REVIEW · BUENOS AIRES
Buenos Aires: Rojo Tango Show with Optional Dinner
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Red tango in a five-star cabaret. In Buenos Aires, Rojo Tango pairs world-class performers with an intimate setting inside the Faena Hotel, designed by Philippe Starck, with décor that nods to old-school French cabarets. I especially like the room size—maximum 100 people—because it makes the performance feel close, not staged.
I also like the overall pacing: you get premium drinks in the cozy cabaret atmosphere, then the show shifts into a polished rush of singers, musicians, and dancers that look and sound top-tier. The main thing to keep in mind is timing: dinner is set for 8:00 PM and the show starts at 9:30 PM, and the evening can run a bit behind schedule.
In This Review
- Key things you’ll notice right away
- Rojo Tango at Faena: what makes the room matter
- The evening flow: pickup, smart casual, and a clear schedule
- Inside the cabaret: dancers, the orchestra, and why it feels expensive
- Dinner with the tango: 3 courses, Argentine flavors, and local wine
- Drinks included: why that’s more valuable than it sounds
- Price and value: is $260 worth it?
- Timing tips: how to avoid stress when the show runs late
- Who should book Rojo Tango (and who might rethink it)
- Practical details that make the night smoother
- Should you book Rojo Tango with Optional Dinner?
- FAQ
- What time is dinner and what time does the show start?
- Does this experience include drinks?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- What’s the dress code?
- How long is the experience?
- Is free cancellation available?
Key things you’ll notice right away

- Faena Hotel setting: A luxury five-star base with designer touches by Philippe Starck.
- Cabaret-style intimacy: Maximum capacity of 100, so the stage feels reachable.
- Full drink service included: Premium alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks are part of the ticket.
- Optional 3-course dinner: Traditional Argentine flavors plus local wines and cocktails.
- Smart casual dress code: Dress up a notch, not a lot.
- Private hotel pickup and drop-off: A car service that saves you from pre-show scramble.
Rojo Tango at Faena: what makes the room matter

This isn’t a big, loud stadium-style tango night. The experience happens inside the Faena Hotel, and that location is half the magic. The cabaret space is refurbished and decorated to feel like a throwback to elegant French nightlife, which helps the dancers and musicians land even harder.
The other half is the scale. With a maximum capacity of 100 people, you’re not fighting for view lines or getting stuck watching from the back. Even if tango isn’t your usual style, the closeness makes the emotion easier to read—every gesture looks intentional.
One practical upside: the venue is designed for an evening. That means you’re not bouncing between multiple places before the show. You go in, you settle, and the night flows toward the performance.
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The evening flow: pickup, smart casual, and a clear schedule

Your night starts with the most helpful kind of travel service: hotel pickup and drop-off by private vehicle. After booking, you coordinate by email with the local partner to arrange the pickup and return, and the transfers cover hotels in the city center.
Once you’re there, the schedule is straightforward. Dinner (if you choose it) begins at 8:00 PM, and the show begins at 9:30 PM. The whole experience is designed as a tight, two-hour window, so you’ll want to arrive with enough time to check in and get comfortable before dinner starts.
Dress code is smart casual. Think neat and comfortable over flashy party wear. You’ll look right for photos and you won’t feel overdressed in a room that’s already doing elegant.
A small note to keep you sane: because the show can be slightly late, plan your day so you’re not watching the clock in panic mode. If you have dinner reservations elsewhere or a hard theatre deadline, leave some breathing room.
Inside the cabaret: dancers, the orchestra, and why it feels expensive

Rojo Tango is built around live performance quality. The Rojo Tango Quintet Orchestra sets the tone, and the musicians keep the rhythm tight while the dancers move with that controlled tango intensity. The result is less about spectacle for spectacle’s sake, and more about craft—music, choreography, and singing all working together.
What you’ll feel most is the balance between polish and intimacy. In a room for around a hundred people, you can see details: facial expression, costume movement, and how the dancers use space on the floor. It’s the kind of setting where tango looks like a conversation, not just a show.
Costuming also plays a big role in the atmosphere. Multiple performances are presented with strong visual styling, and the dance lineup is big enough to keep the energy moving without losing the sense of artistry. If you want a first tango experience that doesn’t feel touristy, this is the model.
Dinner with the tango: 3 courses, Argentine flavors, and local wine

