Best Champagne for Bottle Service at London Clubs: What to Order and What It Costs
Dom Perignon or Moët? Ace of Spades or Veuve? Here's what every major champagne costs at London clubs and which ones are actually worth ordering.
Your waitress is standing at your table asking what you'd like to order. The champagne menu has 15 options ranging from £350 to £2,000+. You don't want to overpay and you don't want to look cheap. Here's the insider guide.
The Champagne Tiers at London Clubs
Entry Level (£350–£500)
- Moët & Chandon Imperial: £350–£450. The reliable default. Everyone knows it, it tastes fine, and nobody judges you for ordering it. It's the Toyota of champagne — dependable, not exciting.
- Veuve Clicquot Yellow Label: £400–£500. A step up from Moët in prestige and taste. The yellow label is iconic and photographs well. A solid middle-ground choice.
Mid-Range (£500–£800)
- Laurent-Perrier Rosé: £500–£700. The pink bottle is visually striking and it's genuinely good champagne. Very popular with groups and for birthdays — the rosé colour adds a celebratory feel.
- Ruinart Blanc de Blancs: £500–£650. The connoisseur's choice. Less flashy than Dom but genuinely better champagne in many people's opinion. If you know your champagne, this is the order that signals it.
- Perrier-Jouët Belle Epoque: £600–£800. The hand-painted floral bottle is beautiful and the champagne is excellent. Impressive without being ostentatious.
Premium (£600–£1,000)
- Dom Perignon: £600–£900. The name everyone knows. Ordering Dom signals celebration and generosity. The champagne itself is excellent — there's a reason it's the most famous in the world. Available in standard and rosé.
Ultra-Premium (£800+)
- Armand de Brignac (Ace of Spades): £800–£1,500+. The gold bottle is the most visually impactful champagne you can order. It catches every light in the club and photographs incredibly. The champagne is good but you're paying for the spectacle and the statement.
- Cristal (Louis Roederer): £800–£1,200. The hip-hop heritage champagne. Clear bottle, gold label, genuine prestige. Often considered the most "serious" ultra-premium champagne.
- Krug Grande Cuvée: £800–£1,000. The champagne that champagne experts order. Less flashy than Ace of Spades but arguably better liquid. The insider's choice.
Champagne vs Spirits: What's Better Value?
Let's be honest about the maths. A £350 bottle of Grey Goose gives you roughly 20 mixed drinks. A £400 bottle of Moët gives you 6–7 glasses. Drink for drink, spirits are three times better value.
The smart play: Order spirits for the bulk of your drinking and add one bottle of champagne for a toast, a birthday moment, or a visual statement. Your waitress can help you plan your order to hit your minimum spend without waste.
What to Actually Order: Our Recommendations
- Best value: Moët Imperial — gets the job done at the lowest price
- Best all-rounder: Veuve Clicquot — good taste, good recognition, good photos
- Best for celebrations: Laurent-Perrier Rosé — the pink bottle adds a festive element
- Best for impressing: Dom Perignon — the name carries weight
- Best spectacle: Ace of Spades — the gold bottle is unmatched for visual impact
- Best for wine lovers: Ruinart or Krug — quality over branding
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