SINGLZ community guidelines: how we keep the night safe and respectful

SINGLZ events are designed as open, social club nights exclusively for single adults. These community guidelines set out the behavioural expectations that apply to everyone present at a SINGLZ event. They exist to define what respectful participation looks like, how concerns are raised and handled, and what conduct may result in removal from the event. These guidelines apply to all attendees without exception, from the moment they enter the venue to the moment they leave.

What these guidelines are for and who they apply to

These community guidelines apply to all individuals who purchase a ticket to and attend a SINGLZ event, regardless of age, gender, background, or city of residence. They are in place to define the behavioural standards expected within the event environment and to clarify how situations that fall outside those standards are managed. They are not a legal contract but a shared framework that makes the event function as intended. They apply from the moment an attendee enters the venue until they leave, and extend to all interactions with other attendees, event staff, and venue personnel.

The one rule that makes SINGLZ work

SINGLZ events are exclusively open to single individuals. This is the foundational condition of attendance communicated clearly at the point of ticket purchase and central to how the event is structured and experienced. All other guidelines exist to support the environment this rule creates. Without it, the premise of a shared, open social space for singles cannot function. Attendees are expected to honour this condition in good faith. While it cannot be verified in every case, it is the core standard against which all participation is measured.

How respectful behaviour is defined at our events

Respectful behaviour at a SINGLZ event means recognising and responding to the signals of others. A personal boundary is considered crossed when an individual continues unwanted interaction after a clear verbal or non-verbal indication that the other person is not interested or uncomfortable. This includes persistent contact attempts, physical contact that has not been invited, following or positioning near someone after they have moved away, and any form of language or behaviour that is threatening, demeaning, or sexually explicit without mutual consent. The standard applied is not intent but impact: behaviour that makes another person feel unsafe or unable to move freely within the event falls outside the acceptable scope.

Any attendee who feels uncomfortable or believes a situation has gone beyond acceptable conduct may report this directly to a member of the SINGLZ event team or to venue security personnel. Reports are taken seriously and reviewed in the context of the specific situation. The event team will assess the report and determine an appropriate response, which may range from a direct intervention to removal from the venue. The identity of the person raising a concern is handled with discretion. No attendee is required to manage or resolve a situation on their own.

Who enforces the guidelines and how

The role of the event team and venue security

  • SINGLZ event team Present throughout the evening to monitor the environment, respond to reports, and intervene where behaviour falls outside the guidelines.
  • Venue Security Operates independently within the venue and works in coordination with the SINGLZ team where a situation requires physical intervention or removal.
  • Shared Responsibility Both the event team and venue security are points of contact for attendees. Either can receive and act on a report during the event.
  • Scope of Authority The event team and venue security have the authority to remove any attendee whose behaviour is deemed to violate these guidelines or to compromise the safety or comfort of others.

How reports are reviewed and handled

  1. 1
    Report received An attendee raises a concern with the event team or venue security, verbally or by approaching a staff member directly.
  2. 2
    Situation assessed The team member gathers relevant context — what occurred, where, and who was involved without requiring a formal written statement.
  3. 3
    Response determined Based on the nature and severity of the reported behaviour, the appropriate response is identified. This may include a verbal warning, separation of parties, or immediate removal.
  4. 4
    Action taken The response is carried out promptly. Where venue security is required, coordination happens immediately.
  5. 5
    Follow-Up where needed In situations where continued monitoring is warranted, the event team remains attentive for the remainder of the evening.

What attendees can expect from each other

Connecting, exchanging details, and reading the room

SINGLZ events are social by design. Conversation, dancing, and exchanging contact details are all normal parts of the evening. Attendees are expected to approach these interactions with awareness: genuine interest from one person does not create an obligation on the other. Exchanging details is appropriate when both parties are clearly comfortable and mutually interested. Reading the room recognising when someone is engaged versus when they are being polite or disengaged is the baseline social standard expected of all attendees.

When to step back and respect a no

Verbal indication

If someone says they are not interested, would like space, or declines further conversation, this is a clear signal to disengage. No further contact attempts should be made.

