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The 3-Day First-Timer Itinerary

The no-regrets first trip to Las Vegas: three days that hit the Bellagio fountains, the themed resorts, a world-class show and one morning in the desert, paced so you are not fried by lunch on day one.

LAS VEGAS3 DAYS · NV

Never been to Las Vegas? This is the trip to book. Three days is the sweet spot for a first visit: long enough to see the icons, catch a show and still steal a morning in the desert, but short enough that the city never wears you down. The trick is to pace it, give each day one anchor and leave room to wander, because half the magic here is free and unplanned.

This plan keeps you mostly on foot along the Strip, adds a night downtown on Fremont Street, and saves the third day for one easy escape out of the valley. For the best home base, stay near center Strip so the big nights are a short walk home; our where to stay on the Strip guide breaks down the zones. And for trams, the Monorail and rideshare, lean on getting around.

Day one

Land & learn the Strip

Arrive, drop your bags and ease into Las Vegas Boulevard, where the biggest resorts and the free spectacles sit shoulder to shoulder. Day one is all about the center Strip on foot.

The Fountains of Bellagio
THE ICON · CENTER STRIP

The Fountains of Bellagio

Start where the Strip introduces itself. More than a thousand water jets dance to music on the eight-acre lake out front, free, every fifteen minutes in the evening. Watch from the sidewalk rail or the pedestrian bridge, then step inside for the Bellagio Conservatory’s seasonal garden.

Free
The themed resorts
FREE ICONS · CENTER STRIP

The themed resorts

Wander the half-scale Eiffel Tower at Paris, the canals and frescoes of The Venetian, and the Roman columns and Forum Shops at Caesars Palace. The best of the Strip is free to walk into, and you can string the lot together in an afternoon. More in our free things to do guide.

Free
The High Roller at dusk
THE VIEW · THE LINQ

The High Roller at dusk

Time the 550-foot observation wheel for sunset and watch the valley flip from desert glare to neon in one thirty-minute rotation. It anchors the open-air LINQ Promenade, an easy place to grab a drink before dinner. See observation decks & wheels.

Book it
One world-class show
THE BIG NIGHT · VARIES

One world-class show

Cap the first night with a show, the thing a first trip should not skip. A Cirque du Soleil production is the classic pick, but residencies, magic and comedy all deliver. Popular shows sell out, so book before you fly. Browse the shows guide.

Book ahead
Day two

The Sphere, the pool & old Vegas

Sleep in, slow down, and split day two between a lazy Strip afternoon and a night in the city where the neon was born.

The Sphere
THE SPECTACLE · NEAR THE VENETIAN

The Sphere

Even from the outside, the 366-foot orb wrapped in the planet’s largest LED screen is worth the walk; it has glowed over the east Strip since 2023. Check what is playing inside, from immersive films to concert residencies, and book ahead if you want to go in. Details on the Sphere.

Check schedule
A pool afternoon
EARN THE NEON · YOUR RESORT

A pool afternoon

Vegas runs on contrast: cram the mornings, then do nothing by the water. Pool season runs roughly spring through early fall, and most resorts let guests laze the afternoon away before the evening kicks off. In cooler months, swap in a spa or the shops.

Seasonal
Fremont Street after dark
OLD-SCHOOL VEGAS · DOWNTOWN

Fremont Street after dark

Head a few miles north for the other side of the city: five blocks under the Fremont Street Experience canopy, a zipline overhead, vintage casinos with table minimums the Strip forgot, and live bands until late. It is the most fun you can have for the price of a few drinks. See Downtown & Fremont.

Free to walk
Day three

Escape the valley for a morning

Trade the neon for sandstone. One of the West’s great landscapes sits within an hour of your hotel, and a half-day trip is the perfect palate cleanser before you fly out.

Red Rock Canyon
CLOSEST ESCAPE · ~20 MIN WEST

Red Rock Canyon

A 13-mile one-way scenic loop through banded red and cream cliffs, just twenty minutes west of the Strip. Drive it in an hour or pull over for a short hike. Go early to beat the heat and the cars. Full guide: Red Rock Canyon.

Half day
Hoover Dam & Lake Mead
OR · ~45 MIN SOUTHEAST

Hoover Dam & Lake Mead

Prefer engineering to hiking? The art-deco dam holding back the Colorado is forty-five minutes southeast, and you can be back for an early dinner. It pairs with the blue water of Lake Mead. See Hoover Dam.

Half day
The Welcome sign & a last dinner
THE SEND-OFF · SOUTH STRIP

The Welcome sign & a last dinner

Back in town, grab the obligatory photo at the 1959 “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign at the south end of the Strip, then go big on one final dinner. End where you started, on a bridge over the boulevard, watching the lights.

Free
At a glance

The three days, in order

The whole plan on one card, easy to screenshot and tweak.

  1. Day 1 — Center Strip: the Bellagio fountains and conservatory, the free themed resorts, the High Roller at dusk, dinner, then your booked show.
  2. Day 2 — Slow & downtown: sleep in, the Sphere, a pool afternoon, then a night on Fremont Street.
  3. Day 3 — Desert & send-off: a morning at Red Rock or Hoover Dam, the Welcome sign photo, and one last big dinner.
First-timer tips: the Strip walks far longer than it looks, and summer afternoons routinely top 100 degrees, so wear real shoes, hydrate and cut through the air-conditioned casinos. Watch for resort fees and parking charges added at checkout, book any show before you arrive, and keep one evening loose, the best Vegas nights are the ones you do not plan. Trams, the Monorail and rideshare are all covered in getting around.
Plan ahead

Book Las Vegas shows & tours

Book tickets Things to do in Vegas
Good to know

Common questions

Is three days enough time in Las Vegas?

For a first visit, three days is close to ideal. It is long enough to see the Strip's icons, catch a show and take one day trip into the desert, but short enough that the city never wears you out. Most first-timers find a fourth day is a bonus, not a necessity.

What should a first-timer do in Las Vegas?

Hit the free and iconic things first: the Fountains of Bellagio, a walk past the themed resorts like Paris, The Venetian and Caesars Palace, a dusk ride on the High Roller, the Sphere, and a night on Fremont Street downtown. Add one world-class show and, with a third day, a half-day trip to Red Rock Canyon or Hoover Dam.

Where should I stay for a first trip to Vegas?

Center Strip is the easiest home base for a first visit, putting the fountains, the biggest casinos and most headline shows within an easy walk. If you want a quieter or cheaper room, the north or south Strip and Downtown are good options. Our where-to-stay guide maps each zone to who it suits.

Do you need a car in Las Vegas?

Not for a first trip focused on the Strip and Downtown, where walking, the Monorail, free resort trams and rideshare cover everything. A car or a guided tour only makes sense for the third-day desert trips to Red Rock, Hoover Dam or the Grand Canyon, and even those can be done by tour bus.

How much walking is in this itinerary?

A fair amount. The Strip is about four miles end to end and the resorts are huge inside, so you can easily clock several miles a day. Wear real shoes, hydrate, and in summer duck through the air-conditioned casinos and use the Monorail or rideshare for the longer jumps.

When is the best time to take this trip?

Spring and fall, roughly March to May and September to November, bring the most comfortable weather for all the walking. Summer is reliably over 100 degrees, and winter is cool but pleasant. Note that major events like the Formula 1 Grand Prix in November and the National Finals Rodeo in December spike hotel prices, so book early or pick your dates around them.