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Magic Shows in Las Vegas

No city on earth packs this much sleight of hand into a few square miles. From sold-out headliners and floating-piano spectacles to a magician working cards a foot from your face, here is how to find the right magic show on the Strip and beyond.

LAS VEGASMAGIC · NV

Las Vegas is, and has always been, a magician's town. Long before the megaresorts, the lounges ran on close-up card men and disappearing acts, and that tradition never left. Today you can catch a network-TV headliner, a deadpan dragon, or a master of pure deception, all within a cab ride of one another, and most nights you have a half-dozen great options at once.

This guide is for anyone trying to pick just one. We will sort the scene by style: the big-illusion spectacles, the intimate close-up and mentalism shows, and the split between family-friendly afternoons and saltier late-night sets. Magic is one of the deepest benches in town, so once you have a feel for it, browse the full Las Vegas shows lineup or our take on Cirque du Soleil to round out the trip.

The headliners

The big names

The marquee residencies, from television favorites to the longest-running act on the Strip. Venues and lineups shift fast in Vegas, so confirm who is playing where before you buy.

Mat Franco
SLEIGHT OF HAND · THE STRIP

Mat Franco

The first magician to win America's Got Talent, Franco has held down a long-running residency, recently at The LINQ, with a warm, improvised, no-egos style. He works close and large in the same show, and locals will tell you it genuinely changes night to night. A safe bet if you want charm over menace.

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Shin Lim
CARD MAGIC · THE STRIP

Shin Lim

A two-time AGT winner and a Penn & Teller: Fool Us alum, Lim is the most jaw-dropping card and close-up technician working today. His show recently moved from the now-closed Mirage to the Venetian's Palazzo Theatre, so double-check the venue. Cards vanish and reappear in ways that hold up even on the big in-house screens.

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Penn & Teller
COMEDY MAGIC · THE STRIP

Penn & Teller

The thinking person's magic act, and one of the longest-running headliner shows in town, recently at the Penn & Teller Theater at Rio. They explain how some tricks work and still fool you, blending magic, comedy and a little subversion. Stick around after; they often come out to the lobby to meet the audience.

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The grand-illusion shows
GRAND ILLUSION · THE STRIP

The grand-illusion shows

For floating bodies, vanishing motorcycles and full-stage spectacle, the big-production magicians are the move. Criss Angel's dark, high-energy MINDFREAK has long anchored its own purpose-built theater at Planet Hollywood, and the MGM Grand has hosted a string of grand-illusion residencies over the years. Big-stage magic lineups rotate, so check what spectacle is currently playing and confirm dates before you buy.

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Picking a style: Want spectacle and a packed theater? Go grand illusion. Want to be genuinely fooled up close? Choose a card or sleight-of-hand show. Want to laugh as much as gasp? A comedy-magic act is your night. There is no wrong answer, but the styles are very different experiences.
Intimate & family

Close-up, mentalism & the matinees

Smaller rooms, sharper angles, and the afternoon shows that work for the whole family.

Mac King
FAMILY · AFTERNOON

Mac King

A Vegas institution: a goofy, clean, genuinely clever afternoon comedy-magic show that has long played the Excalibur. Cheap, funny and great for kids and grandparents alike, it is the easiest family magic ticket in town and a perfect break from the heat. Check the current room and showtimes before you go.

Family-friendly
Piff the Magic Dragon
COMEDY MAGIC · THE STRIP

Piff the Magic Dragon

The deadpan magician in a dragon onesie, with his Chihuahua Mr. Piffles, has been a Flamingo fixture for years. It is more stand-up-with-tricks than pure magic, and the laughs lean adult, so it is better for teens and grown-ups than little ones. Loud, silly and a great late-night pick.

Mostly adult
Mentalism & mind-readers
MIND-READING · VARIES

Mentalism & mind-readers

If watching a stranger seemingly read your thoughts is your idea of a good night, seek out the mentalism shows. Performers in this lane work mind-reading, prediction and suggestion rather than props, often in smaller, more interactive rooms. The lineup rotates, so search current mentalism listings when you plan.

Interactive
The close-up parlors
CLOSE-UP · SMALL ROOMS

The close-up parlors

Beyond the theaters, Vegas has a thriving close-up scene: tiny, off-Strip parlor rooms seating a handful of guests where a magician works inches away with cards, coins and your borrowed ring. These sell out fast and are the most personal magic you can see. Book well ahead; capacity is the whole point.

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Do it like a local

A perfect magic night

How we would build an evening around a show.

  1. Take the kids to an early afternoon Mac King matinee, then escape the desert heat indoors until evening.
  2. Grab an early dinner near your show's resort so you are not sprinting the Strip at showtime; traffic and the walk both eat more time than you think.
  3. Catch your headliner: Mat Franco or Penn & Teller for charm and laughs, Shin Lim for pure astonishment, or Criss Angel and whatever grand-illusion spectacle is currently playing for full-stage wow.
  4. After the curtain, hunt down a late close-up or mentalism set in a small room for the most personal magic of the trip.
  5. Cap it with a stroll past the lights, or pivot to a late comedy or variety show if you still have energy to burn.
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Good to know

Common questions

What is the best magic show in Las Vegas?

There is no single best, because the styles are so different. For charm and a TV-favorite headliner, many love Mat Franco; for pure close-up astonishment, Shin Lim is the technician's pick; for comedy and clever subversion, Penn & Teller; and for full-stage spectacle, Criss Angel or whatever grand-illusion show is currently on the big stages. Decide whether you want laughs, intimacy or spectacle, then check what is playing in that lane while you are in town.

Which Las Vegas magic shows are family-friendly?

The Mac King Comedy Magic Show, an afternoon staple long at the Excalibur, is the easiest clean, kid-friendly pick. Many grand-illusion shows also play well for older kids. Be aware that some comedy-magic acts, like Piff the Magic Dragon, lean more adult, so check the show's age guidance before bringing young children.

Where can I see close-up or mentalism magic in Vegas?

Beyond the big theaters, Las Vegas has a strong scene of intimate close-up parlors that seat only a handful of guests, plus mentalism shows built around mind-reading and prediction. These smaller rooms sell out quickly precisely because they are so personal, so book well ahead and search current listings, since the off-Strip lineup rotates often.

How far in advance should I book a Las Vegas magic show?

For popular headliners and any small close-up room, book as early as you can, especially on weekends and around big events. Tiny parlor shows can sell out days ahead. Larger theaters have more flexibility, but good seats go first, so reserve once your dates are set rather than waiting until you arrive.

Did Shin Lim's show move venues?

Yes. Shin Lim's show was at the Mirage, which closed in 2024 to be rebranded as a Hard Rock resort. His residency relocated to the Venetian's Palazzo Theatre. Because Vegas venues change so often, always confirm the current theater and showtimes on the official ticketing page before you buy.

Do I need to tip or pay extra fees at a Vegas show?

Ticket prices vary widely by show and seat, and resorts often add service or facility fees, so the final total can run above the headline ticket price. Some shows offer meet-and-greet upgrades. Tipping is optional but appreciated if a performer interacts with you or you have table service, much like anywhere else in town.