Bristol

Dare to Club Bristol – A Closure the Lifestyle Community Won’t Forget

There is a particular kind of loss that communities feel when a genuine institution disappears — not just the inconvenience of losing a venue or a service, but the deeper recognition that something irreplaceable has gone and that whatever replaces it will inevitably be something different rather than something equivalent. Bristol’s lifestyle community experienced exactly that kind of loss on February 11th 2026 when Cheryl Brice announced on Instagram that Dare to Club — the Southwest’s most established and most loved swinger venue — was closing permanently.

Seven Years of Something Real

Dare to Club opened in 2019 at Alfred Street in St Philips and spent seven years doing something that is considerably harder than it looks — running a genuinely good swinger club. Not a technically functional venue that ticks boxes and processes people through the door, but a community institution that people felt genuinely attached to. Cheryl Brice’s farewell message — thanking every customer, associate, promoter and organiser who created the energy, community and memories that defined the venue — was the language of someone who understood that what she had built was more than a business.

That emotional response from the owner was matched by the Bristol lifestyle community’s reaction to the news. Social media responses to the closure announcement reflected genuine grief — not the performative outrage that the internet specialises in, but the quieter, more personal sadness of people who had real memories attached to a real place. First visits. Long-term friendships formed on the dance floor. The particular comfort of a venue where you could be yourself without explanation or apology.

What Made Dare to Club Different

The British swinger club scene is not short of venues — but it is short of venues that achieve what Dare to Club achieved. Most swinger clubs exist in a kind of social quarantine — known within the lifestyle community, invisible and irrelevant outside it. Dare to Club operated differently. Its programming crossed lifestyle events with fetish nights, live music, and underground parties that brought genuine musical talent — Neffa-T, Pluralist, Kahn and Neek among them — through its doors and gave the venue a cultural identity that extended into Bristol’s broader alternative scene.

That crossover was not accidental. It reflected something true about Bristol’s lifestyle community — that the people who participate in the swinging scene here are the same people who go to Lakota on a Saturday night, who attend the Harbour Festival, who know every inch of Stokes Croft. Bristol has never kept its interests in separate boxes and Dare to Club reflected that integration perfectly. It was a swinger club that Bristol’s broader alternative community could claim without embarrassment — and that made it genuinely distinctive within the national lifestyle landscape.

The Circumstances of the Closure

The closure followed a licence suspension that began in January 2026 — three months imposed after an inspection reportedly identified insufficient lighting, electricity concerns, and fire safety issues including overloaded cables near the DJ booth. The BBC covered the story — a measure of how far Dare to Club’s profile extended beyond the lifestyle community into Bristol’s cultural mainstream.

Owner Cheryl Brice chose permanent closure over the prospect of reopening after the suspension period. It is worth noting that the inspection issues — lighting, electrical safety, fire concerns — are the kind of practical venue management challenges that many small independent venues face and that have nothing to do with the nature of the events the venue hosted. The closure of Dare to Club is a story about the difficulty of sustaining independent cultural venues in a challenging economic and regulatory environment — a story that Bristol has told before with music venues, arts spaces, and community clubs that deserved better than the circumstances that ended them.

What This Means for the Southwest Lifestyle Scene

The practical impact of the Dare to Club closure extends beyond Bristol. The venue served the entire Southwest lifestyle community — couples and singles making the journey from Bath, Somerset, Gloucestershire, and beyond who used Dare to Club as their organised lifestyle anchor in a region that has relatively few dedicated venues. Those people are now navigating a Southwest lifestyle landscape without its most established fixed point — and the online community is working through what that means for how the region’s lifestyle scene organises itself going forward.

Bristol being Bristol, something will emerge. The city’s creative and community-minded character has always produced new cultural spaces to replace those that close — often stranger, more interesting, and more distinctly Bristol than what came before. The lifestyle community that Dare to Club built over seven years has the social infrastructure, the connections, and the organisational capability to support whatever comes next. Cheryl Brice created a community that can outlast the venue that created it — and that is perhaps the most significant thing she built.

A Final Word

The British lifestyle community does not produce many genuine institutions — venues and spaces that transcend their function and become something that people are genuinely attached to. Dare to Club was one of them. Its closure deserves to be acknowledged properly rather than absorbed into the general background noise of venues that open and close without anyone much noticing.

To Cheryl Brice, to everyone who worked there, promoted there, and organised there — and to the Bristol lifestyle community that made it what it was — this one mattered. The memories it generated will last considerably longer than the electrical cables near the DJ booth that contributed to its end.

Looking for Bristol’s swinger community? Explore our Bristol swingers guide and find out what is happening in the Southwest — or head back to the Confessions archive for more stories from the British lifestyle community.

The British lifestyle community is waiting. Thousands of couples and singles near you are already online right now.

Bristol Swingers

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