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Las Vegas Itineraries

Vegas can feel like a lot. We've turned the noise into a handful of ready-made plans — three days for a first-timer, a couples trip, a budget run, a kid-friendly stretch and a layover — so you can stop researching and start having fun.

LAS VEGASITINERARIES · NV

The Strip is roughly four miles of resorts, and a casual stroll past three hotels can quietly eat two hours and a whole lot of feet. The trick to a great Las Vegas trip isn't seeing everything — it's picking a lane and committing to it. That's what these itineraries are for: pre-built days that group nearby stops together so you're not crisscrossing the desert in a rideshare.

Below you'll find plans for the five most common kinds of Vegas trip we get asked about. Each one is a starting point, not a rulebook — swap in a show you've been dying to see, or trade a casino afternoon for a pool day. For the full menu of options to drop into any plan, our things to do guide is the place to browse.

Pick your trip

Itineraries by trip style

Five plans, each built around a different reason to come. Start with the one that sounds like you.

LVNV
START HERE · 3 DAYS

The 3-Day First-Timer Plan

Never been? This is the one. Three days that hit the icons — the Bellagio fountains, a wander through the Forum and the Venetian, the view from the top of the Strip — without burning you out by lunch on day one. We pace it for first-timers and leave room for a show. The full hour-by-hour version lives on our 3-day first-timer itinerary.

Most popular
LVNV
LIGHT ON CASH · 2–3 DAYS

Las Vegas on a Budget

Vegas is one of the most generous free-entertainment towns in the country if you know where to point. The Bellagio fountains and the Conservatory cost nothing, the Fremont Street Experience runs free hourly light shows and live music, and resort lobbies are attractions in themselves. We map a full day of it — plus where to eat and stay smart — on the Vegas on a budget plan.

Free-first
LVNV
JUST THE TWO OF YOU · 2 NIGHTS

A Couples / Romantic Trip

Trade the buffet line for a slower, sweeter Vegas. A two-seat gondola ride through the Grand Canal Shoppes at the Venetian, sunset from the Eiffel Tower viewing deck at Paris, a quiet dinner with a fountain view, and — if you're feeling it — a short helicopter loop over the lights. It's surprisingly easy to make this city feel intimate.

Date night
LVNV
YES, WITH KIDS · 2–3 DAYS

Las Vegas With Kids

It's more doable than its reputation suggests. The Adventuredome at Circus Circus is a five-acre indoor amusement park with roller coasters; the High Roller observation wheel at The LINQ is a big hit with kids (check current ticket details); and the Discovery Children's Museum downtown is a brilliant rainy-day reset. Just keep in mind that casino floors and most clubs are 21+, so plan routes that skirt the gaming pits.

Family-friendly
LVNV
SHORT & SHARP · 24 HOURS

The 24-Hour Layover

One day, maybe between flights — make it count without overreaching. Base yourself mid-Strip, walk the stretch from the Bellagio fountains up to the Venetian and the Sphere, catch a sunset view from up high, eat well, and end on Fremont Street downtown where the energy runs all night. No day trips, no regrets.

One day
Getting around: The Strip is longer than it looks — distances that seem walkable on a map can be a sweaty half-mile in the heat, so don't underestimate it in summer, when afternoons routinely top 100°F. The Deuce bus runs the whole Strip and down to Fremont Street 24 hours a day, the monorail zips along the east side, free resort trams connect a few neighbors, and Uber and Lyft are everywhere. Pick the tool that fits the leg and save your feet for the casino floors.
Got more time?

Build in a day trip

Some of the best things near Las Vegas aren't in Las Vegas. If your trip runs four days or more, give one of these a slot.

LVNV
HALF DAY · ~30 MIN

Red Rock Canyon

The closest dose of nature — a 13-mile scenic loop of red sandstone cliffs and desert washes about 30 minutes west of the Strip. You can drive it in under an hour or spend the morning on the trails. Timed-entry reservations apply in the busy months, so check before you go.

