Downtown & Fremont Street
Where the neon was born. Five blocks under a glowing LED canopy, classic casinos with table minimums the Strip forgot, a zipline over the crowd, and a retro Vegas that feels a little more honest than the resorts up the road.
Updated June 2026
If the Strip is the glossy new Vegas, Downtown is the original. This is where the city's first casinos lit their signs in the 1940s and '50s, and it still wears that history proudly. The heart of it is the Fremont Street Experience, a five-block pedestrian mall roofed by a canopy of some 49 million LED lights that bursts into a free show every hour after dark. Underneath, the sidewalks are packed with buskers, beer-yard-toting visitors and a zipline screaming overhead.
Downtown is for travelers who want the lights and the gambling without Strip prices, anyone chasing a hit of retro neon, and night owls who'd rather wander between local bars than line up for a megaclub. It's a cheaper, looser, more walkable corner of the city, and from here it's an easy hop to the Arts District just south. Browse the rest of the map on our neighborhoods guide.
What to see & do
The neon canopy, a zipline, a shark-tank pool and casinos that have been dealing cards since before the Strip existed.





Fremont East & beyond the canopy
Past the light show, Downtown's locals' side keeps going, into craft cocktails, fire art and the galleries a few blocks south.



A perfect Downtown night
Retro neon, a little gambling and a free show overhead, without burning through your Strip budget.
- Start with dinner at Downtown Container Park and catch the fire-breathing Mantis at sunset.
- Wander onto Fremont Street and find a low-minimum table at Binion's or the Golden Nugget.
- Stake out a spot under the canopy for a Viva Vision light show on the hour, free and unmissable.
- Fly the length of the street on SlotZilla, or watch the brave ones do it from below.
- Drift east into the Fremont East bars for a nightcap, or south to the Arts District for something quieter.
Where to go next
Downtown is the old soul of Vegas; here's where to head from the canopy.

Where to Stay Downtown
Classic casino hotels and Circa, often a better value than the Strip, right by the canopy.

The Arts District
Galleries, breweries and independent kitchens a mile south of Fremont Street.

Free Things to Do
The light shows, the Mantis and more ways to enjoy Vegas without spending a dime.

All Neighborhoods
From the Strip to Summerlin, the lay of the land across Las Vegas.
Find a Downtown hotel
Common questions
What is the Fremont Street Experience?
It's a five-block, car-free pedestrian mall in Downtown Las Vegas, roofed by a giant LED canopy called Viva Vision. After dark the canopy plays free light-and-music shows roughly every hour into the early morning, and live bands perform on stages below. It's lined with classic casinos, bars and street performers, and there's no admission charge to walk through it.
Is Downtown Las Vegas cheaper than the Strip?
Generally yes. Downtown casinos are known for lower table-game minimums than the Strip, room rates often run lower, and many of the best attractions (the light shows, the street scene, the Container Park mantis) are free. Resort fees still apply at the hotels and stakes change daily, so check before you book or sit down.
What is SlotZilla and how do I ride it?
SlotZilla is the zipline that flies down the middle of Fremont Street, launching from inside a 12-story slot-machine tower. The lower Zip-Zilla line carries you seated for about two blocks, and the higher Zoomline flies you face-down, superhero style, the full five blocks under the canopy. Buy tickets at the tower or online, and confirm current operating hours before you go.
Is Downtown Las Vegas family-friendly?
Parts of it are, though gambling areas and many bars are 21+. The light shows and street performers are free and fun for all ages, and Downtown Container Park is family-friendly by day before turning 21+ in the evening. Circa is an adults-only resort. With kids, plan around the casino floors and the late-night crowds.
How far is Downtown from the Las Vegas Strip?
Downtown sits a few miles north of the Strip. A rideshare between the two takes about 10 to 15 minutes depending on traffic, and the Deuce double-decker bus runs the route along Las Vegas Boulevard. Many visitors split their trip between the two areas for a mix of new resorts and old-school Vegas.
Is the Golden Nugget shark tank always open to swim in?
The Tank pool at the Golden Nugget wraps around a large shark aquarium and a waterslide that runs through it, but pool access is typically for hotel guests, and the aquarium and slide can close for extended renovation work (they have in recent seasons). If swimming around the shark tank is your goal, confirm the current status and any guest requirements with the resort before you visit.