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Hen weekends · Sailing Estonia Journal

Bachelorette Party Ideas in Tallinn: Top 25
Things to Do

Twenty-five hand-picked bachelorette ideas in Tallinn — what actually works, by people who have hosted hundreds of hen weekends out of Port Noblessner.

🥂 25 ideas ⛵ 4 sailing options 📍 Tallinn & Tallinn Bay 🗓 Updated May 2026

We have hosted hundreds of hen weekends out of Port Noblessner over thirteen seasons. After a while you start noticing what the best ones have in common. It isn't the budget — some of the best ones spent less than a long restaurant night. It isn't the number of activities — three good ones beat seven shallow ones every time.

It is the mix: one unforgettable centrepiece, a couple of "we have never done that" surprises, some genuinely good food, and enough downtime not to break the bride by Sunday afternoon. This is the playbook we share when people email us asking "what should we actually do?" Four ideas below are ours. The rest are friends.

In this guide

01
⛵ Our service

Departs Port Noblessner · 2–3 hours · 8–12 guests

Private Yacht Charter on Tallinn Bay

The honest pitch first: this is the activity our hen parties book the most, and the one they keep talking about for years. A two- or three-hour skippered cruise on Tallinn Bay with the boat entirely yours. No strangers on board, no fixed playlist, no schedule that isn't your own. Bring the music. Bring the prosecco. Bring the inflatable crown.

We bring the boat and the captain. Most groups add a limousine pickup from the hotel, a photographer to catch the candid moments, or a detour towards Naissaar Island. Between mid-June and mid-August the sunset slot is the one to chase — the sky goes peach, then gold, then deep navy over the course of an hour, the city skyline silhouetted against it.

  • Skipper, fuel and safety gear included
  • Bring your own food and drinks — or we'll arrange catering
  • Sunset slots in June–August book out 4–6 weeks ahead
Book a private yacht
02

Port Noblessner · 2 hours · 4–8 per igloo

Hen Sauna at Iglupark, Noblessner

Estonians and saunas — it isn't a fashion thing, it's closer to a religion. Iglupark in Port Noblessner does the modern version: igloo-shaped private saunas right on the waterfront where you book the whole hut for your group. Heat, sea dip, repeat. The Baltic is cold even in July, which is half the fun once everyone's done it.

Two hours per booking, towels and birch whisks provided, sparkling on request. It's a five-minute walk from where our yachts leave, so pair sauna with sailing and you've got a properly Estonian afternoon. Don't overthink the outfit — you'll be in swimwear most of the time.

03

Kalamaja · 3–4 hours · Day-two recovery

Hedon Spa, Kalamaja

Day two of a hen weekend needs recovery. Hedon is the design-forward spa in Kalamaja, ten minutes' walk from Port Noblessner. A 25-metre pool, a rooftop terrace, salt sauna, steam room — all in one building, beautifully done.

Book the two-hour pool-and-sauna access, add 30-minute massages and a hot lunch in the spa restaurant, and you've got an effortless half-day. Weekend slots in summer fill up around two weeks ahead. Our tip: the 11:00 slot is the emptiest of the day — the rooftop is basically yours. Vegan menu is good. The lemonade is dangerous.

04

Telliskivi · 1.5 hours · No reservations

Brunch at F-Hoone, Telliskivi

Kalamaja's anchor brunch spot, inside Telliskivi Creative City. F-Hoone is what every European city wishes it had: an old factory hall, mismatched chairs, light through tall windows, plates that come big and warm. No reservations on weekends, so arrive before 11:00 or expect a queue.

The pelmeenid (Estonian dumplings) are reliable; the cinnamon bun is the size of a small dog. Coffee is fine, not destination-good — for that, walk five minutes to Renard or Nope. Pairs well with a sailing trip in the afternoon: brunch at noon, on the water by 14:00, dinner before dark.

05

Town Hall Square · 2 hours · Tip-based

Old Town walking tour

Free walking tours that leave from Town Hall Square are a much better way to see the Old Town than wandering with a map. Two hours, English-language, run by Tallinn Free Tour and a couple of others (tip the guide if you enjoy it — that's how they get paid).

