Miami didn't invent bottle service, but it perfected the theater of it. From the moment the ropes part on Collins Avenue, the city runs on a simple economy: a table is your passport. Cover lines can stretch for blocks, but a confirmed minimum walks you past the crowd, up the stairs, and into a booth where a server arrives with sparkler-lit magnums held overhead like trophies. Across South Beach, Downtown, and Wynwood, the VIP table is less about the alcohol and more about position, sightlines to the DJ, proximity to the dance floor, and the unspoken signal that you belong in the room. Understanding how the minimum-spend game works is the difference between watching the night and owning it.
Expect to pay for the privilege. Miami table minimums are among the steepest in the country, and they move constantly with the calendar. A midweek reservation at a Downtown club might open around $1,000, while a marquee Saturday with a headlining DJ can push prime dance-floor tables into the five figures. The ratio of your group matters more here than almost anywhere else: a table stacked with guys will carry a higher minimum than a balanced mix, a quirk of the model-and-bottle economics that South Beach runs on. Layer in the standard 20 to 38 percent for tax and gratuity, and a $2,000 minimum becomes a $2,600-plus night before you factor in anyone's Uber home.
What you're really buying is access and choreography. A minimum spend secures a reserved booth, your bottles and unlimited mixers, a dedicated server and often a security escort, plus that all-important bottle-parade moment when the lights hit your section. Location within the venue is everything, dance-floor and stage-side tables command the highest minimums because they put you inside the energy, while mezzanine and perimeter tables cost less but keep you at arm's length. The city's range is vast, from Latin-scene spots and river-front lounges where you can pop bottles for a few hundred, to celebrity-magnet megaclubs where a prime table is a serious investment. Below are the twelve Miami rooms that do bottle service best.
Miami's 24-hour crown jewel treats bottle service as spectacle, with LED-wrapped booths, aerialists overhead, and one of the most relentless bottle-parade productions in the country. Pit tables on the dance floor start around $1,000 with lower VIP options near $500 for smaller parties, but headliner nights and prime sections push minimums to $1,500 and well beyond. Because it never closes, the money keeps flowing long past when other clubs go dark.
Guestlist & details →The Fontainebleau's iconic megaclub is the celebrity-and-model epicenter of South Beach, where dance-floor tables put you in the same airspace as the stars who routinely drop by. Minimums for a balanced group start around $1,000, with the average table landing near $3,500 and prime stage-side sections climbing toward $6,000 on marquee nights. The bottle presentations here are pure Miami theater, sparklers and magnums at full volume.
Guestlist & details →Inside the Seminole Hard Rock, Daer runs a dual nightclub-and-dayclub operation with expansive VIP decks and A-list DJ residencies. Table minimums range from roughly $1,000 to $8,000, averaging around $2,500, with bottles starting near $450 and pricing swinging hard on the talent booked. The indoor-outdoor layout means you can pick a booth on the dance floor or a poolside cabana depending on the vibe.
Guestlist & details →The reborn South Beach institution (formerly Mansion) is a multi-level playground with some of the widest table range in the city. Minimums run from a $1,000 mezzanine lounge for up to ten guests all the way to a $12,000 stage-area table for twelve, averaging around $2,500 for a solid mid-tier section. The tiered layout lets you buy exactly the amount of proximity to the DJ you're willing to pay for.
Guestlist & details →An intimate, notoriously selective South Beach lounge where the door policy is half the experience and the VIP tables are the only guaranteed way in. Minimums typically open around $500 for smaller groups but prime tables run $2,000 to $3,000 and climb on busy weekends. The smaller footprint means every booth feels close to the action, and the model-heavy crowd keeps the room camera-ready all night.
Guestlist & details →The Downtown temple of underground and techno is where Miami goes when the sun comes up, famous for its open-air Terrace and marathon sets. Table pricing is the widest in town, from around $450 midweek to $15,000 when a superstar DJ takes the decks. Bottle service here buys you a reserved perch above the crowd rather than bottle-parade flash, ideal for serious music heads who still want a home base.
Guestlist & details →Housed in a restored Art Deco theater, Cameo delivers high ceilings, a booming sound system, and VIP booths arranged around a genuine dance-floor pit. Minimums generally start near $1,000 for a balanced group and scale up for stage-adjacent tables on headliner nights. The theater bones give bottle presentations a dramatic, tiered-audience feel you won't get in a flat room.
Guestlist & details →A polished, upscale South Beach club that leans classy over chaotic, with elegant VIP tables and a refined bottle-service program. Minimums typically open around $1,000 for a mixed group and rise with location and event, with attentive servers and a curated crowd. It's the pick when you want the bottle-parade energy without the wall-of-sound intensity of the megaclubs.
Guestlist & details →A vibrant Miami hotspot blending Latin rhythms with open-format sets, Coco pairs an energetic dance floor with a strong VIP-table setup. Bottle minimums generally start in the $800 to $1,500 range depending on the night and your group size, with mixers and dedicated service included. The crowd skews lively and social, making the booths feel like the center of the party rather than a roped-off sideline.
Guestlist & details →A Latin-scene favorite where reggaeton, salsa, and open-format keep the floor packed and the bottle service flowing. Table minimums sit at the more accessible end of the Miami spectrum, often opening under $1,000 for smaller groups, with bottles and mixers brought straight to your booth. It's a strong value pick for crews who want the full VIP treatment without South Beach megaclub pricing.
Guestlist & details →This 24/7 riverfront institution runs an enormous VIP operation with 24 bottle sections plus air-conditioned patio booths for a quieter scene. Bottle service starts around $500, though most parties land at $1,500 or more per table, with boat dockage and round-the-clock hours setting it apart. The relaxed, come-as-you-are energy makes it a favorite for groups who want bottles on their own schedule.
Guestlist & details →A high-energy Latin nightlife staple where live music and DJ sets fuel a party that runs late and loud. Tables range from roughly $800 to $3,000, averaging around $1,200, with the full lineup of premium bottles and mixers available. The intimate, festive room means a VIP booth here buys real proximity to the band and the dance floor for a genuinely social night out.
Guestlist & details →Full directory — dress codes, hours and guestlists on every page.
Minimums usually start around $1,000 for a balanced group at most clubs, with averages landing between $2,500 and $3,500. Prime dance-floor or stage-side tables on marquee nights with headlining DJs can climb to $6,000, $12,000, or more. Latin-scene and riverfront spots often open lower, sometimes near $500.
Your minimum spend covers a reserved VIP table or booth, the bottles you order, unlimited mixers and garnishes, and a dedicated server, often with a security escort. Many clubs add a bottle-parade presentation with sparklers. Note that 20 to 38 percent for tax and gratuity is added on top of the minimum, not included in it.
Reserve in advance through the club's website, a booking concierge, or a nightlife-table platform, and confirm your minimum, group size, and table location before arriving. Weekends and event nights sell out, so book early for prime sections. You'll typically place a card on file, then settle the full bill on the night.
The best tables sit on or beside the dance floor and near the DJ booth or stage, putting you in the center of the energy and the sightlines. These command the highest minimums. Mezzanine, perimeter, and lounge tables cost less but keep you further from the action, a fair trade if budget matters more than position.
Most South Beach and Downtown clubs enforce upscale nightlife attire: stylish dresses or fashionable tops for women, and collared shirts, designer sneakers or dress shoes for men. Avoid athletic wear, flip-flops, baggy shorts, and beachwear. Selective venues like Mynt are strict at the door, though a confirmed table reservation smooths your entry considerably.
Rankings are Nightspotters editorial opinion, refreshed for 2026. Hours, policies and lineups change — confirm with the venue for your night.