Richard Caring's Annabel's will open its first US location in New York by spring 2027, marking the most significant Atlantic crossing by a legacy European private club since Harry's Bar considered Vegas in 2003 and declined. The move arrives as membership economics invert: what was once a revenue floor for hotels became the entire business model, and $5,000 annual dues now underwrite $180 dover sole.
The club secured an undisclosed Midtown East address — sources close to the lease negotiation suggest a building between Park and Madison, south of 60th Street — and will replicate the Berkeley Square formula of taxidermied peacocks, Martinware birds, and a ground-floor dining room that generates 70% of nightly revenue despite seating only 38% of capacity. Annabel's London runs at $42M annual revenue across 1,800 members; the New York unit will target 1,200 at launch with a $7,500 initiation and $6,000 annual, per three people familiar with the membership structure. That pencils to $16.2M in first-year dues before a single Negroni Sbagliato moves.
This matters because Annabel's does not operate like Soho House, which went public at a $2.8B valuation in 2021 and has since watched shares fall 64% as unit economics soured. Caring's model — privately held, zero debt, 12:1 staff-to-member ratio — works only if table yield exceeds $420/hour and wine margin holds above 74%. The company has never disclosed food cost, but comparable Mayfair establishments run 22-26%; Annabel's is believed to run 19% by virtue of à la carte pricing that penalizes sharing and a membership too polite to complain about $38 for six asparagus spears.
The US expansion follows 18 months of membership monetization stress across the industry. Casa Cipriani raised dues 23% in September 2025. NeueHouse closed its Hollywood location after burning $11M in lease obligations it could not offset with co-working revenue. Zero Bond briefly paused new applications when member density in the billiards room exceeded the architect's rendering. The pressure comes from two directions: rising tenant-improvement costs — buildouts now average $1,100/sq ft in prime Manhattan zones versus $740 in 2019 — and evaporating placement fees as initiation sticker shock drives attrition before month thirteen. Annabel's bypasses both problems by owning the impatience; its London waitlist sits at 2,400, and the New York list opened February 12 without public announcement. It already has 180 names.
Operators should watch Q3 2026 buildout commencement for signals on whether Caring self-finances or brings in a hospitality REIT structure, which would indicate margin confidence and a possible second US unit in Los Angeles or Miami by 2028. Membership accretion rate matters more than opening headcount; if Annabel's fills 1,200 seats in under nine months, expect Gymkhana, The Twenty Two, and Loulou's to each explore US satellites by mid-2027. If the ramp takes eighteen months, the model stays European.
The club's New York GM hire will come from within Caring's portfolio — likely Sexy Fish Miami or The Ivy Asia — and construction permits should appear in the Department of Buildings database by late May, revealing square footage and therefore the seriousness of kitchen investment. A 9,000 sq ft footprint suggests cocktails and caviar; anything above 14,000 means Caring believes New York will eat dinner past 22:30, which London does and Americans historically do not.
The takeaway
Annabel's New York debut tests whether **$16M+** in dues can survive **$1,100/sq ft** TI costs and American impatience with **$180** fish.
private clubsannabel'smembers-only hospitalityexperience economyrichard caringnew york
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