Pole Parties in Atlanta
9 studios in Atlanta, Georgia show real evidence of hosting private and bachelorette parties — 5 with a party or booking page on the studio's own site. A pole party is a private, beginner-friendly class for your whole group: spins, a little sassy floorwork, a lot of cheering, and everyone leaving feeling powerful — the runaway favorite for a bachelorette, and just as fun for a birthday, girls' night or team celebration. With 9 studios hosting in town, it's worth calling around to compare group minimums, packages, and vibe before you lock in a date. Studios are ranked below by local reputation (rating weighted by review count), and where students' reviews mention a party, the quote is shown.
1. PoleLaTeaz
4.8 ★★★★★ 581 reviews
“PoleLaTeaz was such a fun experience! We booked a bachelorette party (group experience- VIP package). The instructor was so sweet and down to earth - made all of us feel super…” — Lindsey
2. Pink Poles Studio
4.6 ★★★★★ 326 reviews
“This class was amazing! Me and my bridal party were so impressed by the routine we all felt so sexy afterwards. Our instructor was so fun and hyped all of us up! 10/10 would…” — Alison
3. The Sky Barre Downtown Beltline
4.8 ★★★★★ 112 reviews
“Amazing we loved every minute of our class! We went to celebrate a bachelorette party. Starfire was our instructor and she was so fun and patient ! The experience was a 10/10 and…” — Jordén
4. Secret Garden Pole Fitness Boutique
4.6 ★★★★★ 64 reviews
“Recently held a pole party with my girlfriends this past weekend at Secret Garden Pole and it was so much fun! They let us bring drinks and snacks and choose the type of music or…” — Yemi
5. The Milan Method Pole Dance Fitness Studio
4.8 ★★★★★ 53 reviews
6. The Studios Brookhaven
5 ★★★★★ 37 reviews
“I absolutely love The Studios Brookhaven and all the hard work Don Jones and the team have put into this place. My daughter started going to TSB's Group Piano classes when she was…” — Leigh
Booking a pole party in Atlanta: what to ask
- Group minimum and maximum. Most studios need a minimum headcount (often around 4–8) and cap the group at how many poles they have — ask both, and whether a big crew can be split across two instructors.
- What's in the package. How long the class runs, whether it's spins and tricks, floorwork, heels or chair dance, and what's included versus an add-on. Some throw in decorations, a toast, or photos.
- Drinks and decorating. If you want BYOB bubbly or to decorate, confirm it's allowed — it varies by studio and local law, and most keep drinks to before or after the class, not during.
- Total price and deposit. Per person or flat group rate, what a deposit holds, and the cancellation policy. Get the real number for your date and headcount rather than relying on a ballpark.
- Date and lead time. Popular slots (weekend evenings especially) book up, so ask how far ahead to reserve, and whether they can accommodate any mobility needs or non-drinkers in the group.