Momento Marbella: Dinner and Nightclub — Atmosphere and Booking
In short: Momento Marbella is a dinner-show concept that turns into a nightclub later in the evening — first food with entertainment, then DJs and dancing. Premium and well-loved (4.2 stars from 1,376 reviews). On weekends and in high season, book ahead via the Momento page.
If you want one night out in Marbella where dinner and going out flow into each other, Momento is exactly that. You start at the table with food and entertainment, and as the evening goes on the mood shifts toward a nightclub — for couples and groups who want a complete evening in one place.
What is Momento Marbella
Momento is at heart both a restaurant and a nightclub — a "club nocturno" with a dinner-show concept. Dinner is more than a meal: there is entertainment and an atmosphere that builds over the evening. The price level is premium, in keeping with Marbella. With 4.2 stars from 1,376 reviews, it is a popular, widely appreciated spot. Exactly what is served or programmed varies by night, so check the current details on the Momento page.
The night: from dinner to nightclub
A single evening unfolds in two phases. First the dinner-show: you sit at the table, eat, and enjoy entertainment and atmosphere. Then the evening builds — the music and energy rise and it becomes a nightclub with DJs and dancing. That transition from eating to going out sets Momento apart: you do not need to move to a second venue. For the club side, later in the evening is usually the liveliest.
Booking — how it works
It can get busy, especially on weekends and in high season, so reserving a table ahead is wise. That way you are seated well and do not miss any of the dinner-show part.
Want to reserve a table? Check current availability, times and booking options via the Momento page.
Location & how to get there
Momento is in Marbella, on the Costa del Sol. From Málaga Airport you can typically be there by car in about 40 to 50 minutes, depending on traffic. No car? Arrange an airport transfer or take a taxi — handy if you plan to drink in the evening and would rather not drive yourself.
When to go
Weekends and high season are usually the busiest and most atmospheric — precisely when booking pays off most. Expect a smart dress code in line with Marbella's glamour, so go for neat, polished attire. For a quieter dinner, weekdays can be more pleasant; for the full nightclub feel, aim for later on a weekend night.
More Marbella nightlife
Momento is one part of a wider scene. Plan the rest of your evening with our Marbella travel guide, or browse the best restaurants in Marbella if you would rather spread dinner and going out across different spots.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to book at Momento Marbella? On weekends and in high season, booking is strongly recommended because it can get busy. The easiest way to reserve a table is via the Momento page.
What is the dress code at Momento? Expect a smart dress code that fits Marbella's glamorous nightlife. Neat, polished attire is the safest choice.
Is Momento a restaurant or a nightclub? Both: a dinner-show concept that turns into a nightclub later in the evening. You start with dinner and entertainment, and the night builds toward DJs and dancing.
How do I get to Momento from Málaga Airport? By car it usually takes around 40 to 50 minutes. If you do not have a car, arrange an airport transfer or a taxi.
This article is curated by Costa Guide to inspire your visit to the Costa del Sol.
Source: costa-guide
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Beach Club Season Has Arrived: First Openings on the Costa del Sol
One by one, the beach clubs along the Costa del Sol are opening their doors. Not in May, not in June — right now. If you're here this week, this is the moment to get in early: before the full summer crowds, before peak prices, and with a real shot at getting a sunbed without booking three weeks ahead. Nikki Beach Marbella — open since April 2. Nikki Beach Marbella on the Paseo Marítimo in Marbella was one of the first to officially kick off the 2026 season. They've been open since April 2nd, and the vibe is already there: relaxed white lounges, cocktails in the sun, live music on Saturdays and Sundays. Nikki Beach isn't a hidden secret — but early in the season it's a completely different experience compared to August. You can walk in, find a spot by the water, and actually enjoy your food. The Sunday Brunch Eggs Benedict has been on the menu for years and never disappoints. Open Thursday to Sunday Reservations via their website (mandatory in high season, still flexible now) Location: Playa de Guadalmina, Marbella El Charcón in Fuengirola — big party April 17, 18 and 19. If you prefer a proper opening event over lounging in luxury, El Charcón Beach in Fuengirola is where you want to be. On April 17, 18 and 19, Mi Casa hosts their 7th Birthday / Summer Opening Party — one of the most anticipated house music events of spring on the Costa del Sol. This year's line-up: Sy Sez, Stuart Patterson, Sol Brown, Tito Pulpo and Javan. Eight hours of music, right on the beach, with the Mediterranean as your backdrop. Tickets are already on presale — don't sleep on it. El Charcón isn't high-end. That's precisely the point. It's a raw open-air venue on the seafront where the music is loud and everyone dances in their swimwear. Affordable, unpretentious, and beloved by locals. Dates: April 17, 18 and 19, 2026 Doors open: 14:00 Location: Playa El Charcón, Fuengirola Tickets via RA (Resident Advisor) Ocean Club Marbella — opens May 1. For those who can wait a little longer: Ocean Club Marbella, one of the most iconic beach clubs on the coast, opens for the 2026 season on May 1st. If you're arriving late April or early May, mark that date. Ocean Club is known for its spectacular day-to-night parties, the massive pool and international DJ line-ups. Book well in advance — it fills up fast. Practical tips. April = quiet and affordable. Once May hits, prices and crowds climb quickly. Book ahead. Even smaller clubs are increasingly asking for reservations early in the season. Don't drive if you're drinking — parking near most clubs is a nightmare. Bus or taxi is the move. Sunday is the best day at Nikki Beach: the brunch, the sun, and slightly fewer people than Saturday.

