The city's longest running jazz room: a cafe and bar up front, a 150 seat hall in back, and a concert every night of the week.
Budapest Jazz Club holds down Hollan Erno utca 7 in Ujlipotvaros, the bookish residential quarter north of Parliament, and it is the longest active jazz club in the city. The format separates it from every wine bar with a saxophonist: a real concert hall with more than 150 seats sits behind the cafe, and the program runs every single night.
The booking mixes Hungary's first call players, names like Veronika Harcsa and the Balint Gyemant Trio, with touring international acts. Fodor's reviews it as the city's serious jazz address, and one Tripadvisor reviewer called it the go to place for jazz in Budapest, blown away by the sound quality.
Who would hate it? Anyone wanting background music. The hall expects listening; conversation lives in the front bar.
The front room works as a neighbourhood cafe and bar; the back is the point, a purpose built hall where the stage stays visible from every seat. Reviewers on Tripadvisor single out the PA as very clear and the moving lights as proper concert grade, rare praise for a club this size. The room seats jazz like a theatre but drinks like a bar, with table service through the sets.
Order a classic cocktail or a Hungarian wine and settle in; reviewers rate the cocktails as excellent for a music venue, and the bar holds a fair list of local bottles. Concert tickets run roughly 2,500 to 5,000 forints depending on the act, and the Monday and Wednesday jam sessions at 10pm cost nothing. The kitchen serves through early evening, though reviewers note it can wind down before late sets.
Expect local jazz heads, musicians on their night off, and travelers who did their homework. The hall hushes for the sets; the front bar carries the chatter between them. Late jams pull a younger, looser crowd than the ticketed shows.
