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Getting Around Las Vegas

The Strip is bigger than it looks and the sun is no joke. Here's how to get from the airport to your room, up and down the Boulevard, and out to the desert — without wrecking your feet or your budget.

LAS VEGASGETTING AROUND · NV

Here's the thing nobody tells you before your first trip: the Las Vegas Strip is much, much bigger than it looks. The resorts are giants, the sidewalks are long, and the desert sun does not negotiate. Getting around well isn't about one magic option — it's about knowing when to walk, when to ride, and when to skip the car entirely.

This is our honest, local-friend rundown for anyone who'd rather save their feet and their budget. We'll cover the airport run to your hotel, how far the Strip really stretches, the Monorail, the free resort trams, the Deuce bus, rideshare and the Vegas Loop, and the one question everyone asks — do you actually need a rental car? (Short answer: mostly just for day trips.) Sort your hotel first over on Where to Stay, because location shapes everything that follows.

From the airport

Getting from LAS to your hotel

Harry Reid International is closer than almost any major-city airport — just a few miles from the south end of the Strip.

Uber, Lyft & cabs
FASTEST · RIDESHARE & TAXI

Uber, Lyft & cabs

The quickest door-to-door option, usually 10 to 25 minutes to a Strip hotel. Rideshare has dedicated pickup zones (follow the signs from baggage claim — they're not always curbside), and taxis line up just outside. A cab to the Strip is a short, metered ride; ask for the freeway, not the tunnel, to avoid the longest fare.

No reservation
Shared-ride shuttles
BUDGET · SHARED SHUTTLE

Shared-ride shuttles

The cheapest pre-booked ride, but you'll share the van and stop at other hotels along the way, so build in extra time. Worth it if you're watching every dollar and aren't in a hurry to drop your bags.

Book ahead
The RTC public bus
CHEAPEST · PUBLIC BUS

The RTC public bus

RTC routes serve the airport (Terminal 1) and run toward the Strip and Downtown for just a few dollars — check the current routes and fares at the stop. It's slower and you'll likely transfer, but it's the rock-bottom-price option for light packers. Most visitors skip it in favor of a rideshare.

Low cost
Getting around: The Strip looks short on a map and feels enormous in person — it runs roughly four miles end to end, and the resorts are so large that "next door" can be a 15-minute walk just to cross one property. In summer, when afternoons routinely top 100°F, plan to ride more than you walk, carry water, and lean on the air-conditioned shortcuts inside and between casinos.
On the Strip

Trains, trams & the bus

You can cover almost the whole Strip without a car — here's what each ride does best.

The Las Vegas Monorail
EAST SIDE · ELEVATED RAIL

The Las Vegas Monorail

A driverless train running about four miles along the back (east) side of the Strip, from the Sahara station down to MGM Grand, with stops near Caesars, the Linq/Harrah's, Paris and the Convention Center. Trains come every few minutes, and single rides or one-to-seven-day passes are sold online. Worth knowing: stations sit inside or behind the resorts, so factor in a walk to your actual destination. It does not reach the airport.

Buy passes
The free hotel trams
FREE · RESORT TRAMS

The free hotel trams

Two complimentary trams shuttle between neighboring resorts at the south end: one links Mandalay Bay, Luxor and Excalibur, and another (the Aria Express) connects Park MGM, the Crystals shops and Bellagio. They're a small thing, but on a hot afternoon they save you a sweaty quarter-mile. Hours are limited, so check posted times.

Free
The Deuce (and the SDX)
STRIP & DOWNTOWN · BUS

The Deuce (and the SDX)

The double-decker Deuce is the workhorse: it runs 24 hours up and down Las Vegas Boulevard and all the way to Downtown and the Fremont Street Experience. A 24-hour pass is the smart buy if you'll hop on a few times. It can crawl in heavy traffic, but it's cheap, frequent and goes where the Monorail doesn't. The express SDX is a faster Strip-to-Downtown alternative with fewer stops.

Day pass
The Vegas Loop
NOVELTY · UNDERGROUND

The Vegas Loop

The Boring Company's tunnel system carries you between stations in a Tesla, with no traffic overhead. It's grown to connect the Convention Center, Resorts World, Westgate, Encore and Fontainebleau, with more on the way. Convention-center hops can be free; other point-to-point rides carry a small per-trip fare. It's more a fun curiosity than a way to cover the whole Strip — useful mainly if you're headed to those specific stops.

Per ride
The car question

Do you need a rental car?

For a Strip-and-Downtown trip, almost certainly not. For the desert beyond, almost certainly yes.

If your whole trip is hotels, shows, dining and a little gambling, a car is mostly a liability. Strip traffic is slow, self-parking and valet often carry fees, and a rideshare beats hunting for your car in a 3,000-space garage. Skip it and ride.

Where a car earns its keep is the open road. The best scenery near Vegas is out in the Mojave — Red Rock Canyon (about half an hour), Hoover Dam (roughly 45 minutes), Valley of Fire (about an hour) and the various rims of the Grand Canyon (two and a half hours and up). Those reward having your own wheels and your own schedule. If you'd rather not drive, plenty of guided tours run from the Strip and handle everything — see all of it on our Day Trips guide. One smart play: stay car-free in town, then rent for just the day (or two) you head out of the city.

Good to know

Common questions

How do I get from the Las Vegas airport to the Strip?

Harry Reid International (LAS) sits just a few miles from the south end of the Strip, so it's a short trip. Rideshare (Uber/Lyft) and taxis are fastest at roughly 10 to 25 minutes, shared shuttles are cheaper but slower with multiple stops, and the RTC public bus is the rock-bottom budget choice (check current routes and fares). The Monorail does not serve the airport.

Can I get around Las Vegas without a car?

Yes, easily, if you're sticking to the Strip and Downtown. Between walking, the Monorail, the free resort trams, the 24-hour Deuce bus and rideshare, most visitors never need a car in town. A rental mainly pays off for day trips out to Red Rock Canyon, Hoover Dam, Valley of Fire or the Grand Canyon.

How long does it take to walk the Las Vegas Strip?

The Strip runs roughly four miles end to end, and walking the whole thing can take a couple of hours or more once you factor in crowds, crosswalks, escalators and the sheer size of the resorts. Distances feel much longer than they look on a map, and in summer heat over 100°F you'll want to break it up with the Deuce, the Monorail or the free trams.

Is the Las Vegas Monorail worth it?

It can be, depending on where you're staying. The Monorail runs along the east (back) side of the Strip from Sahara to MGM Grand and is great for skipping traffic, but its stations sit behind the resorts, so you'll still walk a bit. If your hotel is near a station and you'll ride several times, a multi-day pass can be good value; otherwise the Deuce bus covers more ground including Downtown.

What is the Vegas Loop and how does it work?

The Vegas Loop is an underground tunnel system from the Boring Company where you ride in a Tesla between stations with no surface traffic. It currently links spots like the Convention Center, Resorts World, Westgate, Encore and Fontainebleau, with more planned. Rides between Convention Center stations can be free while other point-to-point trips carry a small fare; it's handy for those specific stops rather than a way to cover the entire Strip.

Do I need a rental car for Las Vegas day trips?

It helps a lot. Destinations like Red Rock Canyon (about 30 minutes), Hoover Dam (about 45 minutes), Valley of Fire (about an hour) and the Grand Canyon (2.5 hours and up) are far easier with your own vehicle and schedule. If you'd rather not drive, guided tours leave from the Strip and handle transport; a common approach is to stay car-free in town and rent only for the days you head out.