Consumer trust
Each city should explain where to go, what kind of crowd to expect, and how to book without guessing.

City network
Miami is live because the inventory, venues, operators, and specialty sites are real. Vegas, New York, Ibiza, Mykonos, and St Tropez can live in the product now, but stay conservative for search until we have verified dates, tables, pricing, and local notes.
World planner
This is the spine of the consumer app: one account, one client memory, many cities. Miami stays the proof market while future cities are built carefully before search indexing.
Use real inventory first: tickets, VIP tables, current flyers, and booking paths.
Browse clubs, pool parties, table ranges, music, dress code, and source sites.
Collect table preference, budget, guest split, source, and staff follow-up context.
Keep new markets in product preview until content, inventory, and routing are real.
Live markets
1 active
Mapped cities
6 markets
Venue profiles
16 mapped
Core paths
Tickets + VIP
Live market
The live market gets stronger city content, better venue profiles, and clean event routing. Future cities get built as app experiences first, then indexed only when they are genuinely useful.
Next markets

Nevada, United States
The Vegas experience will be built around dayclub seasonality, Strip nightclub calendars, DJ-driven pricing, table minimums, promoter attribution, and hotel-area planning.

New York, United States
The New York experience will separate rooftops, clubs, lounges, private events, welcome-week events, and nightlife by neighborhood so users can plan without jumping between generic lists.

Balearic Islands, Spain
Ibiza will need beach clubs, superclubs, season calendars, boat parties, table minimums, and hotel-area context before it should become a search target.

Cyclades, Greece
Mykonos discovery needs beach-club timing, lunch-to-party transitions, table minimums, bottle menus, and island transportation notes.

French Riviera, France
The St Tropez experience will need Pampelonne beach clubs, lunch reservations, table minimums, seasonal notes, and high-end concierge routing.
Each city should explain where to go, what kind of crowd to expect, and how to book without guessing.
Thin future-city pages stay noindex. The sitemap only promotes pages that are ready for Google.
Every booking lane should preserve source, campaign, venue, event, group size, and follow-up history.
One global client graph
As venues come online, TheParty can remember preferred music, venues, table sections, ticket behavior, ad source, ChatGPT/source referrals, and staff follow-up across every market.