Enough with bachelor parties that seem to be taken from a stale 90s manual. One for the guys, another for the girls, the typical night of debauchery… Look, you don’t have to end up like in The Hangover, losing the groom halfway across town and waking up with a tiger in the bathroom (although we won’t judge you if you want to).
The key is to put together a night like something out of a movie, but on your own terms: original plans, experiences you’ll remember (no blackouts the next day, please) and, yes, a party too, but with options for all tastes.
1. The Jury Experience
Ready to become a juror for a night? The Jury Experience turns the Palacio de la Prensa into a courtroom where you will be in charge of deciding whether the defendant is guilty or innocent. A plot full of twists and turns, suspicious testimonies, and heated debates that will put you to the test… and make you laugh like there’s no tomorrow. A perfect bachelor party to start the night with a different plan, with laughter, intrigue, and lots of group camaraderie.
2. Neon Brush
At Neon Brush, you paint a picture together (as these plans should be, right?) with neon light, an artist to guide you, and in the meantime, you can have a drink if you want (which you always want). And yes, you can then display the painting at the wedding… or not.
If you’re thinking of organizing this plan as a group, you can check all the details for private bookings here.
3. Immersive cocktail workshop: La Movida Madrileña. Back to the 80s!
If you’re going to dress up at the wedding, you can start rehearsing with this plan: hats, heart-shaped glasses, the blonde wig that always appears… Well, at the cocktail workshop: La Movida Madrileña, you can rehearse for real: make your own cocktails, learn something new (yes, even the bride and groom) and throw an 80s-themed bachelor party with music, nostalgia and the most original cocktails.
4. BuzzAttack
BuzzAttack is one of those plans that fits especially well with bachelor parties. When we went with the Madrid Secreto team, there were movie questions (yes, even those that seem tailor-made for the brother-in-law), but the game goes much further and mixes pop culture, logic, intuition, and team challenges.
The experience is organized into four rooms, with up to six people per room (or 12 if playing in pairs), making it easy to adapt to large groups.