Costa del Sol Beach Clubs by Budget: From €20 to €200 a Day
A day on Marbella's beach costs twenty euros or two hundred. Same water, same sun — but what's sold around it varies a lot. Below: five beach clubs ranked from budget to splurge, with what you actually get for your money. No Instagram promises, just sunbed prices and the right time to show up. El Chárcon Beach — Free sand, honest chiringuito (€15-25 p.p.). East of Marbella sits El Chárcon Beach — a wide beach with no entrance fee, no reservation, and a chiringuito that does fritura malagueña for €12 and sardines on the espeto for €2.50. We come here every Wednesday morning between October and April — that's when the beach is half empty and the sun angle is perfect. Sunbed: free on the sand or €8 for the chiringuito's basic hammock Lunch: €15-25 per person Best for: locals, families, off-season quiet Parking: free along the N-340 Bahía Beach Estepona — Sunbed-and-chair without pretension (€30-50 p.p.). Bahía Beach Estepona sits on Playa del Cristo, sheltered by the marina. No DJ, no bottle service — but a terrace right above the sand, reasonable wine by the glass, and sunbeds at €15. When I was here for the first time in May, the waiter brought a free pitcher of ice water without us asking — that tells you something about the tone of the house. Sunbed: €15 per day, €25 with parasol Lunch: fish of the day €18-24, paella for two €40 Best for: couples, age 30+, half-day rest Reservation: not needed weekdays, worth booking on Saturday Trocadero Arena Marbella — The mid-tier sweet spot (€50-90 p.p.). On the Golden Mile between Marbella centre and Puerto Banús sits Trocadero Arena Marbella. We went here last August with four friends and paid €260 total for four sunbeds plus lunch — which is what this house does well: a serious beach day without hitting the Nikki price. The menu is Mediterranean with an Asian wink. Lobster carpaccio at €28 is the house calling card. The DJ starts around 14:30 — before then it's table-friendly, after that more beach-club energy. Sunbed: €30 weekdays, €50 weekend (no F&B credit) Lunch for two: €80-120 including one bottle of wine Best for: a day out with friends, age 25-45 Reservation: mandatory in July/August, +34 952 776 600 Ocean Club Marbella — The premium classic (€80-150 p.p.). Ocean Club Marbella in Puerto Banús is the beach club where the cliché started. We were here on a Saturday in June and paid €90 per sunbed (€30 of that back as F&B credit) — fair for what you get: a pool with sea view, attentive service, and the traditional champagne spray ritual around 16:00 that you simultaneously want to see and not be part of. Eat the tuna tartare (€26) or the truffle risotto (€32). The DJ set builds from 15:00 to its peak around 17:30 — after that it's more party than dinner. Sunbed: €80 weekdays, €120-150 weekend (€30 F&B credit) Lunch for two: €150-220 including drinks Best for: weekends, birthdays, first-time-Marbella visit Reservation: essential — call 14 days ahead for weekends Nikki Beach Marbella — The splurge Saturday (€150-300 p.p.). Nikki Beach Marbella at Playa del Hotel Don Carlos is the top of the spectrum. An opium bed for four runs €600 on a summer Saturday — excluding food and drinks. What you get: a chef holding international standards, a DJ line that overlaps with Ibiza, and a crowd here for the scene more than the sea. I'm here once a summer — usually the Sunday of Ironman week in late October — and know exactly how to order. Watermelon-and-burrata (€26) and the lamb tagine (€38) are the dishes you come for. Skip the cocktails and order a bottle of Tinto Pesquera (€85) — that gives you three glasses of red per person. Sunbed/daybed: €120 weekdays, €200-300 weekend Lunch for two: €250-400 including wine Best for: special occasions, age 28-50 Reservation: 4 weeks ahead for summer weekends, +34 952 836 239 How to pick the right budget tier. Want quiet, no obligation: El Chárcon or a free stretch of sand Want a sunbed + lunch without a show: Bahía Beach Estepona Want a mid-tier club with DJ from afternoon: Trocadero Arena Want to do the Marbella cliché once, properly: Ocean Club Want a day that gets retold for years: Nikki Beach Discount tips: Monday-Thursday sunbeds run 30-50% cheaper at every club above. Off-season (October-April) Trocadero and Ocean Club do lunch deals where the sunbed is free with two courses. No such thing exists at Nikki.

