUR, private dance from ~20 EUR
Hours
20:00-03:00 daily, later on Fridays and Saturdays
Insider Tip
Arrive before 22:00 on weekends if you want a seat at the bar rather than standing room. Posted prices are on a board near the entrance; check them before ordering. Pay for drinks as you go rather than running a tab, which avoids any confusion at the end of the night.
Full Review
Black & White Club is the kind of place where the name is the most polished thing about it. The exterior gives little away: a small sign, a doorman who looks you over briefly, and a door that opens into a narrow corridor before the main room. The first thing you notice is the scale. It's smaller than you expect from outside, maybe 40 seats total when the booths and bar stools are accounted for.
The bar runs the length of the left wall and is always staffed by one or two people who move quickly and don't make conversation unless you start it. Beer comes in standard Czech bar glasses, cold, and at prices that are cheap by the city's already cheap standards. The stage at the far end is properly lit and slightly elevated, with a pole and enough space for two performers at once.
The rotation runs roughly every 15-20 minutes on busy nights. The performances are straightforward: no elaborate staging, no themed shows, no audience interaction beyond the standard stage tip dynamic. If you've been to Bratislavska's clubs, the format is identical. If you haven't, know that this is a functioning Czech strip club, not a gentlemen's club.
Compared to Hush Hush Club down the street, Black & White feels slightly more established: marginally cleaner, marginally more organized, and more likely to have staff who notice if something's off. That's not a high bar, but it's a meaningful distinction in this district.
For transport, tram line 3 runs along Cejl and stops within 150 meters. Bolt is faster for leaving; call it before you're ready to go.
The Neighborhood
Sits on the western stretch of Cejl street amid a mix of closed shops, corner bars, and residential blocks. The area around it is active from early evening but gets quieter past 2 AM as the venues close. The nearest equivalent on Bratislavska is about a 10-minute walk north.
Getting There
Tram lines 3 and 11 stop at Cejl tram stop, a short walk from the venue. From the city center (Zelny trh), take tram 3 eastbound for three stops, about 8 minutes. Bolt from the center runs 70-100 CZK and takes under 5 minutes by car.
Address
Cejl 48, 602 00 Brno
Other Venues in Cejl

Hush Hush Club
Low-key adult entertainment club near the Cejl corridor. Smaller space, local clientele, cash-only bar. Known for discretion and minimal presentation.

Garage Pub
Neighborhood dive bar with cheap draft beer and a mixed local crowd. Operates late and attracts regulars from across the Cejl area. No adult entertainment, but good as a starting point before or after.

Na Rohu
Corner pub typical of the Cejl quarter. Cheap Starobrno on tap, loud locals, and no pretense. It's a working-class pub that has served the neighborhood for decades.

Klub Prestige
Private club operating in a basement unit on a side street off Cejl. Caters to regulars and walk-ins comfortable with the area's character. Prices are low; quality is basic.