Where Your Miami Party Bus Actually Stops
A bachelor party bus is only as good as the route. We have been running groups through Miami since 1990, and we know which dining rooms seat a party of fourteen at 9 p.m., which clubs will actually let a bachelor party through the door, and which streets a 40-foot bus cannot physically turn onto. Here is the map we build from. Your dancers ride with you between every stop — that is where the entertainment happens. Each venue runs its own house rules at the door.
South Beach & South of Fifth
The Classic Miami Night
Dinner-first territory. Loud rooms, big steaks, and a five-minute roll to the beach clubs. Book the table before you book anything else — South of Fifth fills up weeks out on Saturdays.
- Prime 112 — the South of Fifth steakhouse that started it all. Dry-aged prime, deep-fried Oreos, a room built to be seen in.
- Papi Steak — the $1,000 Wagyu tomahawk in a rhinestone Beefcase, delivered with a light show. Pure spectacle for a bachelor.
- Joe’s Stone Crab — Miami Beach institution since 1913. No reservations, so we time the drop-off around the wait.
- Carbone — spicy rigatoni vodka and a tough reservation. Worth the effort if someone in your group has the connect.
- The Joyce — Española Way steakhouse for the group that wants to hear each other talk.
- Yardbird — fried chicken, bourbon, and a hangover cure the next morning.
- Bodega Taqueria y Tequila — tacos out front, speakeasy behind the porta-potty door.
- LIV at the Fontainebleau — the benchmark megaclub since 2008. Dress code enforced, no exceptions.
- Story, M2, Mynt, Vendome — the Washington and Collins Avenue club cluster, all within a few blocks.
- Do Not Sit On The Furniture — small room, serious house music, no bottle-service theater.
- Mango’s Tropical Cafe — Latin dinner-and-a-show on Ocean Drive. Easy win for a mixed group.
Brickell
Money, Glass, and Rooftops
Best neighborhood for a group that wants dinner and drinks in the same square mile. Bus staging is tight around Mary Brickell Village on weekends — we drop and loop.
- Komodo — three floors of Southeast Asian, the top one basically a club by 11 p.m. Groot Hospitality’s biggest grosser.
- Sexy Fish — the Brickell outpost of the London original. Aquariums, gold, and a bar list your CFO would flinch at.
- Novikov — Asian-fusion sharing plates that work well for ten-plus.
- Cipriani Downtown Miami — Bellinis and carpaccio for the polished start.
- La Mar by Gastón Acurio — Peruvian on the bay at the Mandarin Oriental. Sunset arrival is the move.
- CVI.CHE 105 — cheaper, louder, still excellent.
- Sugar — 40th-floor rooftop at EAST Miami. Skyline photos the groom’s fiancée will actually approve of.
- Blackbird Ordinary — proper cocktails, late license, zero pretension.
- Baby Jane — dim, loud, and a solid warm-up before Downtown.
- American Social — riverside patio for the pre-dinner beer round.
Downtown & Park West
Where the Night Doesn’t End
The only part of Miami with 24-hour licenses. If your group’s goal is sunrise, this is the last stop on the route.
- E11EVEN — 24 hours a day, part nightclub, part cabaret, part concert venue. Named the #1 club in the country. The single easiest bachelor party sell in Miami.
- Club Space — the terrace, the sunrise sets, and a sound system people fly in for. Music first, scene second.
- Floyd — Space’s smaller sibling. 400 capacity, Funktion-One, house and techno.
- Zuma — Japanese izakaya on the river at the Kimpton EPIC. The pre-club dinner that never misses.
- Toro Toro — Latin churrascaria at the InterContinental. Built for big groups and big appetites.
- Kaseya Center — Heat game first, club after. The bus holds your stuff while you’re inside.
Miami River & Edgewater
Waterfront, Slightly Off-Script
Our favorite pitch for a group that has already done South Beach twice. Yachts tied up outside, no Ocean Drive crowds.
- Kiki on the River — Greek, riverside, and it turns into a party by 11. Consistently a top bachelor party dinner in the city.
- Seaspice — the other river institution. Long dock, long night.
- Casablanca on the Bay — fresh-off-the-boat seafood at a fraction of the Beach prices.
- Klaw — dry-aged beef and king crab in the old Miami Women’s Club, with Biscayne Bay behind it.
- Sunny’s Steakhouse — open-air, backyard-feeling, and a genuine Miami favorite.
Wynwood & Design District
The Crawl That Needs No Reservations
Walkable, no dress code, and the cheapest full night in Miami. We park the bus on the edge and let the group work the blocks on foot.
- Coyo Taco — tacos up front, hidden bar in the back. Start here.
- Wood Tavern — the Wynwood backyard bar. Nobody is judging your sneakers.
- Gramps — dive energy, backyard stage, cheap and honest.
- El Patio — Latin dance floor with no attitude at the door.
