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Where to Stay in Las Vegas

There are tens of thousands of rooms here, and the right one depends on three things: where on the Strip you land, the vibe you want, and what you'll actually pay once the resort fees show up. Here's how we'd choose.

Vintage neon postcard of a retro Las Vegas resort pool at dusk

Almost every visitor stays on or near the four-mile run of Las Vegas Boulevard everyone calls the Strip, and for good reason: it's where the marquee resorts, casinos, pools and dining live. But "on the Strip" covers a lot of ground, and a room at one end can mean a long, hot walk to the thing you came for. The first decision isn't really which hotel; it's which stretch.

This page is the lay of the land for first-timers and repeat visitors alike, whether you want a marble-and-fountains splurge, a sensible mid-tier base, or a cheap room you'll barely see. We'll sort it by area and vibe, flag the resort fees and parking nobody mentions in the headline rate, and point you toward the neighborhoods, shows and restaurants each base puts you closest to.

Location, location

Where on the Strip to land

Center, south and north each trade walkability for price and elbow room. Here's the honest difference.

Center Strip
THE CORE · CENTER STRIP

Center Strip

The dense walkable heart, roughly Treasure Island down to Planet Hollywood, anchored by the Bellagio fountains, Caesars Palace and the Linq Promenade. You can reach most landmarks on foot, which is the whole point. You pay for that convenience in nightly rate, but you save it back in time and ride-share. Best for a first trip.

Most walkable
South Strip
VALUE & SPORTS · SOUTH STRIP

South Strip

Big resorts at more reasonable rates, and the side of town for sports: Allegiant Stadium and T-Mobile Arena sit down here. You're a little removed from the center-Strip crush, so a short ride or a longer walk gets you into the thick of it. Good for groups, event-goers and anyone watching the budget.

Better rates
North Strip
NEWER & ROOMIER · NORTH STRIP

North Strip

Wider, quieter and home to the newest mega-resorts (Resorts World and Fontainebleau opened here, near Wynn and Encore and The Strat at the far end). Lovely rooms and shorter pool lines, but more of the action is a ride away rather than a stroll. Great if you want space and don't mind a quick lift south.

More space
Downtown & Fremont Street
THE REAL VEGAS · DOWNTOWN

Downtown & Fremont Street

The original, neon-soaked Vegas about ten minutes north of the Strip by car. Rooms run noticeably cheaper, the casinos feel less corporate, and you're walking distance from the Fremont Street Experience, the Mob Museum and the Neon Museum. The Golden Nugget is the upscale anchor; adults-only Circa brought Strip-level polish and its tiered Stadium Swim pool. Less resort sprawl, more character.

Cheaper, characterful
Pick your tier

Luxury, mid or value

A rough map of the Strip's big resorts by what you'll spend and what you get for it. Names move and rebrand fast, so confirm before you book.

The luxury tier
SPLURGE · CENTER & NORTH STRIP

The luxury tier

Bellagio, Wynn and Encore, The Venetian and Palazzo, Aria and The Cosmopolitan sit at the top for rooms, pools, spas and service. This is where the hotel itself becomes part of the trip. Expect the highest nightly rates in town, biggest suites, and the deepest restaurant and amenity lineups.

Top end
The mid tier
SWEET SPOT · ALL ALONG THE STRIP

The mid tier

Properties like Paris, Planet Hollywood, Harrah's, New York-New York, Park MGM and Mandalay Bay land in the comfortable middle: solid rooms, full casino-and-pool resorts, often a great location, without the top-tier price. For most visitors this is the value-for-money pick.

Best value-for-money
The value tier
CHEAP & CHEERFUL · SOUTH STRIP

The value tier

Excalibur, Luxor and Circus Circus get you a Strip address at the lowest entry point. They're older and more basic, though Luxor's tower rooms saw a recent refresh, and Circus Circus is the family-and-budget standby with its indoor theme park. Perfect if the room is just somewhere to sleep between the casino and the pool.

