{"id":20241,"date":"2026-02-27T13:31:41","date_gmt":"2026-02-27T12:31:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/?p=20241"},"modified":"2026-02-27T13:31:41","modified_gmt":"2026-02-27T12:31:41","slug":"how-gen-z-is-reshaping-nightlife-in-utrecht","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/20241\/how-gen-z-is-reshaping-nightlife-in-utrecht\/","title":{"rendered":"How Gen Z is reshaping nightlife in Utrecht"},"content":{"rendered":"
At 1 am in Utrecht, the line outside the club is short. Inside, the dance floor is filling slowly. No one is rushing in. For many students, Friday night no longer means clubbing by default. A few years ago, this would have looked different. Friday night meant clubbing. Not as a special occasion but that is simply what every young person would do.<\/p>\n
From routine to occasional event<\/strong><\/p>\n In early 2020, 24 percent of young people in the Netherlands reported going to a club every week. By 2023, that number had dropped to 13 percent, according to the Trimbos Institute\u2019s Large Nightlife Survey<\/a>. At Club Poema in Utrecht, the change has been noticeable. \u201cWe have noticed changes in visitor numbers over the past years,\u201d said Dyan of Club Poema. \u201cThe shift became particularly visible after the COVID period, around 2022. While people returned to nightlife, their patterns changed. Nights are shorter, and attendance is less predictable.” The shift is not simply about fewer people going out. It is about how they go out.<\/p>\n An empty dance floor in a Utrecht club.<\/p><\/div>\n Changing clubbing habits<\/strong><\/p>\n \u201cYounger generations definitely approach nightlife differently,\u201d Dyan explains. \u201cThey are more selective, more health-conscious, and often more focused on specific events rather than going out as a weekly routine.\u201d Social media, he added, plays a stronger role in deciding where and when to go.<\/p>\n