- The Dirty Rabbit — reggaeton, hip-hop, and a fog machine.
- Racket — live music room that books better than it needs to.
- Bakan — 200+ mezcals and tacos that hold up at 1 a.m.
- Veza Sur and J. Wakefield — brewery stops for the crew that would rather drink beer than $22 cocktails.
- Kush — burgers and local taps, the reliable base layer.
- Swan — Design District, a step up in polish when Wynwood is too scruffy for the plan.
- Wynwood Walls — daytime stop, and the only group photo anybody will actually keep.
Little Havana & Beyond
Calle Ocho, Aventura, Fort Lauderdale
Add-on territory. The bus range covers the whole tri-county, so a Broward pickup with a Miami night out is routine for us.
- Ball & Chain — live salsa, mojitos, and the pineapple stage. The best hour of most bachelor parties.
- Cubaocho — rum collection, art museum, live son.
- Versailles — the 2 a.m. pastelito and cafecito stop. Non-negotiable.
- Old’s Havana — Cuban food with a live band and no tourist tax.
- Bourbon Steak, Aventura — the north-end steak option when the group is staying up that way.
- Las Olas Boulevard, Fort Lauderdale — a full walkable bar strip if the party is based in Broward.
- Hard Rock, Hollywood — the guitar hotel. Casino, then back on the bus.
Four Miami Party Bus Routes That Work
These are not brochure fantasies. They are the four shapes almost every bachelor party we run in Miami ends up taking. Pick one, and we will adjust the times to your dinner reservation.
The Steakhouse Classic
- 8:00 p.m. Hotel pickup. Two dancers already on board, drinks on ice, the groom finds out now.
- 8:45 p.m. Drop at Prime 112 or Papi Steak. Bus stages nearby.
- 10:45 p.m. Back on. Loop north on Collins with the LEDs on — this is the leg the group remembers.
- 11:30 p.m. Drop at LIV. We hold the bus.
- 2:00 a.m. Pickup and return.
The All-Nighter
- 7:30 p.m. Pickup, Brickell or the Beach.
- 8:15 p.m. Dinner at Zuma or Toro Toro.
- 10:30 p.m. Bus leg with dancers. Bayfront and the causeway.
- 11:30 p.m. Drop at E11EVEN. It never closes, so the schedule stops mattering here.
- 2:30 a.m. Optional Club Space transfer, two blocks away.
- Sunrise Versailles for cafecito, then home.
The Wynwood Crawl
- 7:00 p.m. Pickup. No dress code, no table minimums, no stress.
- 7:30 p.m. Coyo Taco. Tacos, then the back bar.
- 9:00 p.m. Wood Tavern and Gramps on foot. Bus stays parked.
- 10:30 p.m. Back on board. Dancer set, music up, roll to the Design District.
- 11:30 p.m. El Patio or Dirty Rabbit until close.
The Waterfront
- 6:30 p.m. Pickup while it’s still light. Best photos of the night happen here.
- 7:15 p.m. Kiki on the River or Seaspice. Dock, boats, and a dining room that turns into a party on its own.
- 10:00 p.m. Bus leg — Brickell Key loop with the skyline on both sides.
- 10:45 p.m. Rooftop at Sugar for the last civilized drink.
- 12:30 a.m. Downtown drop or straight home. Your call in the moment.
Hiring Miami Exotic Dancers for the Bus
Every party bus package on this page includes two female exotic dancers for the duration of the rental. That is not an upsell we bolt on at the end — it is the reason the bus exists. A party bus without entertainment is a shuttle. Miami has plenty of shuttles.
Most groups add a third or fourth dancer once they see the headcount. The working ratio we suggest is roughly one dancer per eight to ten guys — enough that nobody is standing in the back checking their phone. For a 40-passenger bus running a full seven hours, four to five dancers is the sensible number. Tell us the headcount when you call and we will size it honestly, including telling you when you are booking more than you need.
Our roster covers the range Miami actually asks for — Latina, Brazilian, Caribbean, blonde bombshell, tattooed, fitness, and everything between. If your groom has a type, say so on the phone. It is not an awkward conversation for us; it is the whole job. We have been doing this in South Florida since 1990, and the reason we are still here is that the dancer who shows up matches the dancer you booked.
Onboard pole and floor sets run between stops — the transit legs are the show, not dead time.
What Happens On Board
Dancers work the bus between stops — the transit legs are the show, not dead time. Topless and fully nude sets are available depending on your package and the group. The driver’s partition stays shut and the windows are tinted.
What Happens at the Venues
Every restaurant and club on this page enforces its own door policy. Your dancers ride with the group and entertain on the bus. Inside a venue, everyone is just another guest at the table. Clean, simple, and the reason we never get a group turned away.
Tipping and Cash
Bring singles. A lot of them. Tips are separate from the booking and go directly to the dancers. Hit an ATM before pickup — you do not want to be the group hunting a Publix cash machine at midnight on Collins.