The guides know the gossip: which church was burnt by whom, which tower was a prison, which courtyards the locals still drink in. Skip if your group has been to Tallinn before; ideal as Friday-afternoon orientation for first-timers.

06

Old Town · 2 hours · Reserve a table

Cocktails at Whisper Sister

The speakeasy-style bar everyone keeps recommending — and they're right. Whisper Sister is small, dimly lit, brick walls, attentive bartenders who know their craft. Their gin menu is impressive; ask for an off-menu sour and see what comes back.

Reserve a table — it's tiny and Saturday fills early. The vibe is grown-up, quiet conversation, not screaming hen-party noise, which makes it a perfect 19:00 pre-dinner stop, not a 23:00 finisher. Two cocktails each, then move on to dinner. Don't be the group who tries to do twelve shots here; that's a different bar's job.

07

Telliskivi or Old Town · 2 hours · From €40 pp

Cocktail-making masterclass

Most cocktail classes in Tallinn run out of working bars — call Whisper Sister or one of the Telliskivi venues and ask about private workshops for groups of 6–12. Two hours, three or four classics, you drink your own work. It ends with everyone slightly tipsy and very pleased with themselves.

Around €40–€60 per person for a private group. Book at least three weeks ahead — not many venues do it, and the good bartenders are busy. If anyone is non-drinking, they get the mocktail version. Staff are good about it.

08
⛵ Our service

June–August · 2.5 hours · Golden-hour departure

Sunset Sailing on Tallinn Bay

Different from the standard charter because the timing is the point. Between mid-June and mid-August Tallinn sunsets stretch from 22:00 to nearly 23:00. We leave the dock about two hours before the sun touches the horizon and head out into the bay. Sails up. Music on. Drinks open.

The sky does the thing where it goes peach, pink, then deep navy over the course of forty minutes, and the city skyline silhouettes against it. We've had three proposals on these trips. We've had two surprise sashes appear from someone's bag. Bring a light jacket — it cools fast once the sun is gone. Add a photographer; you'll thank us later.

  • Champagne and a charcuterie board on board (on request)
  • Best slots in late June and early July
  • Limousine transfer pairs perfectly
Book a sunset sail
09

Pirita · 2.5 hours · Reserve 1–2 weeks ahead

Dinner at NOA, Pirita seaside

NOA gets included in every "best in Tallinn" list and earns it. Fifteen-minute taxi from the centre, tables along the floor-to-ceiling glass, sun setting behind the medieval skyline across the bay.

The tasting menu is the splurge play; the à la carte is the smarter choice if you also want to drink. They do the courses theatrically — fog, smoke, a knife reveal — without it tipping into cheesy. Pair with a yacht trip that lands at Pirita harbour just before — short walk to dinner, photographer's dream.

10

Harbour · 3 hours · Book months ahead

Michelin splurge: 180° by Matthias Diether

If you want the meal everyone remembers and nobody pays for next time, 180° by Matthias Diether is the answer. Two Michelin stars, twenty-some courses, three hours, by the harbour.

It is not a hen-party-spirit place — no shouting, no group sashes — but for a small close-friend group marking the occasion properly, it's hard to beat. Book three months ahead, no joke. Dress code is "you know the answer."

11

Noblessner · 1.5–3 hours · Walk-in

Põhjala Brewery taproom

For the group that prefers beer to gin. Põhjala is Estonia's best-known craft brewery; the taproom is in a converted Soviet rubber factory in Noblessner, two minutes from where our boats leave.

Twenty-some taps, food trucks at weekends, big communal tables. The space is enormous, the beer is excellent, and unlike most craft places it doesn't take itself too seriously. Stop here for an hour after your sailing trip and dinner becomes optional. Their dark sour beers are world-class; the lager is honest and cold.

12

Gonsiori 5 · 60 min · 6–8 players

Actor-led quest room

Escape rooms got boring — actor-led quest rooms are the upgrade. Questroom Tallinn (No Exit) runs scenarios where real actors play characters inside the room with you, reacting to whatever your group does.

