
Krystle
Krystle operates at the Russell Court Hotel at 21-25 Harcourt Street and positions itself as Dublin's upscale nightclub option. The venue features a main club floor with a central bar, a VIP section with bottle service, and a cocktail lounge area. The interior design leans toward dark finishes, mood lighting, and the kind of aesthetic that signals "this costs more than the place next door." Capacity runs to approximately 600. The club attracts a well-dressed crowd that trends older than the student-heavy venues nearby, typically 25-35. Celebrity appearances and private events are regular occurrences. The door policy is the strictest on Harcourt Street, with bouncers making judgments on dress, group composition, and general vibe.
What to Expect
Sleek interior with low lighting, well-dressed crowd, and a door policy that sets the tone. Inside is calmer and more controlled than Copper Face Jacks, with people who are there to be seen as much as to dance.
Polished, controlled, and image-conscious. The opposite end of the Harcourt Street spectrum from Coppers.
Commercial dance, R&B, hip-hop, and chart hits. Occasional guest DJ nights.
Strict smart casual to smart. Men need proper shoes (no trainers), fitted trousers or dark jeans, and a shirt. Women dress up. The bouncer's judgment is final.
Groups wanting a more polished night out, special occasions, people who find Coppers too chaotic
Cards strongly preferred. Bottle service requires card payment.
Price Range
Entry EUR 15-20, cocktails EUR 15-18, pint EUR 9-10, bottle service EUR 200-500+
Entry ~$16-22/~15-20 EUR, cocktails ~$16-19/~15-18 EUR
Hours
23:00-03:00 Thu-Sat, closed Sun-Wed (may open for special events)
Insider Tip
Dress well or you won't get past the door. Groups of men without women in the group face higher scrutiny. Guest list spots are sometimes available through the venue's social media. Arrive before midnight to avoid the worst queue.
Full Review
Krystle occupies the space in Dublin nightlife that every city needs: the club where people go when they want to dress up and feel like the night is an event rather than just an outing.
The door is the first filter. Bouncers at Krystle assess your appearance, your group, and your attitude before making a call. Groups of five men with no women in the party will likely be turned away. Shorts, sportswear, and dirty shoes are automatic rejections. This isn't unique to Krystle, but they enforce it more consistently than anywhere else on the street.
Inside, the space delivers on the promise the door policy sets. The lighting is low and flattering, the main bar is well-staffed, and the dance floor fills without reaching the crush levels of Copper Face Jacks next door. The VIP section offers bottle service for groups willing to pay, and the tables get attention from staff throughout the night.
The crowd is genuinely different from Coppers. People are here for a different kind of night. Conversations happen at a volume where you can actually hear the other person. The music is commercial but competently mixed, and the sound system handles it well.
The trade-off is price and exclusivity that can feel forced. Drinks cost more, the door can feel arbitrary in its selections, and the atmosphere sometimes prioritizes looking good over having fun. Whether that trade-off works for you depends entirely on what you want from a night out.
The Neighborhood
In the Russell Court Hotel on Harcourt Street, between Copper Face Jacks to the north and Diceys in the same building complex. The Luas stop at St Stephen's Green is a 3-minute walk.
Getting There
Russell Court Hotel, 21-25 Harcourt Street. Walk south from St Stephen's Green Luas stop. The venue entrance is at street level with the queue typically extending south along the pavement.
Address
Russell Court Hotel, 21-25 Harcourt Street
Other Venues in Harcourt Street

Copper Face Jacks
Ireland's most famous nightclub, operating since 1996 in the basement of the Jackson Court Hotel. Known for GAA players, nurses' nights out, and a meat-market reputation that has become part of Irish pop culture.

Diceys
Large, multi-room venue spread across several floors with cheap drinks, student-friendly pricing, and a beer garden. Three different rooms play pop, dance, and indie on any given night.

The Ginger Man
Traditional pub with a quieter atmosphere than the surrounding clubs. Dark wood interior, decent food menu during the day, and a crowd that skews slightly older than the student-dominated venues nearby.

Xico
Tequila and mezcal focused cocktail bar with Mexican-inspired decor. Small, dark, and atmospheric with skilled bartenders and a late-night crowd that skews toward cocktail enthusiasts.