Party Bus with Dancers vs. a Miami Strip Club Crawl
Every Miami bachelor party has this argument. Here is the honest math.
| Party Bus + Dancers | Strip Club Crawl | |
|---|---|---|
| Cover charges | None. It’s your bus. | $20–$40 per man, per club, and it stacks fast on a group of fifteen. |
| Drinks | Bring your own. No markup. | $18 well drinks and a two-drink minimum. |
| Getting there | Included. One vehicle, one driver, no scattering. | Three rideshares, two of which get lost, and a $400 surge at 2 a.m. |
| The group stays together | Yes. That’s the entire point. | Not after the first hour. |
| Who the night is about | The groom. He isn’t competing with 200 strangers for attention. | Whoever tipped the most that night. |
| Dinner and clubs | Built into the route. Prime 112 at nine, LIV at midnight, dancers between. | You’re locked to the club’s parking lot. |
| Cost for 15 guys | One flat package, split fifteen ways, dancers included. | Cover + drinks + rides + private dances, and nobody can reconstruct the total the next morning. |
Pickups, Parking, and Miami Realities
The unglamorous half of the job, and the half that decides whether the night runs on time.
Hotel pickups across Miami-Dade and Broward, plus MIA and FLL. Dancers board before the groom does.
Where We Pick Up
- Miami Beach hotels — Fontainebleau, Loews, W South Beach, 1 Hotel, The Setai, Faena, Delano, SLS, Eden Roc. Most have a designated bus lane or a side-street protocol we already know.
- Brickell and Downtown — EAST Miami, Kimpton EPIC, JW Marriott Marquis, InterContinental, Novotel, plus any Brickell high-rise with a loading zone.
- Airbnb and private homes — Miami Beach, Coconut Grove, Coral Gables, Doral, Kendall, Aventura, Sunny Isles.
- Broward — Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Hallandale, Pembroke Pines, Weston, Davie, Plantation, Sunrise.
- MIA and FLL — bachelor parties that start the second the flight lands are our favorite kind.
Things Worth Knowing
- Ocean Drive is closed to buses. Everyone asks. We stage on the numbered side streets and you walk half a block.
- Bring cans, not glass. Bottles break, and a broken bottle ends a party bus night early.
- Book dinner before you book us. Prime 112, Carbone, and Papi Steak go weeks out on Saturdays. We build the route around your reservation, not the other way around.
- Dress codes are real. LIV and Story will turn away sneakers and shorts. Wynwood will not care at all. Tell us which kind of night it is and we’ll warn the group.
- Causeway traffic on a Saturday night is not a joke. Budget 30 minutes between the Beach and Downtown, more during Art Basel, Miami Music Week, F1 weekend, or a Heat playoff run.
- Same-day is often possible. Not always on a Saturday in season, but more often than you’d think. Call and ask.
Miami Bachelor Party Bus Questions
Are the dancers really included, or is that a bait price?
Two female exotic dancers are included in every package listed on this page, for the full length of the rental. Additional dancers are quoted per dancer, per hour, and we give you the number on the phone before you commit to anything. Tips are separate and go to the dancers.
How many stops can we make?
As many as fit the clock. A realistic five-hour night is dinner plus one club plus one bar. A seven-hour night can do dinner, a rooftop, a Wynwood stretch, and a Downtown finish. Every stop costs 20 to 40 minutes in loading, parking, and Miami traffic — we’d rather you do three stops well than six badly.
Can the bus wait for us while we’re inside a club?
Yes. The bus is yours for the hours you booked, and the driver stages nearby. Your bags, jackets, and the drinks stay on board.
Can we drink on the bus?
Yes, if everyone on board is 21 or over. Bring what you want — cans and plastic, no glass. Coolers and ice are on board.
Which club is easiest to get a bachelor party into?
E11EVEN, and it isn’t close. It’s open 24 hours, it’s built around the exact kind of night you’re planning, and it’s a five-minute roll from Club Space if you want to keep going. LIV is the bigger name but the door is stricter and the table minimums are higher.
Do you serve Fort Lauderdale and Broward?
Yes. Pickups across Broward and Miami-Dade, plus MIA and FLL. A Fort Lauderdale pickup running a Miami route is one of the most common bookings we do.
What size bus for our group?
Rule of thumb: take your headcount and add four. A “30-passenger” bus with 30 men in it and dancers working has no room to actually be a party. Groups of 12 to 18 are happiest on a 25 to 30. Twenty-five to thirty-five guys should be on a 45 or 55.
How far in advance should we book?
Two to three weeks for a normal weekend. Six weeks or more for Art Basel, Miami Music Week, Super Bowl weekend, F1, spring break, or New Year’s. Weeknights are usually available with a few days’ notice, and same-day happens more often than people expect.