Sixty minutes, six to eight people, you'll either solve the case or be locked in your own laughing. Pick the horror-adjacent room only if you trust the bride's nerves; the "cabin" room is safer for mixed groups. Book the 17:00 slot — early evening, before dinner. English-language slots fill ahead, so book early.

13

Old Town · 2.5–3 hours · Reserve ahead

Medieval feast at Olde Hansa

For the group who wants the dinner itself to be the highlight. Olde Hansa in the Old Town runs the medieval feast that everyone in town has heard about — candlelit halls, fur on the benches, knights bringing the courses, mead from clay cups, music piped in from somewhere off-stage. It is theatre as much as a dinner.

Reserve ahead — Saturday nights sell out two weeks early. The full feast menu is the move; do not split a starter and call it medieval. Vegetarian options exist but the carnivores get the best of it. Take the group photos before the wine flight. Afterwards nobody is holding the camera steady.

14

Terminal D · 1 day · €30–€60 return

Day cruise to Helsinki

If your hen weekend has three days, spend one on a different sea. Tallink fast ferries sail Tallinn to Helsinki in 80 minutes, multiple times a day. Leave on the 09:00, lunch by the market hall in Helsinki, walk the design district, ferry home by dinner.

The boat itself does the work — bars, a buffet, a duty-free, a pool deck on the larger ships. A hen weekend's slow morning is solved by the journey. Tickets €30–€60 booked ahead; double that at the gate. A bachelorette spread across two capitals is a story. One in one capital is just a weekend.

15
⛵ Our service

Door-to-door · 3.5–4 hours · Premium

Limousine + Sailing VIP Package

For the group that wants no logistics and no compromises. A private limousine picks you up from your hotel and drives to Port Noblessner. The yacht is ready — champagne in the cooler, your playlist already cued up, a photographer aboard if you booked one. Two to three hours on the water, then the limo back.

We organise the limousine transfer, the catering, the flowers, the cake-with-sparklers, the sashes if you forgot them. Year-round limousine service, May-to-September sailing. The guests describe this package as "we just showed up and everything was already there" — which is exactly the point.

  • Photographer add-on highly recommended
  • Catering and flowers included in quote
  • Available outside the sailing season as a limo-and-dinner package
Plan a VIP day
16

Pirita · 2 hours · Summer only

Tallinn TV Tower glass-floor walk

For the hen who wants something genuinely scary. The TV Tower at 175 metres has a glass-floor section and, for the brave, an outdoor walk along the open-air edge of the viewing platform with a safety harness.

The view from up there covers Tallinn Bay, Naissaar Island, and on a clear day the silhouette of the Finnish coast. The walk costs around €40 per person and runs summer only; the regular observation deck (no walk) is half that and works for everyone. There is always one in the group who refuses. Let them. They'll hold the bags.

17

Noblessner · 1.5–2 hours · Heavy

Patarei Sea Fortress

This one is for the hen weekend that wants a moment that isn't lighthearted. Patarei is a 19th-century Russian sea fortress that became a Soviet prison and is now an exhibition about communist terror. It's heavy. It's important. It's also walking distance from our harbour.

If the bride or the maid of honour is interested in history, book it. If the group's mood is purely champagne and dancing, skip — wrong tone. The contrast of doing this in the afternoon, then sailing at sunset, is something guests have told us shaped their whole trip. Your call.

18

Telliskivi · 2–3 hours · Restaurant separately

Fotografiska Tallinn

Photography museum in Telliskivi with one of the best rooftop restaurants in the city. Fotografiska Tallinn does rotating world-class exhibitions on three floors, and then dinner upstairs with a view across Tallinn's rooftops at sunset.

It's the activity that works for the hen group with two art teachers and one banker. Tickets to the exhibitions are around €15 each; the restaurant separately, reserve ahead. We send a lot of bachelorette groups here for the early-evening slot — exhibitions first, drinks, then dinner with the city lighting up beneath you.

19

Kalamaja · 2–3 hours · Saturdays

Telliskivi — flea, food, photos

Saturday morning in Telliskivi is one of the highlights of the city's weekend. Telliskivi Creative City is a converted rail-industrial complex turned into restaurants, design shops, vintage stores, the Fotografiska museum, a flea market and a constant rotation of pop-up events.

