Welcome to SV Forum – Sex in Vienna Forum, the biggest independent forum about Vienna sex scene in English. Here you can discuss the sex clubs, brothels, laufhauses, sauna clubs, studios and other sex institutes in city of Wien. You can also post your sex worker, escort ladies and other girl related reviews, we are eager to read recommendations of the best prostitutes in Vienna. The biggest Sex clubs, like Maxim Wien, Goldentime, Fun Palast, Babylon got their own subforums, but you can also freely open your new threads for any place or topic. We created a Global Sex Forum part where you can share your international experiences too.
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me and my girlfriend are visiting Vienna and we was wondering if there is any clubs, kino or anything similiar that a couple can go to and for example book a room and have sex? We are not looking for threesome, swingers or anything like that... We just want to experience something different for us two. Any tips is much appreciated!
I have tried to search but I see its mostly escorts and stuff, so is there any places for couples?
Hi everyone! I will be visiting Vienna in a few days for a business meeting. Will stay over weekend. But since I don't know anyone here beside work, I will probably be hitting few clubs. I like ebony girls. Can someone recommend a club that has them, or an independent that is nice and can be trusted. Thanks!
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How do you deal with rejection? I'd be pleased to hear your stories from all kinds of perspectives. Have you ever experienced rejection from clients and how do you deal with it? Does this happen often, and if I may asky, why? Do you find that if you like someone more, like an instant connection, the service is better or is it the same for everyone?
I'd love to hear from customer side as well, have you ever sent a sw home, and if so, why? How did she react?
I'm very much curious about your answers and stories.
I've just heard a rumor that Amore Lounge is going to close. It is a bit shocking because it was one of the better studios in the city, a good-looking and well-maintained one. A few years ago, the girls were very good in this studio.
I know nothing about the possible reason behind the closure. Their website is already shutting down, it is not working at the moment.
Why the Nordic Model is a bad approach to prostitution
In this post, we will talk about the Nordic Model in prostitution, about why it is a bad approach, and we will discuss all of our upcoming articles here. If you're looking for information about how this model impacts sex workers, men, and society at large, you've come to the right place. This thread will serve as a central hub where we post summaries, updates, and community discussions around this controversial legal framework.
What is the Nordic Model?
The Nordic Model, also known as the Swedish Model, is a legal approach to prostitution that criminalizes the purchase of sexual services while decriminalizing the selling of them. In theory, this aims to target the demand side of prostitution—punishing buyers while "protecting" sex workers. The model was first introduced in Sweden in 1999 and has since been adopted by several other countries including Norway, Iceland, France, and Ireland.
Proponents argue that this model helps to reduce human trafficking, discourage demand, and empower women to leave the sex industry. However, 25 years after its implementation in Sweden, there is mounting evidence that the Nordic Model causes more harm than good.
1. Why the Nordic Model is bad for sex workers
Criminalizing clients but not sex workers might sound like a good compromise, but in practice, it puts sex workers in more danger. Since buyers are afraid of being caught, sex workers are forced to work in more hidden and less safe environments. They have less time to screen clients, are often forced to lower their prices, and face increased violence. This creates worse working conditions and removes access to legal protection or medical services.
The stigma also worsens. Even though the sex workers themselves are not criminalized, the entire act becomes taboo, pushing them to the margins of society. The model ignores the voices of sex workers who argue for autonomy, dignity, and legal rights.
The Nordic Model unfairly criminalizes men who engage in consensual sex work transactions. These men are not criminals—they are fathers, retirees, or individuals who simply want intimacy or connection. Instead of recognizing this, the law punishes them, often with serious legal consequences.
This can lead to a rise in blackmail, discourage men from seeking medical help, and create an atmosphere of fear and mistrust. By outlawing a consensual activity, it also infringes on personal freedoms and human rights. It’s not a sustainable or fair solution for a diverse, modern society.
When you push prostitution underground, you create a breeding ground for crime. Illegal sex work becomes more common, which means less regulation, more abuse, and more risk of sexually transmitted infections. Law enforcement becomes overloaded trying to catch clients, diverting resources away from real criminal activity.
It also leads to the loss of tax revenue, the closure of legal establishments, and unemployment. This model does not eliminate demand—it just hides it, giving more power to criminal networks that thrive in unregulated environments.
Sweden, the pioneer of this model, offers a 25-year case study of its effects. The results are mixed at best. While there are fewer visible signs of prostitution, the sex trade has simply moved indoors or abroad. Swedish men increasingly travel to countries where buying sex is legal. Sex workers, many of whom are migrants, continue to operate in unsafe conditions.
Law enforcement officials admit that the people they arrest aren’t hardened criminals—they’re ordinary people. And instead of improving the lives of sex workers, the model has led to fear, stigma, and stress. Meanwhile, Sweden has one of the highest rates of reported rapes in Europe, raising questions about whether the model actually reduces sexual violence.
For a full picture, read our dedicated article: Sweden’s Nordic Model: 25 years later, is it working?
Personally I am a big fan of Austrian sex workers, and I believe it is a good idea to make and independent thread to them. Here's a good example: Emily from Maxim. She is a natural blonde girl with amazing body and she is a real Austrian: https://maxim-wien.com/all-girls/emiliy-from-austria/