3 reviewed party hostels · from €8.42/night · Hostelworld rated
Punta del Este turns into a different beast when the Southern Hemisphere summer hits. From late December to February, the peninsula hums with backpackers, locals, and international visitors all chasing the same thing: warm nights and colder drinks. The action centres on the harbour and the narrow strip of bars along Playa Brava, where La Huella serves cocktails to a crowd that spills onto the sand. Most party hostels cluster around the central peninsula or in La Barra, putting you within stumbling distance of the next bar. Expect to pay around 250–350 Uruguayan pesos for a beer in a hostel bar, or double that in a club. If you’re here for the nightlife, skip the residential zones: anywhere beyond Gorlero Street feels like a ghost town after midnight.
Rated by Hostelworld score · Prices per dorm bed per night
If you are a party maniac, the F&F Hostel will exceed your expectations. There is a lively and buzzing on-site bar with a swimming pool where you can chill and meet other people. In the evenings you can enjoy crazy pool parties, awesome happy hours, and fun drinking games.
Cool party hostel with nice vibes and friendly atmosphere. Start your day with a free tasty breakfast. After the surfing, enjoy the sunsets, drink specials, and happy hours at the vibrant on-site bar. And when the night comes, join the fun pub crawls and explore local dance clubs just a short walk away.
Great place for party people and surfers. Great common areas where regular events are organised to ensure a friendly and fun atmosphere. The vibrant on-site bar is hosting happy hours, live music events, drinking games, karaoke nights, etc. If you are a real adventurer, don’t miss to join the fun city tours, fishing, cycling, snorkelling, and other group activities.
Organised nights out with a local guide
The crawl visits four bars in the port area, all within a 10-minute walk. Each bar has a different theme: one might have a beer pong table, another a shot challenge. The ticket includes four drinks (beer, whisky, gin, or vodka), skip-the-line entry to clubs, and a guide who keeps the group together. Expect a mix of backpackers and young locals.
How Punta Del Este's nightlife zones break down
A 15-minute bus ride from the centre, La Barra is where Punta del Este’s bohemian side comes out. The streets are lined with street-art murals, boutique shops, and bars that spill onto the pavement. The bridge over the lagoon is the best spot for sunset photos, and the nightlife here is more low-key than the peninsula: think craft beer bars and live music rather than clubs.
The heart of Punta del Este’s nightlife, the peninsula is packed with hostels, bars, and clubs. Gorlero Street is the main drag, where you’ll find everything from street food stalls to high-end restaurants. The harbour area is where the pub crawls start, and the streets stay busy until sunrise on weekends.
The calmer side of the peninsula, Playa Mansa is where you go for beach clubs and day parties. The sand is softer, the water is warmer, and the bars along the beachfront serve cocktails in plastic cups so you can take them onto the sand. At night, the clubs here attract a slightly older crowd than Playa Brava.
Where the hostel pub crawls end up, and where to go on your own
Perched on the rocks at the end of Playa Brava, Moby Dick is the go-to for sunset cocktails. The crowd is a mix of backpackers and older travellers, and the vibe stays chilled until around 10 p.m., when the music shifts to reggaeton and the dance floor fills up. A caipirinha costs 280 pesos during happy hour (6–8 p.m.).
OVO brings a slice of Miami to Punta del Este, with bottle service, laser lights, and a dress code that leans toward smart casual. The club has two floors: electronic on the ground level and Latin upstairs. Cover is 500 pesos and includes one drink. Doors open at midnight, but the crowd doesn’t peak until 2 a.m.
Attached to the El Viajero hostel, this bar is the social hub of the peninsula. The crowd is mostly backpackers and Uruguayan students, and the drinks are cheap: beer starts at 150 pesos during happy hour. The bar stays open until 4 a.m. on weekends, with live music or DJs most nights.
A short taxi ride from the centre, La Huella sits on the sand at José Ignacio and is famous for its seafood and sunset views. The bar area gets lively after 9 p.m., with a mix of locals and tourists. Cocktails cost around 350 pesos, and the ceviche is worth the splurge.
The crawl hits four bars in the port area, all within walking distance. Each stop has a different theme: think beer pong, shot challenges, and reggaeton. The ticket includes four drinks, access to clubs, and a guide who keeps the group moving. Meet at the fountain on Gorlero Street at 11 p.m.
Daytime beach party that spills into the night. The club is right on Playa Mansa, with sand underfoot and a thatched roof overhead. Entry is free before 8 p.m., but drinks are pricey: expect to pay 300 pesos for a beer. The crowd is mostly under 30, and the music leans toward house and Latin.
A British-style pub tucked off Gorlero Street, Soho is the spot for football matches and cheap pints. The crowd is a mix of expats and locals, and the pub grub: think burgers and fish and chips: is solid. Happy hour runs 5–7 p.m., with pints at 200 pesos.