Level 27 sits on the 27th floor of the Atlas Tower at Al. Jerozolimskie 123a, in Warsaw's Ochota district, and trades on a view few city bars can match. The Rooftop Guide lists it as a rooftop bar built around the skyline, set high enough that the room itself becomes the draw before a drink is poured.
The bar suits a late weekend night out, a group that wants city views, cocktails and a dance floor under one roof. It works less well for a quiet early drink or a weeknight, because the venue runs only Friday and Saturday and shifts toward a club after midnight rather than a calm cocktail lounge.
The format is rooftop bar and nightclub together. The venue's own site bills it as a sky bar in the centre of Warsaw, and coverage on My Guide Warsaw and Novacircle describes a room that leans into live music and a late, energetic crowd through the early hours. The hours back that up: doors run 11pm to 5am on the two nights it opens.
The drinks list is the strongest reason to come beyond the view. The house menu lists the Vigentino, a long drink of Ostoya vodka, Martini Bianco, Ambroeus 0% and elderflower syrup, among a cocktail range the venue prices between 29 and 44 PLN. Bottle service is a core part of the offer, which fits the table-led, group-booking pattern the room is built around.
The setting is the point. Twenty-seven floors up, the terrace and windows give a wide read of the Warsaw skyline, and the venue is at its best at the turn of the night when the city lights come up. Tripadvisor reviewers through 2026 return to the view and the height more than any single drink, which is the honest measure of a rooftop bar.
The crowd is weekend-night Warsaw, dressed up and out late, with the room filling after midnight and running toward dawn. Because the venue opens only two nights a week, those nights pack in, and the tone sits closer to a high-rise club than a hotel sky lounge. A table booking is the way to hold a seat.
Best time to go is late on a Friday or Saturday, after 11pm, when the bar is open and the skyline is lit. There is no weekday option, so the visit has to land on the weekend. Arriving earlier in the window gives the calmer read of the view before the floor fills.
What sets Level 27 apart in Warsaw is the height and the format, a genuine 27th-floor room that pairs the city's skyline with a late club night rather than a polite rooftop aperitivo. The weekend-only schedule narrows when it can be done, but for a group chasing a view and a late night it is one of the clearest options in the city. It headlines the high-rise picks in our Warsaw bar guide and our rooftop bars cluster.
What regulars and reviewers flag is to set expectations around the format: this is a high-rise club with a view, not a calm cocktail terrace, and the people who rate it highest are the ones who came for a late night out. My Guide Warsaw notes the live-music programming and the energy of the room after midnight, while the recurring caution across listings is that the lifts and the door can back up on busy nights, so a table booking and an earlier arrival in the 11pm window are the practical moves. Taken on those terms, the view and the cocktail list at 29 to 44 PLN deliver what the floor promises.
Compare it with Panorama Sky Bar and the rest of the city's high rooms in the rooftop bars guide before picking a night.
Sources: Level 27 official site and menu; The Rooftop Guide; My Guide Warsaw; Novacircle; Tripadvisor (updated 2026).