Nature
LVNV
HALF DAY · ~45 MIN

Hoover Dam & Lake Mead

An engineering marvel and an easy half-day, about 45 minutes southeast toward Boulder City. Walk across the dam, take a tour inside, and stop for the view from the bypass bridge above. Pairs neatly with a Lake Mead drive.

Half day
LVNV
FULL DAY · ~1 HR

Valley of Fire State Park

Nevada's oldest state park, roughly an hour northeast — a surreal landscape of flaming-red Aztec sandstone, slot canyons and ancient petroglyphs. Go early, bring far more water than you think you need, and you'll have the desert almost to yourself.

Full day
LVNV
LONG DAY · 2–2.5 HR

Grand Canyon West / Skywalk

The closest rim to Vegas, around two to two and a half hours out, home to the glass Skywalk that juts over the canyon. It's a long day by car or an easy one by guided tour. For the deeper, more dramatic South Rim, plan an overnight rather than a day trip.

Tour or drive
Do it like a local

A perfect first night

No matter which plan you pick, this is a lovely way to spend your opening evening on the Strip.

  1. Time your arrival for golden hour and catch a Bellagio fountains show — they run every 15 minutes in the evening and cost nothing.
  2. Drift through the cool, air-conditioned Bellagio Conservatory next door to see the current seasonal floral display.
  3. Walk over to Paris Las Vegas and ride up the Eiffel Tower viewing deck for the whole Strip glittering below.
  4. Have a proper dinner, then check the lineup and book a show — confirm what's currently playing, since Vegas residencies and productions change often.
  5. If you've still got it in you, hop the Deuce down to Fremont Street for the free LED canopy light show and live music downtown.
Good to know

Common questions

How many days do you need in Las Vegas?

Three full days is the sweet spot for a first trip — enough to see the headline resorts, the Bellagio fountains, the Sphere from the outside, a show and a little downtown Fremont Street, without rushing. Two days works if you stay focused on the Strip, and four or more lets you add a day trip to Red Rock Canyon, Hoover Dam or the Grand Canyon.

Can you do Las Vegas on a budget?

Absolutely. Some of the best entertainment in town is free: the Bellagio fountains run every 15 minutes in the evening, the Conservatory is free and air-conditioned, and the Fremont Street Experience downtown puts on free hourly light shows and live music. The cost comes from rooms, dining and gambling, so set a daily limit, watch for resort fees on hotel bills, and lean on the free stuff.

Is Las Vegas good for kids?

Yes, with planning. The Adventuredome at Circus Circus is a five-acre indoor amusement park, the High Roller observation wheel at The LINQ is a hit, and the Discovery Children's Museum downtown is great for a break from the heat. Just remember casino floors and nightclubs are strictly 21+, so route around the gaming areas and keep evenings family-paced.

What day trips can you take from Las Vegas?

Red Rock Canyon is about 30 minutes west, Hoover Dam roughly 45 minutes southeast, Valley of Fire State Park around an hour northeast, and Grand Canyon West with the Skywalk about two to two and a half hours away. All make solid day trips by car or guided tour; the Grand Canyon's South Rim is better as an overnight.

What's the best way to get around the Strip?

Mix and match. The Deuce bus covers the entire Strip and downtown 24 hours a day, the monorail runs fast along the east side, and free resort trams connect a handful of neighboring hotels. Uber and Lyft are plentiful for longer legs. Walking is fine in short stretches, but the Strip is bigger than it looks and brutally hot in summer, so don't plan to walk it all.

When is the best time to visit Las Vegas?

Spring and fall — roughly March to May and September to November — bring the most comfortable weather, with mild days ideal for walking and day trips. Summer afternoons regularly top 100°F, which makes outdoor sightseeing tough, while winters are mild and quieter. Whenever you come, big events and conventions can spike room rates, so check the calendar before you book.