Grand Canyon Day Trip from Las Vegas
The most famous hole in the ground on Earth is closer than you think — but "the Grand Canyon" means two very different places from here, and only one of them is a comfortable day trip. Here's how to pick your rim and how to get there.
Updated June 2026
First thing to know: there is no single "Grand Canyon" you drive to from Las Vegas. There are two rims people mean, and they are hours apart. Grand Canyon West — home of the glass Skywalk, on Hualapai tribal land — is about a two to two-and-a-half hour drive and is the one that actually works as a day trip. The South Rim, the postcard you picture when someone says Grand Canyon National Park, is roughly four-and-a-half to five hours each way, which makes a same-day round trip a very long, very tiring haul.
This page is for anyone with a free day in Vegas who wants to stand on the edge of something enormous and be back for dinner. We'll walk through both rims, the realistic ways to get there — self-drive, bus tour, or a helicopter or airplane flight — and the desert-heat-and-altitude details that trip people up. If you'd rather a shorter outing, the Hoover Dam sits right on the way to the West Rim, and our full day trips roundup has the rest.
West Rim or South Rim
Two canyons, two very different days. The drive time is the deciding factor for most visitors.




Drive, ride, or fly
Three ways to do it, depending on how much driving you want to do — and how much you want to spend.



A perfect canyon day
The relaxed, self-drive version to the West Rim — early out, big views, home for dinner.
- Roll out of Vegas by 7am with a full tank, coffee and a cooler of water. Beat the heat and the crowds.
- Pull off for a quick photo stop at Hoover Dam or the Mike O'Callaghan–Pat Tillman Bridge as you cross into Arizona.
- Arrive at Grand Canyon West, grab your package, and ride the free shuttle out to Eagle Point for the Skywalk.
- Loop to Guano Point for the wraparound views and a barbecue lunch on the rim.
- Head back mid-afternoon, beat the sunset glare on the drive, and toast the day on the Strip.
Where to go next
More desert escapes within a short drive — and ideas for the rest of your trip.

Hoover Dam
An engineering marvel on Lake Mead, right on the road to the West Rim — perfect to pair with the canyon.

Day Trips
Red Rock, Valley of Fire, Lake Mead and more — every easy escape from the city in one place.

Things to Do
Shows, casinos, the Sphere and the best of the Strip for the night you get back.

Itineraries
Ready-made Vegas day plans that fit a canyon trip neatly into your week.
Book a Grand Canyon tour
Common questions
Can you do the Grand Canyon as a day trip from Las Vegas?
Yes, but it depends on which rim. Grand Canyon West (the Skywalk rim, on Hualapai tribal land) is about a 2 to 2.5-hour drive and makes a comfortable day trip by car, bus or helicopter. The South Rim of Grand Canyon National Park is roughly 4.5 to 5 hours each way, so a same-day round trip by car is exhausting; most people make it an overnight or take a scenic flight.
What's the difference between Grand Canyon West and the South Rim?
Grand Canyon West is a private attraction owned by the Hualapai Tribe, built around the glass Skywalk and overlooks like Eagle Point and Guano Point, reached by a shuttle and an admission package. The South Rim is Grand Canyon National Park — the classic mile-deep views, the Rim Trail and visitor center — and charges a national-park entrance fee. The West Rim is far closer to Vegas; the South Rim is the more iconic, immersive experience.
How long does it take to drive from Las Vegas to the Grand Canyon?
To Grand Canyon West it's roughly 125 miles and about 2 to 2.5 hours, heading southeast past Boulder City and into Arizona. To the South Rim it's around 275 to 280 miles and about 4.5 to 5 hours each way. Allow extra time for stops, fuel and the slower back roads near the West Rim.
Is the Skywalk worth it?
For many visitors, yes — once. The glass horseshoe cantilevers out over the rim at Eagle Point with a dramatic drop beneath your feet, and it's a genuine thrill. It's an add-on cost on top of general admission, and personal cameras aren't allowed on the glass (the staff take photos you can buy), so go in knowing that and decide if the experience is worth it to you.
What should I bring for a Grand Canyon day trip?
Lots of water, sunscreen, a hat and sturdy shoes are essentials in the desert. Bring layers too: summer can be brutally hot at the rim and over 100°F in the inner canyon, while the South Rim sits near 7,000 feet and can be cold or snowy in winter. Fuel up before the remote stretch to the West Rim, and don't rely on cell service along the way.
Are helicopter tours from Las Vegas worth it?
If your budget allows, they're spectacular and they solve the time problem. Flights leave from the Boulder City terminal (with Strip shuttle pickup) and pass over Hoover Dam, Lake Mead and the Colorado River. Helicopter trips to the West Rim can include a landing on the canyon floor, and airplane-plus-helicopter combos can reach the far-off South Rim and back in a single day, which driving simply can't match.