Lowest entry
Off-Strip and Summerlin
QUIET LUXURY · OFF-STRIP

Off-Strip and Summerlin

If you want calm, value and free parking, look just off the boulevard. Red Rock Resort out in Summerlin is a polished, family-friendly base near Red Rock Canyon; The Palms has matured from party scene to grown-up resort with serious dining. You'll need a car or rides to reach the Strip, but you trade the crowds for breathing room.

Quieter
The fine print: almost every Strip and Downtown resort adds a daily resort fee on top of the advertised room rate (it usually bundles Wi-Fi, the gym and pool access), and most charge for self-parking and valet, with hotel guests sometimes getting a break. Budget for both when you compare prices, and check each hotel's current policy, because a few places, like Treasure Island and Circus Circus, still park you free.
Match the mood

Party, family or pool day

Vegas resorts have personalities. A few honest pointers so the vibe fits the trip.

  1. Traveling with kids? Lean toward Circus Circus, an off-Strip base like Red Rock, or roomy resorts with big family pools, and remember the casino floors, most clubs and pool parties are 21+.
  2. Here to go out? Center-Strip resorts and adults-only Circa downtown put you closest to the nightlife and dayclub scene.
  3. It's about the pool? The top resorts and party-day spots like the Stadium Swim amphitheater at Circa are the headliners, but note many cool down or close in the winter months.
  4. Want calm and value? An off-Strip or Summerlin stay buys you quiet, free parking and a quick drive to day trips like Red Rock Canyon.
  5. Whatever you pick, this is the Mojave Desert: summer afternoons run well past 100°F, so a shady walk-to-everything base and a pool you'll actually use matter more than they sound.
Where to stay

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Good to know

Common questions

Where is the best area to stay in Las Vegas?

For most first-time visitors the center Strip is the best base, because it's the most walkable stretch and puts you near the Bellagio fountains, Caesars Palace and the major resorts. The south Strip offers bigger resorts at lower rates and is handy for Allegiant Stadium and T-Mobile Arena, while the north Strip is roomier and newer but more spread out. Downtown around Fremont Street is cheaper and full of character if you don't mind being a short ride from the Strip.

What is the difference between the center, north and south Strip?

The center Strip is the dense, walkable core where you can reach most landmarks on foot, which is why it tends to cost the most. The south Strip has big resorts at friendlier prices and the main sports venues. The north Strip is wider and quieter, with the newest mega-resorts like Resorts World and Fontainebleau, but more of the action is a ride away rather than a walk.

Should I stay on the Strip or Downtown?

Stay on the Strip if the resort itself is part of your trip and you want the big pools, spas, shows and restaurants within walking distance. Stay Downtown around Fremont Street if you want lower rates, a more old-school neon atmosphere, and walkable access to spots like the Mob Museum and Neon Museum. Downtown is roughly ten minutes north of the Strip by car, and hotels like the Golden Nugget and adults-only Circa offer surprising polish for the price.

What are resort fees and parking charges in Las Vegas?

Nearly every Strip and Downtown hotel adds a mandatory daily resort fee on top of the advertised room rate, typically covering Wi-Fi, the fitness center and pool access. Most resorts also charge for self-parking and valet, though hotel guests sometimes get a discount and a handful of properties still park you free. Always factor both into your real nightly cost, and check each hotel's current policy, since these fees change often.

Which Las Vegas hotels are best for families?

Families often do well at Circus Circus, which has an indoor theme park, or at off-Strip resorts like Red Rock in Summerlin, which is quieter, has free parking and is close to outdoor day trips. Larger resorts with big family-friendly pools are also a good fit. Keep in mind that casino floors, most nightclubs and pool parties are 21 and over, so look for properties with dedicated family amenities.

Is it worth staying off the Strip in Las Vegas?

Yes, if you value quiet, lower prices and free parking and don't mind needing a car or rideshare to reach the Strip. Off-Strip and Summerlin resorts like Red Rock and The Palms offer comfortable rooms, good dining and a calmer atmosphere, and they put you closer to day trips such as Red Rock Canyon. It's a trade: you give up walk-to-everything convenience in exchange for more space and value.