Home Food & Dining 15 Best Ways to Experience LGBTQ+ Berlin, From Gay Bars to Bookstores

15 Best Ways to Experience LGBTQ+ Berlin, From Gay Bars to Bookstores

by sumesh.sheil@gmail.com
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Condé Nast Traveler

Gallery exhibition showing an installation of various images and ephemera related to the Stonewall Uprising in New York...

The “Love at First Fight!” exhibition is currently on view at the Schwules Museum, one of the world’s first LGBTQ+ museums.

Sarah Blesener

Schwules Museum

One of the world’s first LGBTQ+ museums, Schwules (Gay) Museum opened in 1985 and remains a touchstone of queer history in Berlin. Its rotating exhibitions delve into everything from trans visibility to queer resistance under Nazi rule. The museum collaborates with artists and academics from across the LGBTQ+ spectrum, offering an ever-evolving portrait of queer life in Berlin and beyond.
Address: Lützowstr.73, 10785 Berlin

Berlin by night

Hafen

Hafen (“harbor”) has been a safe mooring for the city’s LGBTQ+ community for over thirty years. Located on arguably Berlin’s gayest street, it’s a place where locals greet each other by name as they spill out onto the sidewalk. Regular events range from pub quizzes to inclusive football screenings. Inside, it’s snug and unfussy, with red walls and a long wooden bar—perfect for striking up a chat.
Address: Motzstr. 19, 10777 Berlin

People shown a colorful night club

Beloved Berlin nightclub SO36 hosts Gayhane, a queer dancy party, on a monthly basis.

prokura nepp/SO36

SO36

This is an iconic venue rooted in punk counterculture, with a half-century of history of supporting Berlin’s LGBTQ+ community. Located in Kreuzberg, SO36 hosts the legendary Gayhane nights, where a Turkish, Arabic, and South Asian soundtrack is matched by a diverse queer audience from across the city and the world. It’s multicultural, electrifying, and defiantly authentic.
Where: Oranienstr. 190, 10999 Berlin

Alaska Bar

Tucked into a quiet Neukölln corner, Alaska is a kitsch-filled cocktail bar with a laid-back, queer-friendly atmosphere. Though not exclusively LGBTQ+, it’s beloved by the community for its inclusive vibe, vegan tapas, and house-infused cocktails. On weekends, expect pop-up gigs, art shows, or experimental drag performances.
Address: Reuterstr. 85, Neukölln, 12053 Berlin

Girl’s Town

Berlin’s queer nightlife isn’t all megaclubs. Girl’s Town was created for queer women and trans and nonbinary people, and remains an example of word-of-mouth Berlin at its best. This roving party pops up every few weeks (check their Instagram for updates) at venues across Kreuzberg and Neukölln, including summer beach bar takeovers. Expect hip-hop, R&B, bass-heavy sets, and performances from local queer artists. The vibe is inclusive, consent-led, and joyfully familiar.
Address: Varies across Kreuzberg and Neukolln

Exterior of Babylon Cinema at night with illuminated sign reading MONGAY

Mondays at Babylon Cinema are called MonGay.

Oldjaj Cesko

Interior of a dark cinema with cobalt blue velvet seats and two spotlights on a closed curtain covering the screen

Films shown as part of the MonGay series range from mainsteam hits to cult classics.

Oldjaj Cesko

MonGay at Babylon Cinema

In the same cinema that screened East Germany’s first gay movie (which debuted on the night the Wall fell), Mondays are now reserved for queer films. Hugely popular with Berlin’s LGBTQ+ crowd, the series mixes mainstream hits, cult classics, and indie favorites. German movies carry English subtitles. Occasional special events—think screenings of Cabaret with live orchestra—make it a standout.
Address: Rosa-Luxemburgstr. 30, 10178 Berlin

LGBTQ+ Festivals

Easter Berlin, which takes place in mid-March or April, is Europe’s biggest leather gathering. Thousands head to Berlin for themed parties, workshops, and the Mister Leather Berlin contest. A similar scene returns in September for Folsom Europe, a kink festival. In May or June, keep an eye out for Queer History Month, when cultural institutions and grassroots groups spotlight intersectional queer stories through talks, exhibitions, and performances. Also in spring, XPosed covers four days of international queer cinema, from contemporary documentaries to rediscovered classics to, experimental animations, with screenings in indie venues citywide. Later in the year, Soura (‘image” in Arabic) focuses on LGBTQ+ movies from South Asia and North Africa. Both festivals include director talks and filmmaker Q&As.

Christopher Street Day in late July is Berlin’s flagship Pride event, dating back to 1979. The parade runs from Kurfürstendamm to Brandenburg Gate, followed by citywide street parties. The lead-up includes Schöneberg’s Gay & Lesbian Street Festival. Come winter, the great tradition of German Christmas markets gets a queer twist thanks to Berlin’s LGBTQ+ holiday market, which sits in the heart of Schöneberg. Expect queer-run stalls, DJs, drag shows, and plenty of glühwein.

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