Every year, somewhere in Europe or North America, roughly 130 of the most influential people on the planet gather for four days of off-the-record conversation. No press. No official statements. No votes taken. Just heads of state, CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, central bank governors, tech pioneers, and senior academics speaking freely under the Chatham House Rule.
The Bilderberg Group has operated this way since 1954. Seventy-one conferences. Seven decades of transatlantic dialogue at the highest levels of political and economic power. And for most of that time, anyone trying to understand what it actually was — not the conspiracy theories, not the tabloid hysteria, but the documented facts about its structure, history, and participants — had a genuinely difficult time finding reliable, well-organized information in one place.
That problem now has a solution: Bilderberg.club.
A Reference Project Built on Documentation, Not Speculation
Launched as an independent informational resource, Bilderberg.club has become the most comprehensive English-language archive on the Bilderberg Group available online. The project covers everything from the 1954 founding meeting at Hotel de Bilderberg in Oosterbeek, Netherlands, through the 71st conference held in Stockholm in June 2025 — a complete seven-decade record that no other single source matches in depth or organization.
The site is the work of Polaris Nexus LLC, a digital media company with over fifteen years of experience building specialized informational resources across multiple markets and languages. The same editorial discipline that characterizes their other projects — verified content, regular updates, and a clear separation between documented fact and interpretation — defines the approach at Bilderberg.club.
“Facts, not fiction” is the site’s stated editorial philosophy, and it shows in the architecture of the resource. Every meeting since 1954 is catalogued with attendee lists, locations, dates, and agenda topics where available. The members database allows users to search participants across decades. The FAQ section addresses the most common questions about the organization’s structure, rules, and operations with precision rather than vagueness. For a subject that generates as much noise as the Bilderberg Group, the discipline of sticking to what is actually documented is rarer than it should be.
What the Site Actually Covers
The scope of Bilderberg.club is broader than a casual visitor might expect. The resource is organized around several distinct areas that together form a complete picture of the organization.
The meeting archive spans all 71 conferences. Each entry documents participant counts, country representation, host location, and the general agenda topics published by the organization after each meeting. The earliest entries cover the Cold War-era conferences where the original mission — reducing anti-American sentiment in post-war Europe and building transatlantic solidarity against Soviet influence — shaped every discussion. The more recent entries reflect a world almost unrecognizable from that starting point: AI governance, cybersecurity, European security architecture post-Ukraine, the future of NATO in an era of renewed great power competition.
The 2024 Madrid meeting, which marked the organization’s 70th anniversary, is particularly well-documented on the site. With 131 participants from 25 countries, it brought together executives from Google DeepMind, Microsoft AI, and Anthropic at a moment when artificial intelligence was reshaping entire industries globally. The conference agenda reflected that reality: AI governance was the dominant topic, alongside the future of warfare and transatlantic economic challenges. The 70th anniversary was also a moment for the organization to take stock of how its own role had evolved — from Cold War institution to forum for the technological and geopolitical challenges of the 2020s.
The members section documents who has attended Bilderberg conferences over the years. The list reads as a who’s who of Western political and economic influence across seven decades. Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Angela Merkel, and Emmanuel Macron all attended before becoming heads of state. David Rockefeller was a founding participant. Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, who hosted that first 1954 meeting, chaired the organization for over two decades. More recently, Eric Schmidt, Peter Thiel, Reid Hoffman, and executives from across the technology sector have shaped discussions on digital transformation and its implications for governance, security, and economic stability.
The agenda section tracks discussion topics longitudinally across meetings, making it possible to see how specific issues have evolved on the Bilderberg agenda over time. Climate and energy policy, artificial intelligence, NATO expansion, democratic governance, US-China relations — the site provides the kind of historical perspective that is impossible to get from coverage of individual annual meetings in isolation.
Beyond the archive, Bilderberg.club provides structural context that most coverage of the organization skips entirely. How the Steering Committee works. What the Chatham House Rule means in practice and why it was adopted. How Bilderberg compares operationally to other elite forums like the World Economic Forum at Davos or the Trilateral Commission — smaller and more private than either, with a deliberate focus on transatlantic rather than global dialogue. For anyone approaching the subject without prior knowledge, it is genuinely the most useful and best-organized starting point available anywhere online.