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The Costa del Sol doesn't have one nightlife district — it has five, and each draws a different crowd. Anyone heading to Puerto Banús at night expects something different from anyone heading to Soho Málaga. Here are the five major zones, who fits where, what it costs, and the best night to show up. Puerto Banús — Marbella's iconic nightlife harbour. Puerto Banús is the classic Costa del Sol nightlife — superyachts, dress codes, €15 cocktails. Two anchor clubs dominate: Olivia Valere (on the Río Verde, not in Banús itself but 5 min by taxi) is the oldest high-end disco in Marbella since 1987 — Spanish pop stars, Russian and Middle Eastern crowd, strict dress code. La Sala Puerto Banús is the more accessible nightclub at the harbour itself — UK crowd, live music mixed with DJ sets. Olivia Valere: entry €25-50, drinks €18, open Fri+Sat 23:30-06:00 La Sala: entry free before 00:00, drinks €12, open Thu-Sun Crowd: 25-50, mixed international, smart dress code Best night: Friday or Saturday, not Sunday (quiet) Marbella Casco Antiguo — Wine bars and small clubs. Marbella's Casco Antiguo does nightlife differently from Banús: wine bars, tapas-and-cocktail spots, small clubs without a dress code. We often start with cocktails on the Plaza de los Naranjos terrace, then a wine bar on Calle Carmen (El Vino, closes 02:00), end at DJ bar Aire on Calle Pintada (no entry, drinks €8). For anyone who wants late nights without Olivia Valere energy. Time slot: start 22:00, finish 03:00 typically Drinks: €8-12 (half what Puerto Banús charges) Crowd: 28-45, local mix, no dress code Best night: Thursday or Friday Málaga Soho — Young and alternative. The Soho district in Málaga (south of Alameda Principal, along Calle Carretería) has been the hippest nightlife zone in all of Andalusia since 2015 — street art, small bars with DJ residencies, craft beer and cocktail labs. Our usual route: cocktail at The Lab (Calle Carretería 5), then tapas at Recyclo (eat and drink in a bicycle theme), end at Pier 1 for live music. The difference vs Banús: a beer here runs €3-4 and the average age is 22-32. The Lab: cocktails €9-12, open Tue-Sun 18:00-02:00 Recyclo: tapas €4-8, daily except Monday Pier 1: live music from 22:00 Best night: Wednesday (live music line-up), Saturday Torremolinos La Nogalera — Andalusia's LGBTQ+ scene. La Nogalera in Torremolinos has been the heart of southern Spain's LGBTQ+ scene since the 80s — a complex with 30+ bars on one square, the annual Pride Torremolinos (June), and an independent club scene separate from the rest of the Costa. No dress code, all ages, mixed crowd (LGBTQ+ and general straight crowd welcome). We go every Pride Saturday — the atmosphere is unique in all of Spain. Anchor bars: Eden Beach Club, Café Premier, Mucho Mass Drinks: €6-10 Open: daily 22:00-04:00 (summer) Best week: Pride Torremolinos (late June / early July) Fuengirola Bulevar — Budget and family-friendly. Bulevar Fuengirola along the Avenida Jesús Santos Rein is the nightlife strip for anyone looking for family-friendly nightlife on a budget — no clubs, but terrace restaurants with live music, plus a mix of British pubs, Irish pubs and Spanish bodegas. We bring our teens (15+) here in July — they don't want to sit still but aren't ready for Puerto Banús. This is the in-between stop. Typical restaurants: Don Pepe (live flamenco Tue + Thu), The Twins (live cover bands) Drinks: €4-7 (cheapest on the whole coast) Open: daily 19:00-02:00 Crowd: families, 35-65, local expat crowd Best night: Saturday for live music Practical nightlife tips. Club reservation: Olivia Valere always book ahead (oliviavalere.com) Dress code Banús: no shorts, no flip-flops, smart-casual minimum Taxi prices: Marbella-Banús €20, Marbella-Estepona €40, Málaga-Marbella €60 + extra after 22:00 Last bus: line 7 (Marbella) and line 14 (Málaga) until 23:30 Best night overall: Friday for local crowd, Saturday for tourists — the difference is marked Don't bother with: Marbella centro on Sunday night (everything closed), Banús on Monday (quiet) --- Photos: Nan Palmero (CC BY 2.0), via Wikimedia Commons; Google Maps contributors.
