The neighborhood calendar is intended to connect neighbors with neighborhood-oriented activities, such as community-building events and activities for specific target groups. Commercial activities, political propaganda, protests without a neighborhood connection, and activities unrelated to the neighborhood are not allowed. Advertising is prohibited on Hoplr.
Neighborhood calendar activities: What is allowed and what is not?
The neighborhood calendar exists to connect neighbors with each other. We explain which activities you can post and which you cannot.
What is allowed in the neighborhood calendar?
Community-building activities with or without a (solidarity) participation fee:
For activities that bring the neighborhood together, you may ask for a small participation fee. This option is available when creating an event. The activity must genuinely aim to connect neighbors and not serve commercial purposes.
Activities aimed at a specific target group:
It is allowed to offer an activity for a particular group, such as people under 18, seniors 65 and older, men, women, or mixed groups. We understand this can sometimes be perceived as inconvenient, but the organizer of the activity has the freedom to decide this themselves.
What should you better not post in the neighborhood calendar?
Commercial activities or commercial workshops:
Activities that are purely profit-oriented or not community-building do not belong in the calendar. Advertising is not allowed on Hoplr.
Political propaganda or activities:
Hoplr is not a platform for political parties. Therefore, do not post flyers, images with political party logos, or politically charged activities.
Protests or calls to demonstrations without a neighborhood connection:
Protest and demonstration are important, but Hoplr focuses on connecting neighbors about matters directly related to the neighborhood. Calls for protests that do not have a direct link to the neighborhood do not fit our mission and are better shared through other, more appropriate channels. This rule is not discriminatory but ensures that Hoplr remains a place for neighborhood-focused communication.
- Activities that have no connection at all with the neighborhood.
(Last updated on: 06/25/2025)