Built for every kind of community

One platform. Every kind of community.

Meetups, hackathons, chapters, and networks.

The same operating system works whether you are running a 50 person meetup or a multi-city program with volunteers, speakers, sponsors, and separate local teams.

Community room in Amsterdam

A real community room, the same energy Clubria helps coordinate behind the scenes.

Tech meetups

  • Publish one brief, then keep the venue, agenda, and speaker notes in sync.
  • Use one operator view for registration, reminders, and post-event follow-up.
  • Keep volunteers and hosts aligned without a separate spreadsheet for every meetup.
Tech meetup room in Berlin

A meetup room that stays calm because the admin work is already handled.

Hackathons

  • Turn on Hack Mode for teams, tracks, judging, prizes, and demo day in one place.
  • Keep mentors, judges, and organizers on the same event timeline.
  • Capture submissions and recap content without rebuilding the event from scratch.
Hackday in Amsterdam

Hack Mode keeps the event moving when the room gets fast and noisy.

Multi-city chapter networks

  • Standardize the core process, while each city keeps its own local cadence.
  • Share sponsor packages, assets, and messaging across chapters without copying work.
  • See what is happening in every city without stitching together separate tools.
Stage in Berlin

A shared stage model works when the network has to coordinate across cities.

Volunteer-run communities

  • Give each volunteer a clear role, checklist, and day-of responsibility.
  • Keep the group updated with broadcasts instead of scattered chat messages.
  • Make handoffs simple so the event keeps running even when people rotate.
Speaker session in Amsterdam

The speaker flow stays consistent even when every volunteer is doing a different job.

120+Events run
18Cities active
2,500+Volunteers
15,000+Attendees
98%Would recommend

Run the same playbook everywhere.

Clubria keeps the operating model consistent so each community can focus on people, not process.