Non-verbal indication

Short responses, turning away, moving to another area of the venue, or limited engagement are signals that continued approach is not welcome.

After disengagement

Once someone has clearly moved on from an interaction, re-initiating contact in the same evening unless clearly welcomed is outside the expected conduct.

What may lead to removal from the event

Conduct Basis for removal
Attending while not single Violates the core eligibility condition of the event
Persistent unwanted contact after clear indication of disinterest Crosses a personal boundary as defined in these guidelines
Physically aggressive or threatening behaviour Compromises the safety of other attendees or staff
Verbal harassment or discriminatory conduct Falls outside the standard of respectful participation
Failure to comply with a request from the event team or security Obstructs the enforcement of these guidelines
Any behaviour that makes others feel unsafe in the venue Undermines the intended environment of the event

How these guidelines reflect the SINGLZ philosophy

SINGLZ events operate on the premise that a shared context everyone present is single and open to meeting people removes many of the social barriers that exist in a typical night out. These guidelines exist to protect that context. They are not designed to regulate how people interact, but to define the minimum standard of conduct that allows the event to function as an open, relaxed social environment. The absence of strict programming or structured activities means that the quality of the experience depends significantly on how attendees treat one another. These guidelines make that expectation explicit.

FAQ

SINGLZ runs as a standard club night, not a structured dating format. There are no rounds, no name badges, no facilitated introductions. The singles-only premise removes the guesswork, but the format stays social and relaxed. Whether or not you connect with anyone, you're attending a regular event with music, drinks, and a crowd that happens to share one thing in common.

Ticket sales are actively monitored across three age brackets: 18–30, 30–45, and 45+. The goal is a balanced mix across all groups within the same venue. You won't be attending a youth-skewed club night. That said, exact ratios vary per event, so checking current ticket availability by category can give you a rough sense of the current balance.

Yes. There's no obligation to stay for the full event, which runs until around 1:00 AM. Tickets are non-refundable once used, but attendance itself is entirely at your own pace. Nothing about the format requires you to stay a minimum amount of time or participate in any structured way.

Solo attendance is the standard at this type of event. Most attendees arrive independently. The format is designed around individual mingling rather than group dynamics, so arriving alone doesn't signal anything unusual. It's structurally easier to approach others and move around when you're not anchored to a group.

You can approach any member of the SINGLZ event team or venue security directly. You don't need to file a formal complaint or explain yourself at length just flag the situation. Staff will assess it and intervene appropriately. You're not expected to manage the situation yourself, and discretion is maintained throughout.

The price difference is €5 between early bird and regular, and €10 versus the late tier. Whether the window is meaningful depends on how far in advance you plan. Ticket protection (€1.68 extra) is worth considering if your schedule is uncertain refund requests are handled through the ticketing provider under their own policy.

SINGLZ doesn't facilitate post-event contact between attendees. There's no matching system or attendee directory. If contact details weren't exchanged during the event, there's no formal channel to reconnect through the organiser. Future events are a practical option if you're open to the possibility of crossing paths again.

Events open around 5:00 PM, so the early hours tend to be quieter and more conversational. As the evening progresses toward the later hours, the atmosphere typically shifts toward music and dancing. If conversation is your priority, arriving earlier gives you better conditions for it. The format doesn't formally change the social dynamic does.

Not connecting on a given night doesn't indicate a format mismatch. Social outcomes depend on a wide range of personal and situational factors that no event structure can control. The format creates conditions a shared context, an open atmosphere but not guarantees. Repeat attendance across different events gives a more complete picture of whether the environment works for you.

Real-time ratio data isn't published as part of the ticket purchase flow. Organisers monitor balance internally and manage it through tiered sales but this isn't presented as a live dashboard to buyers. If balance is a deciding factor for you, reaching out to the organiser directly before purchasing is the most reliable way to get a current read on the composition of a specific event.
At Singlz, it’s not just about dating, t’s about discovering, enjoying, and connecting.
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