Daybreakers
Perfect For
Anyone who wants to move their body, feel amazing, and start their day with a serious spark of joy. Ideal for people craving connection, ritual, and something different before 9am.
Why You’ll Love It
What if your morning started with a DJ set, a dance floor, and a room full of strangers moving like no one’s watching—completely sober?
Welcome to Daybreaker: a global movement that turns wellness on its head.
Equal parts early-morning rave, mindful movement practice, and joy experiment, Daybreaker events are designed to wake up your body, uplift your spirit, and reconnect you with fun.
What Makes It Special
Sober, high-vibe dance parties – No alcohol, no late nights—just sunrise dancing in iconic locations, from rooftops to museums.
Movement: Without the pressure to get it right or look good while doing so.
Community without dressing up– No velvet ropes, no staying awake beyond 9pm—just people who are there to feel good and connect.
The Story Behind It
Founded by Radha Agrawal in 2013, Daybreaker was born out of a desire for joyful connection and conscious community.
Radha, frustrated with traditional nightlife and craving something deeper, imagined a new way to gather: one rooted in wellness, intention, and playfulness.
What began as a 6am rooftop party in NYC has now grown into a global movement across 30+ cities—and counting.
Something Else We Love
We love how Daybreaker’s heart-led energy doesn’t stop at the dance floor—through its sister platform, the Belong Center, it’s creating deeper spaces for connection.
With courses, community gatherings, and creative initiatives like Belong Circles and Belong Benches, it’s all about helping people feel seen, supported, and part of something bigger.
The If Lost Take
We love Daybreaker because it reminds us that joy is a wellbeing practice. That dance floors can be about more than sticky surfaces. That community can be felt in a great song to dance to.
This is movement as a medium for joy, self-care as something done together and mornings reimagined as about more play rather than more productivity.