
8mm Bar
8mm Bar occupies a small, dark room on Schonhauser Allee at the edge of Mitte and Prenzlauer Berg, and has run as a vinyl-focused punk and garage rock bar since the early 2000s. The interior holds around 40 people when full; a short bar along one wall, a few battered seats, and a DJ booth with a record deck at the back. The walls carry posters, photos, and flyers from 20 years of gigs and bar nights, mostly punk, garage, and post-punk artists who played Berlin or passed through. No cocktail menu; the offer is beer, spirits, and occasional shots at honest prices. The sound system is disproportionately good for the room size, and the music runs loud through the late hours on weekends. DJs work vinyl only and the music policy covers 1970s punk, 1960s garage, post-punk, no wave, and occasional psychedelic rock. The crowd is regulars, musicians from nearby rehearsal spaces, visiting punk tourists, and a locals-only late-night scene that emerges after 1 AM. Prices stay low: 3.50 EUR beers, 4 EUR spirits.
Where to stay near 8mm Bar
Hotels and rentals within walking distance.
What to Expect
A small, loud, dark room with punk posters, cheap beer, and a vinyl-only DJ. Expect serious volume, dense crowding after midnight, and a crowd that came for the music rather than the scene.
Loud, dense, and genuinely underground. A bar for the music rather than the look.
Punk, garage rock, post-punk, no wave, and occasional psychedelic rock on vinyl only
Casual to rough; leather jackets, band t-shirts, and boots fit the tone
Punk and garage fans, late-night drinking, musicians looking for a scene
Cash only, euros strongly preferred; no card reader
Price Range
Beer 3.50 EUR, spirits 4-5 EUR, shots 2-3 EUR, no cocktail menu
Beer ~$3.80, spirits ~$4.30-5.40, shots ~$2.20-3.20
Hours
Daily from 21:00 until 4:00 or later; weekend nights run latest
Insider Tip
Cash only, small bills preferred. The DJ takes vinyl requests but will ignore anything commercial. Arrive before 22:30 on weekends to get near the bar; after midnight the room fills to the door.
Full Review
8mm Bar has held its corner on Schonhauser Allee with no interest in updating, rebranding, or softening the edges. The door is unmarked beyond a small sign, and the entrance drops directly into the narrow room. The bar runs along the left wall with five or six stools, a handful of standing spots near the DJ booth at the back, and a few battered wooden seats along the right wall under the poster-covered walls. Everything shows 20 years of use: stained wood, scuffed floors, and tape residue on the walls from decades of flyer runs.
The music is the reason to come. DJs work vinyl only and the rotation is mostly regulars who have been spinning at 8mm for years. A typical night runs heavy on 1970s punk, 1960s garage, and post-punk; the selection leans British and American but stretches into European no wave and Japanese punk when the mood takes. The sound system is loud and clean; the small room makes the volume physical rather than just auditory. After midnight the room packs in, the dance space near the DJ booth becomes standing-only, and the energy intensifies rather than fades.
Compared to other Berlin punk and rock bars, 8mm sits at the more serious end. Madame Claude in Kreuzberg runs a similar vinyl-heavy program but with a broader musical range. White Trash Fast Food closed years ago and left a gap that 8mm partly fills. Bei Roy in Friedrichshain leans more toward indie than punk. 8mm's strength is focus; it does one thing and does it consistently. The crowd rewards the commitment with genuine loyalty.
For a practical visit, bring cash; there is no card reader and the bar moves slowly if you try. Small bills preferred. The bar staff do not make cocktails, so beer and spirits are the offer. Arrive by 23:00 on weekends to get near the bar. Tipping is not expected but appreciated; a rounded-up bill is enough. Closing time stretches to 4 or 5 AM on peak nights, earlier on slower ones.
The Neighborhood
Schonhauser Allee runs north from the top of Mitte into Prenzlauer Berg, and 8mm sits near the border where the two neighborhoods meet. The surrounding blocks hold a mix of residential buildings, small shops, restaurants, and a few music venues. The area has gentrified over 20 years but retains working neighborhood character, especially at night.
Getting There
U2 to Senefelderplatz, three-minute walk south on Schonhauser Allee. U8 to Rosenthaler Platz, 10 minutes east. Tram M1 and M2 stops along Schonhauser Allee itself. Night trams run regular service.
Address
Schönhauser Allee 177b, 10119 Berlin
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