Ice-cold drinks beat a normal night out. Berlin Icebar is a bar built from solid natural ice, right in central Berlin, where even your glass is made of ice. You also get polar jackets and thick gloves, so the cold stays fun instead of miserable.
What I like most is the payoff for your money: the admission includes three drinks (alcoholic or soft), and you exchange tokens for them as you move through the experience. One thing to consider is that the ice time is intentionally brief, because it’s cold and the setup is small, so plan for a taste of the ice bar rather than a long hangout.
In This Review
- Quick Hits: What Makes Berlin Icebar Worth Your Time
- Berlin Icebar at Spandauer Str. 2: Why This Works as a Short Stop
- Getting In: Meeting Point and What the Start Feels Like
- The Ice Bar Experience: Jackets, Gloves, and Actual Cold Levels
- Your Three Included Drinks: Tokens, Choices, and Best-Value Strategy
- Ice Glasses, Ice Sculptures, and Photo-Ready Details
- How Much Time You’ll Actually Spend in the Ice Bar
- Service and Atmosphere: Usually Friendly, Sometimes Uneven
- Berlin Icebar Value: What $23.09 Buys You
- Who Should Book Berlin Icebar (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book Berlin Icebar?
- FAQ
- How long does the Berlin Icebar experience last?
- What’s included with the ticket price?
- What do I drink from inside the ice bar?
- Where is Berlin Icebar located, and what’s the meeting point?
- Is the ice bar dangerously cold?
- How big is the group?
- What are the cancellation options?
Quick Hits: What Makes Berlin Icebar Worth Your Time

- Solid natural ice in the entire bar, including ice-glass drinks
- Polar jacket and thick gloves provided so you can stay comfortable in the cold
- Three drinks included via admission tokens (alcoholic or soft)
- Time is limited in the ice section, so you’ll want to be ready when called in
- Small group feel (maximum 10 travelers), which helps the experience stay smooth
- Photo-friendly ice sculptures and ice-themed extras, like passports/story elements
Berlin Icebar at Spandauer Str. 2: Why This Works as a Short Stop

Berlin Icebar is the kind of activity that fits real life. It’s in the city center, it lasts about an hour, and it gives you a clear “do it once” novelty that’s actually organized. The pitch is simple: walk into a bar where everything you see is made of ice, and you drink from an ice glass.
Pricing is where it starts to make sense. At about $23.09 per person, you’re not paying for entry only. You’re paying for entry plus three included drinks. When you’re in Berlin and you’re already thinking about an early drink before dinner, this can feel close to the cost of a normal round—except this one comes with an ice-bar set you can’t replicate elsewhere.
The venue is also built for a low-friction experience. Mobile ticket. Central location. And because the group size is capped at 10, you’re less likely to feel swallowed by crowds while you’re trying to enjoy the cold, take photos, and get served.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Berlin.
Getting In: Meeting Point and What the Start Feels Like

You’ll meet at Berlin Icebar, Spandauer Str. 2, 10178 Berlin. The biggest practical tip is timing: many people enjoy the warm-up portion by arriving early. Even if your ticket has a set start time, arriving ahead of it gives you an easier start and time to settle in before the cold.
Here’s how the experience typically runs. You begin in a warmer bar area first, where you get your first drink tied to your admission tokens. Then you move into the ice section for the rest of the included drinks. That flow matters because the cold happens in stages. You’re not thrown into the freezer right away.
Some guests report that the warm bar part can be around 45 minutes, then the ice bar time for the remaining two drinks is around 10 to 15 minutes. Whether your timing lands exactly on that, the pattern stays the same: warm first, ice second, and don’t expect a long, slow stroll through the ice.
The Ice Bar Experience: Jackets, Gloves, and Actual Cold Levels
This is not a “light chill.” The ice bar is genuinely cold. One guest notes it around -12°C inside, which sounds brutal until you remember you have help.
You’ll be given a polar jacket and thick gloves. That matters because the goal isn’t to tough-guy your way through. It’s to let you enjoy the ice environment safely and comfortably enough to drink, look around, and take photos.
What surprised me from the feedback is how many people frame the ice bar as an easy win once you’re geared up. If you treat the cold like part of the attraction—not a barrier—you’ll have a better time. If you hate being cold for any reason, this is still a short visit, but it may not feel worth the effort.
Also, the ice setup has a real physical limitation: it’s smaller than what you may imagine from photos. That doesn’t ruin it, but it does mean you’ll want to move efficiently—look, pose, drink, then enjoy the rest of the experience without constantly waiting for empty space.
Your Three Included Drinks: Tokens, Choices, and Best-Value Strategy

The admission includes three free tokens, and those tokens are what unlock your drinks. You can choose drinks that are either alcoholic or soft, depending on what you selected/asked for at the time.
A practical way to think about it: since the drinks are included, you don’t need to play “menu math.” Focus on enjoying the experience rather than scanning prices. Many guests call the included drinks a major part of the value.
A couple of helpful details from the experience feedback:
- The drinks you get inside the ice bar may have a more limited choice compared with what’s available in the warm bar.
- People who want the best value often plan to use a bigger portion of the day’s “included benefits” in the bar areas rather than saving everything for the end.
If you want to maximize satisfaction, I’d do this: take the first drink where choices feel easiest, then be ready to order quickly once you’re in the ice section. Cold slows you down, and the time in the ice bar is intentionally short.
Ice Glasses, Ice Sculptures, and Photo-Ready Details

