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Hï Ibiza voted the ‘World’s No. 1 Club’ in annual poll


Hï Ibiza has been voted the ‘World’s No. 1 Club’ in the annual DJ Mag Top 100 Clubs poll, taking the top spot for the third year in a row.

The Playa d’en Bossa venue, which opened in 2017, is operated by Ushuaïa Entertainment, founded by nightlife entrepreneur Yann Pissenem, and its sister venue Ushuaïa Ibiza also performed strongly in the DJ Mag poll, moving up one place to fourth.

Commenting on the achievement, Pissenem said, “This is a real testament to the support of our incredible community, and this award is as much yours as it is ours. This marks the third consecutive year that your energy and enthusiasm have motivated us to work even harder than ever before, and every vote cast is a result of the strong bond we’ve forged together.

“As we celebrate this extraordinary milestone, we remain deeply committed to raising the bar, delivering unparalleled experiences, and redefining the future of club culture. We cannot wait to welcome you all back again this summer!”


Hï Ibiza opens its doors for the 2024 season this weekend, with Honey Dijon, TSHA, Adam Beyer, Jamie Jones, Carlita, Loco Dice set to play the venue on 27 April.

In second place in the rankings is Green Valley, located in Camboriú, Brazil, with the 10,000 capacity space rising one spot year on year, while third place goes to Washington DC’s Echostage.

Bootshaus in Cologne takes fifth, with The Warehouse Project, Fabric, Amnesia Ibiza, Savaya and Laroc Club rounding off the top ten.

DJ Mag’s Top 100 Clubs report a fully open poll format, in which hundreds of thousands of readers around the world select their top five global dancefloors. DJ Mag has offices in 17 countries worldwide and a global monthly audience of 74 million.

Commenting on the poll, DJ Mag said, ‘Almost 40 countries supply venues this year, making it perhaps the most international list yet. The top five countries — USA, Spain, UK, Brazil, and Croatia — hold their ground, but all except Spain have fewer charting venues than last year. Filling the gaps are a raft of new entries — 16 in total. That’s the most since our 2020 list, which was released just as the world went into Covid-19 lockdown, a clear indicator of the electronic music scene’s post-pandemic recovery.

‘Through these new additions, new nations join (or rejoin) the rankings: Ireland, Malaysia, Slovakia and Azerbaijan all feature this year, the latter officially giving us a transcontinental club.’

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