If you pick the optional dinner, you get a 3-course menu before the show. The idea is simple: you eat well, drink without fuss, then slide into tango at the exact moment the room is ready.
The menu focuses on traditional Argentine cuisine, and you also get a fine selection of local wines. Cocktails are included too, along with both alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks. That inclusion matters because it keeps the evening from turning into a series of add-ons.
You don’t have to treat dinner like a “formal meal.” It’s more like a curated prelude. You can take your time, but you’re still in a schedule that leads smoothly into the performance.
If you choose the option without dinner, you’re still set for drinks at the venue and then the show. That can work well if you already ate in the city and just want the cabaret experience cleanly.
Drinks included: why that’s more valuable than it sounds

This ticket includes alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks, plus the show admission. In practice, it means you’re not trying to calculate what you can afford mid-evening. You can focus on the performance.
The bar setup also fits the vibe. This is a cozy, sophisticated cabaret, and the drinks service is part of how the room stays relaxed before the music kicks in. For a two-hour night, that’s a big deal: the fewer decisions you need to make, the more you enjoy the moment.
One thing to keep in mind: you’ll still want to pace yourself. Tango is intense and the night can run a bit later than the posted start time, so being comfortable matters more than getting through your glass fast.
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Price and value: is $260 worth it?

At $260 per person, this isn’t a budget tango option. But it’s also not a bare-bones ticket. The value comes from what’s bundled: admission, drinks, and private hotel pickup and drop-off. If you add dinner, the price also covers a three-course meal and local wine.
Here’s how I’d think about it for your trip. If you were paying separately, you’d likely face costs for:
- a high-quality show ticket,
- dinner and drinks,
- and getting to the venue plus returning safely and on time.
This package reduces friction. You don’t have to plan transport twice, and you don’t have to hunt for a restaurant that fits the tango schedule. For many people, that alone makes the price feel more reasonable.
It’s also a good fit for a short stay. If you’re only in Buenos Aires for a few days and you want one “wow” evening, paying more for a venue designed for tango drama can be smart.
Timing tips: how to avoid stress when the show runs late

The schedule is clear on paper: dinner at 8:00 PM, show at 9:30 PM. But real nights don’t always obey the clock. One concern that comes up is a wait before the show begins.
My advice: treat the dinner start time like your anchor, then arrive early enough that you can settle without rushing. If you’re coming straight from your hotel, expect the pickup to get you there on time, but keep your evening plan flexible.
If you’re the kind of person who hates waiting, bring a calm mindset. Once the band starts and the dancers take over, the delay tends to matter less.
Who should book Rojo Tango (and who might rethink it)

This experience is especially well-suited if you want tango with high production values and a comfortable, upscale setting. It’s also a strong choice if you’re seeing tango for the first time and want a performance that’s elegant and controlled rather than chaotic.
It can be a great couples night. The lights, the choreography, and the cabaret feel all lean toward romance. It also works for small groups who want a shared night without the logistics headache.
Who might rethink it? If you’re chasing the cheapest tango you can find, this is not it. And if you refuse to ever adjust your evening plans, the possibility of a late show start could be annoying.
Practical details that make the night smoother

A few small prep steps can make the evening feel effortless:
- Wear smart casual: neat and comfortable beats fancy discomfort.
- Plan for arrival time: dinner starts at 8:00 PM, so don’t show up ten minutes before and hope for miracles.
- Stay flexible about the show start: it may run later than the posted time.
- Keep your driver contact handy: you’ll email the local partner after booking to coordinate pickup and drop-off.
The private car service helps even if you’re familiar with the city. It removes the stress of finding the right route at night, and it gets you back to your hotel cleanly.
Also, the experience is guided in a practical way through the whole night—one coordinated evening rather than a stack of separate bookings. That matters more than people think when you’re tired from exploring all day.
Should you book Rojo Tango with Optional Dinner?
Book it if you want one premium tango evening in Buenos Aires that’s designed for comfort, craft, and atmosphere. The best reason is the combination of intimate room size plus top-tier live performance, with drinks included and transport handled for you.
You might skip the dinner option if you already ate well nearby and just want drinks and the show. But if you want the full cabaret night experience, the 3-course meal and local wine slot in naturally before the performance.
My honest take: if $260 fits your trip budget and you’re willing to flex your schedule a little, this is the kind of evening that gives you a clear memory of Buenos Aires tango at its most polished.
FAQ
What time is dinner and what time does the show start?
Dinner starts at 8:00 PM, and the tango show starts at 9:30 PM.
Does this experience include drinks?
Yes. The ticket includes alcoholic drinks and non-alcoholic drinks.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes. You get hotel pickup and drop-off by private vehicle for city-center hotels. You arrange the details by emailing the local partner after booking.
What’s the dress code?
The dress code is smart casual.
How long is the experience?
The duration is about 2 hours. Check availability for the starting times.
Is free cancellation available?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






