Why a Dedicated Resource Matters
The Bilderberg Group occupies an unusual position in public consciousness. It is real, documented, and genuinely influential. It has also been one of the most consistently misrepresented organizations in modern media for the better part of fifty years.
On one end of the spectrum, it is routinely treated as evidence of a secret world government by a corner of the internet that has never let documentation get in the way of a compelling narrative. The absence of press access and the confidentiality of specific discussions — features designed to enable frank conversation among people under constant public scrutiny — get reframed as proof of something sinister. The Chatham House Rule, which is standard practice at hundreds of policy forums worldwide, gets presented as uniquely suspicious when applied to Bilderberg.
On the other end, serious media coverage of the annual meetings often fails to provide adequate context. Articles about the 2025 Stockholm conference, for instance, reported the participant list and general topics without explaining to readers how the Steering Committee selects attendees, what the Chatham House Rule actually requires, or how that year’s agenda compared to the topics discussed at the previous five meetings. The result is coverage that is accurate in its specifics but incomplete in ways that leave readers without a real understanding of what they are reading about.
Bilderberg.club occupies the space between those failure modes. It documents what is known without embellishment and stops where the documentation stops. It does not speculate about what was said behind closed doors — because no one outside the room can know — but it provides everything that is knowable: who attended, where, when, and what the organization said the discussions were about. That combination of completeness and restraint is what makes it useful.
The 2025 Stockholm Meeting
The most recent entry in the archive is the 71st Bilderberg Meeting, held in Stockholm in June 2025. Hosted by Marcus Wallenberg and organized partly around the significance of Sweden’s historic NATO accession, the conference brought together approximately 130 participants from 22 countries for four days of discussion.
The published agenda topics for Stockholm included AI governance, European security architecture in light of ongoing geopolitical tensions, and the future of transatlantic cooperation in what the organization described as an increasingly multipolar world. It was the first Bilderberg Meeting held in Sweden, and its timing — shortly after Sweden’s formal entry into NATO following decades of military non-alignment — gave the discussions a particular context that the site’s documentation captures.
The Stockholm meeting continued a pattern visible in the archive going back several years: artificial intelligence appearing not just as one topic among many but as the organizing concern around which other discussions — on security, economic competition, governance, and democratic institutions — increasingly orbit. That shift is traceable through the Bilderberg.club agenda records in a way it is not traceable anywhere else.
The Organization Behind the Resource
Polaris Nexus LLC is the company behind Bilderberg.club. With over fifteen years building informational resources across multiple verticals, markets, and languages, the company brings to this project the same editorial standards it has applied elsewhere: content that is researched rather than generated, updated regularly rather than allowed to go stale, and designed for the specific audience that needs it rather than built for search engines first.
Bilderberg.club represents the company’s entry into political and institutional documentation at the global level. The resource is available in English and multiple other languages, reflecting the international audience that has an interest in understanding how the Bilderberg Group actually functions — researchers, journalists, policy analysts, students, and engaged citizens who want primary documentation rather than secondhand interpretation.
The site’s multilingual availability is itself significant. Coverage of the Bilderberg Group in languages other than English has historically been even thinner than the English-language coverage. French, Spanish, German, and Portuguese readers interested in the organization’s documented history now have access to the same archive that English-language users do, organized and presented with the same level of detail.
A Resource for Anyone Who Wants to Understand, Not Just React
The Bilderberg Group is not going to become less significant any time soon. The annual conference continues to bring together people who shape policy, drive capital allocation, and influence the trajectory of technology development across the Western world. The discussions that happen in those four days — confidential, informal, off the record — matter precisely because of who is having them.
Understanding what the organization actually is, how it works, who attends, and what gets discussed is not a niche interest. It is basic civic literacy for anyone who wants to make sense of how power and influence operate at the highest levels of the international system.
For that understanding, Bilderberg.club is now the definitive starting point. Seven decades of documentation, organized and accessible, built and maintained by a team that has treated the subject with the seriousness it deserves.
The 2026 meeting will happen. When it does, Bilderberg.club will document it — completely, accurately, and without embellishment — as it has done for every meeting before it.
For more information, visit bilderberg.club or learn about the team behind the project at polarisnexuslcc.com.