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The bottle service guide

Toronto Bottle Service: Prices & Minimums

What a table actually costs in Toronto — how minimum spend works, the all-in number nobody quotes you, and the real menus for the rooms where we have them.

TT By the TopTorontoClubs teamUpdated June 20266 min readWe actually go out

Bottle service in Toronto is priced on a minimum spend, not a flat table fee. You're committing to spend at least a set amount on bottles and mixers, and in exchange you get a reserved table, your own space, and a host who walks your group past the line. The minimum scales with the room, the night, and where the table sits — a booth by the DJ on a Saturday costs multiples of a side table on a Thursday.

The number that catches people out is the all-in. The menu price is just the start: Ontario adds 13% HST, and most rooms add an 18–20% gratuity, so the real damage is roughly a third more than the minimum you were quoted. A $1,000 minimum is really about $1,330 out the door. For our partner rooms we show the true all-in price on every bottle so there's no math at the table.

Real menus

Live bottle menus with all-in pricing

These rooms have full interactive menus — pick your bottles and see the real total with tax and tip baked in.

Live menu
44 TorontoKing West · Fashion District
Full interactive bottle menu with real all-in pricing — every bottle, mixers and the table minimum, tax and gratuity included. See the menu ›
Live menu
CenturyKing West · Fashion District
Full interactive bottle menu with real all-in pricing — every bottle, mixers and the table minimum, tax and gratuity included. See the menu ›
Live menu
Isabelle'sKing West · Above Belfast Love
Full interactive bottle menu with real all-in pricing — every bottle, mixers and the table minimum, tax and gratuity included. See the menu ›
Live menu
LavelleFashion District · King West
Full interactive bottle menu with real all-in pricing — every bottle, mixers and the table minimum, tax and gratuity included. See the menu ›
What it costs

Toronto table minimums, roughly

Exact minimums move with the night and the table, but here's the lay of the land. Entry tables at most clubs start around $500–$700 minimum on a weekend — enough for a couple of bottles, workable for a small group. Prime tables — better location, busier room — run roughly $1,000–$2,000. Premium and dancefloor booths at the marquee rooms on a Saturday, or for big groups, climb to $3,000+. Add the ~30% all-in on top of whichever minimum you're quoted, and split across a group it's often closer to a steep cover than people expect.

Worth it?

When a table beats the guest list

If you just want a normal night out, the free guest list does the job — skip the line, skip the cover, dance. Book a table when getting in needs to be guaranteed, when it's a birthday or a celebration, when you've got a group that wants a home base instead of fighting for bar space, or when you simply want the night handled. Across a group of six or eight, a mid-tier minimum per head isn't far off what everyone'd spend at the bar anyway — except you're sitting down and you never waited.

How much is bottle service in Toronto?
It is priced on minimum spend, not a flat fee. Entry tables on a weekend typically start around $500 to $700, prime tables run roughly $1,000 to $2,000, and premium or dancefloor booths at the top rooms climb to $3,000 and up. Remember the all-in: add 13% HST plus an 18 to 20% gratuity, so the real total is about a third above the quoted minimum.
What does the bottle service minimum include?
The minimum is the amount you commit to spend on bottles and mixers. It buys you a reserved table, your own space for the group, mixers and ice service, and a host who brings you past the line. It does not include tax and gratuity, which are added on top.
Is bottle service worth it in Toronto?
For a birthday, a celebration, a bigger group, or any night where getting in has to be guaranteed, yes. Split across six to eight people, a mid-tier minimum per head is close to what a night of bar drinks costs anyway, with a guaranteed table and no line. For a casual night, the free guest list is enough.
Do you tip on top of bottle service?
Almost always. Most Toronto rooms add an automatic gratuity of around 18 to 20% to the bill, on top of 13% HST. That is why the real all-in lands roughly a third above the minimum you are quoted. Our partner menus show the true all-in price so there are no surprises.
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