
Privilege Club
Privilege Club at Doukos Beaufort 9 is one of Heraklion's larger nightclub venues, drawing weekend crowds with a mix of mainstream dance music and Greek pop nights. The club operates two rooms: a main floor with a large dance area, elevated DJ booth, and a substantial lighting and laser rig, plus a smaller side room that runs different programming for variety. The sound system is powerful enough for the space, handling bass-heavy tracks without the muddiness that smaller clubs suffer from. Cover charges range from EUR 8 to 15 on weekends, usually including one drink. Additional cocktails run EUR 8 to 12, beer is EUR 6 to 8, and bottles for table service start around EUR 80. The door policy is relaxed by European standards, with no strict dress code enforcement beyond common sense. The crowd skews young, from early 20s to early 30s, and is predominantly local. International tourists are present but rarely the majority. Peak hours run from 1 AM to 4 AM on weekends, with the club sometimes pushing to 5 AM on special event nights. Security is visible and professional. The club runs themed nights and occasional guest DJ events that draw larger crowds.
What to Expect
A proper nightclub with the production values to match. You'll pass security at the door, pay cover, and enter a dark room with a dance floor already in motion if you've timed it right. The main room is loud and the lighting is disorienting by design. The side room offers a different energy and sometimes a different genre entirely.
Loud, dark, and energetic. Peak-hours energy on weekends rivals much larger cities.
Mainstream dance, EDM, Greek pop, and commercial house. Occasional themed nights with specific genres.
Smart casual. Button-down shirts for men, dressy tops for women. No sportswear or flip-flops, but enforcement is generally relaxed.
Groups looking for a proper club night in Heraklion, and anyone who wants to experience how young Cretans party.
Cash and cards accepted. Cover charge usually cash at door.
Price Range
Cover EUR 8-15 (includes drink), cocktails EUR 8-12, beer EUR 6-8, bottles from EUR 80
≈ $9-16 cover, $9-13 cocktails, $7-9 beer, $88+ bottles
Hours
Fri-Sat midnight to 4-5 AM. Occasional Thursday nights during peak season.
Insider Tip
Arrive after 1 AM when the crowd has built up. The second room is worth checking if the main floor's music isn't connecting. Buy your cover drink at the door quickly and head to the less crowded side bar for subsequent rounds.
Full Review
Privilege delivers a club experience that punches above what you'd expect from a city Heraklion's size. The main room has enough space for several hundred people to dance comfortably, and the production quality, including the sound, lighting, and laser setup, creates an immersive environment. When the room is full and the DJ reads the crowd well, it generates genuine club energy.
The music policy is mainstream by design. This is a commercial club playing tracks that everyone knows, mixed with Greek pop songs that send the local crowd into singalong mode. If you're looking for underground techno or experimental electronic music, this isn't the venue. What it does, it does well, and the crowd responds with the enthusiasm of people who came specifically to dance and celebrate.
The second room provides an important escape valve. When the main floor's energy tips toward overwhelming, or when the Greek pop rotation doesn't connect with international visitors, the side room offers an alternative atmosphere. The music there tends to lean more international, though programming varies by night.
Drink prices are in line with Greek nightclub standards. The cover-includes-a-drink format keeps the entry cost reasonable, and subsequent drinks aren't marked up excessively. Table service is available for groups willing to spend on bottles. The bar staff handles the weekend rush competently, though waits during peak hours are inevitable.
The Neighborhood
Privilege is slightly outside the main old-town bar strip, on a street that connects the nightlife zone to the newer parts of Heraklion. The walk from the Korai Street bars takes about 5 minutes, making it a natural progression from pre-drinks to clubbing.
Getting There
From Korai Street, walk northeast toward Doukos Beaufort. The club is visible from the street. From the port, it's about a 12-minute walk. Taxis from anywhere in Heraklion are quick and cheap. Late-night taxi availability outside the club is usually good.
Address
Doukos Beaufort 9, Heraklion 712 02
Other Venues in Heraklion Center

Bitters Bar
Cocktail bar on Korai Street that's become a fixture of Heraklion's nightlife. The bartenders know their craft, and the crowd is a reliable mix of locals and university students. Small space that fills fast on weekends.

Utopia Music Bar
Live music venue hosting Greek rock, indie, and acoustic acts throughout the week. The programming leans toward local talent, with occasional Athens-based bands passing through on tour. Drinks are cheap and the atmosphere is unpretentious.

Fix Cocktail Bar
Upscale cocktail bar off Dedalou Street with a carefully curated menu and dim lighting. Attracts a slightly older crowd than the Korai Street spots. Good place to start the evening before moving on.

Roof Garden Bar
Rooftop terrace bar with views over the Venetian fortress and harbor. Summer-only operation with cocktails in the EUR 8-12 range. Gets busy after 10 PM and stays open until 2 AM.