This is the part that feels like a gimmick until you see it. You sip from an ice glass. It’s a simple concept, but it instantly makes the whole thing memorable. A regular bar would never do that, and that’s why the photos work. You’re not just photographing a theme—you’re holding the theme.
The venue also leans into the visuals. Ice sculptures add shape and texture, and they create photo angles you can’t fake with an Instagram filter. Many people specifically praise the ice sculptures and the general atmosphere for pictures.
There are also small ice-themed extras that some guests mention, like story/passes and the idea of an ice-bar “world.” Even if you’re not a super-structured activity person, these small details help make the hour feel more like an experience and less like a one-minute stunt.
One thing to know: some people want more energy, like better music to encourage more movement. Others say the music and vibe are a good match for the ice-bar setting. So if you’re the type who needs a loud party mood, you might find it more “chill oddball” than “dance night.”
How Much Time You’ll Actually Spend in the Ice Bar

The biggest “make-or-break” factor here is time. Berlin Icebar is set up so you spend only a limited stretch inside the ice area, and this is by design. Cold conditions are serious, and the venue limits time in the ice bar to keep it safer and healthier.
That limitation is also why reviews split:
- People who treat it as a short, fun cold experience tend to rate it highly.
- People who expect a long ice-bar hangout feel disappointed—especially if they notice a warm bar portion that feels longer than they expected, or an ice portion that feels too brief.
If you’re going with friends, arrive prepared to follow the flow quickly. If you’re going as a couple or group and you want more time inside, manage expectations before you go. This is an hour-style activity with two different temperatures, not an all-night club.
Service and Atmosphere: Usually Friendly, Sometimes Uneven

Most feedback points to friendly staff and smooth service, especially in the warm bar portion. A number of guests describe staff as helpful and welcoming, and the experience feels organized rather than chaotic.
That said, there are also a few negative moments reported: some people felt the atmosphere changed once inside the ice bar, or that particular staff members were rude or unhelpful. Other reviews mention the ice bar feels smaller than photos and that the drinks weren’t as impressive as expected.
How I’d balance it for you: go in expecting a fun, themed bar with a “cold environment first” structure. If your bar standards run very high for cocktail quality and service personality, you may find it average. If your goal is novelty, ice-glass photos, and included drinks in central Berlin, the overall experience is likely to land well.
Berlin Icebar Value: What $23.09 Buys You

Let’s talk value like a traveler, not like a brochure.
For about $23.09, you get:
- entry to a solid-ice bar in central Berlin
- three drinks included
- polar jacket and thick gloves to handle the cold
- ice glasses and ice-bar visuals that are genuinely rare
If you compare to a standard bar, you’d usually pay for drinks first and then hope the atmosphere is worth the price. Here, your main “thing” is the venue itself—and the drinks are built into the ticket value.
Some guests even describe it as good value relative to entry plus drinks, especially if you catch the experience at the right time in your evening. If you were already planning to grab drinks before dinner, this can feel like you’re paying for an activity and getting bar service bundled in.
Who Should Book Berlin Icebar (and Who Might Skip It)
Berlin Icebar is best for:
- couples or groups who want a short, memorable activity
- first-timers to an ice bar experience
- people who like photos and weird, themed settings
- anyone planning an early-evening drink in central Berlin
It might not be the right fit if:
- you hate cold environments and don’t want to spend even brief time in a freezer-like room
- you expect a large ice bar with lots of lounging space
- you care most about top-tier cocktail quality rather than the ice-glass novelty
If you’re traveling with kids, seniors, or anyone sensitive to cold, you’ll need extra judgment. The polar jacket and gloves help, but cold is still cold.
Should You Book Berlin Icebar?
If you’re on a Berlin trip and you want one short, unusual activity that’s organized and gives you included drinks, I think Berlin Icebar is a strong yes. The value is in the package: entry plus three drinks, ice-glass drinking, and a truly different setting right in the city center.
Just book it with the right expectation: this is not a long ice-bar party. You’ll get a warm start, then a brief ice-bar moment, and you’ll want to use that time well. Arrive a little early, dress for the cold even with the provided gear, and focus on the ice-as-a-bar experience rather than trying to turn it into a traditional pub crawl.
FAQ
How long does the Berlin Icebar experience last?
It runs for about 1 hour (approx.).
What’s included with the ticket price?
Your admission includes three drinks and access to the Berlin Icebar experience. The drinks can be alcoholic or soft, and you use tokens included with admission.
What do I drink from inside the ice bar?
You drink from glasses made out of ice.
Where is Berlin Icebar located, and what’s the meeting point?
The meeting point is Berlin Icebar, Spandauer Str. 2, 10178 Berlin, Germany, and the activity ends back at the meeting point.
Is the ice bar dangerously cold?
It’s very cold. One review mentions it can feel around -12°C inside, but you are provided with a polar jacket and thick gloves.
How big is the group?
This activity has a maximum of 10 travelers.
What are the cancellation options?
You can cancel for a full refund if you cancel at least 24 hours in advance of the experience’s start time. Free cancellation is available, and changes within 24 hours aren’t accepted.

