Wander for an hour, stop for coffee at Renard, photograph the murals, grab lunch at any of the dozen restaurants. The flea market on Saturday morning (until about 14:00) is genuinely good — proper second-hand finds, not tourist tat. Block out three hours.

20

City centre · 2 hours · Walk-in friendly

Bowling at O'Learys

The least pretentious activity on this list, and exactly what some groups need at 22:00 on a Saturday. O'Learys Tallinn does bowling lanes, a sports-bar menu, and big sharing platters of nachos that are dignified for what they are.

Two lanes for a group of eight, two hours, beer or cocktails delivered to your lane. Not the most "Tallinn" experience on the list, but the energy is right and nobody has to dress up. Often busy on weekends; book ahead.

21

Pirita · 2 hours · Free

Pirita beach sunset picnic

Free, simple and one of the best evenings the city offers when the weather holds. Pirita beach is fifteen minutes by tram from the centre — long sandy stretch, pine forest behind, the silhouette of St Bridget's Convent ruins next door.

Bring a picnic from Balti Jaama Turg market by Telliskivi, a couple of bottles, a blanket. The sunset is gentle here; the city skyline is across the water. Pairs with our yacht trip earlier in the day for the perfect bookend. Don't bother after a rainy week; the sand needs a dry day to be worth it.

22
⛵ Our service

Naissaar Island · Full day · Speedboat 30 min

Naissaar Speedboat Adventure

For the group that wants something that's not on every Tallinn hen-weekend guide. Naissaar is an 11-kilometre island 8 kilometres north of Tallinn, almost no permanent residents, pine forest, sandy beaches, and the eerie remains of a Soviet sea-mine factory.

Our speedboat gets you there in thirty minutes; the sailing yacht in two hours. Either way, you have the island largely to yourself. Rent bikes at the harbour, ride to the military ruins, swim at the south beach in July and August, picnic. It's the day-trip that makes everyone go "wait — we did this on a hen weekend?" Yes.

  • Bikes available at the small island harbour
  • Bring lunch or pre-order catering
  • Layered clothing — sea breeze is real
Plan a Naissaar day
23

Kloostrimetsa · 1.5–2 hours · €7 entry

Tallinn Botanical Garden glasshouses

For the Sunday morning that needs gentle. Tallinna Botaanikaaed in Kloostrimetsa is tropical glasshouses, a palm hall, the cactus collection and an English garden out in the open in summer. Fifteen-minute taxi from the Old Town and the perfect quiet-before-the-flight activity for a hen group nursing the previous night.

The tropical halls are properly hot in February — no joke; bring a layer you can take off. Small café on site. Worth two hours, a few nice photos and a slower heart rate. End the weekend here, then airport.

24

Old Town · 1.5 hours · Walk-in

Recovery brunch at Must Puudel

Sunday morning. Heads heavy. Must Puudel — "Black Poodle" — is the dive-bar-by-night, brunch-spot-by-day classic in the Old Town. Big windows, mismatched furniture, friendly to walk-ins.

Kitchen does eggs benedict and a full English without making a fuss. Opens at 11:00; aim for 12:30 if your group was out late. Strong filter coffee, fresh juice, a Bloody Mary that takes the edge off. By 14:00 you can walk to the bus or the train and the weekend is done.

25

Anywhere · 1–2 hours · €200–€350

Book a photographer

Last on the list, and the one most groups regret not doing. A professional photographer for an hour on the yacht, or two hours across the weekend, costs less than you think and gives you content that lives on phones forever after.

We work with Indrek Käsper and a couple of other photographers who specialise in candid, non-staged hen-party photography, on board and on land. They show up, blend in, don't ask you to pose. The files arrive in a Dropbox folder two weeks later. Worth more than the bar tab.

Plan the weekend

Build the day around one great thing.

Pick a centrepiece — usually the yacht — and build the rest around it. Save Sunday morning for recovery and you'll all leave friends. Tell us your dates and we'll sketch the weekend, slot in the boat at the right time of day, and arrange the limousine and the photographer in one quote.