Las Vegas Neighborhoods & Areas
Las Vegas is bigger than the Boulevard. Here's how the valley fits together — the three ends of the Strip, neon-lit Downtown, the artsy and Asian-food corners off-Strip, and the canyon-edge suburbs — so you can pick your home base and roam with confidence.
Updated June 2026
First-timers tend to picture Las Vegas as one long, glowing street, and the Strip really is the main event. But the resort corridor is just a sliver of a sprawling Mojave Desert valley, and knowing the areas around it is the difference between a smooth trip and a surprise rideshare bill you didn't see coming (fares swing with surge pricing, so check current details). The good news: a handful of districts cover almost everything you'll want, and most of them sit within twenty minutes of each other.
This is the orientation page — a flyover of the whole valley before you go deep. We've broken Las Vegas into the zones we actually use when we plan: the three ends of the Strip, Downtown and Fremont Street, the off-Strip pockets like the Arts District and Chinatown, and the canyon-side suburbs of Summerlin and Henderson. Use it to choose a base, then dive into our full Strip guide and Downtown & Fremont pages, or jump to where to stay and where to eat when you're ready to book.
The three ends of the Boulevard
Las Vegas Boulevard runs roughly four miles, and locals split it into thirds. Each end has its own gravity, and the walk between them is longer than it looks on a map.
Downtown, the Arts District & beyond
Some of the best value, character and food in town sits a few miles off the Boulevard. These are the corners we send friends to when they want the local Vegas.
Summerlin & Henderson
If you want canyon trails, golf, calmer hotels or a base near the airport, the suburbs on the valley's rim deliver — and they're closer than you'd think.
A perfect area-hopping day
One easy loop that strings together the best of the valley, from desert morning to neon night.
- Beat the heat with an early drive out to Red Rock Canyon from the Summerlin side — note the scenic-loop timed-entry reservations run October through May.
- Roll back into town for a long lunch in Chinatown along Spring Mountain Road, where the value and variety leave the Strip in the dust.
- Spend the afternoon on the Center Strip, walking between the Bellagio fountains, Caesars Palace and the LINQ Promenade.
- Catch happy hour and a gallery wander in the Arts District, then dinner from one of its indie kitchens.
- Finish under the lights on Fremont Street in Downtown, with the canopy show overhead and the old casinos glowing.
Where to go next
Pick an area and go deeper, or sort out the practical stuff.
The Strip
Resort by resort along Las Vegas Boulevard — fountains, casinos, shows and the famous walk.
Downtown & Fremont
The neon canopy, SlotZilla, vintage casinos and the city's original gambling heart.
Where to Stay
Which area suits your trip, from Center Strip resorts to quieter Henderson and Summerlin.
Where to Eat
From Strip steakhouses to Chinatown noodle counters — the best tables across the valley.
Common questions
What are the main areas of Las Vegas?
For visitors, the key areas are the Strip (split into the South, Center and North ends along Las Vegas Boulevard), Downtown with the Fremont Street Experience, the off-Strip Arts District and Chinatown, and the suburban edges of Summerlin on the west and Henderson to the southeast. Almost everything most travelers want sits within these zones.
Should I stay on the Strip or Downtown?
The Strip puts you in the middle of the big resorts, casinos and shows but costs more and walks long. Downtown around Fremont Street is cheaper, more compact and more old-school, about ten minutes north. We like the Center Strip for first-timers who want to walk to the most, and Downtown for value and character. See our where-to-stay guide for specifics.
What's the difference between the North, Center and South Strip?
The Center Strip is the dense, walkable middle with the Bellagio fountains, Caesars Palace and the LINQ Promenade. The South Strip runs toward Mandalay Bay and the big event venues like T-Mobile Arena and Allegiant Stadium, and is popular with families. The North Strip is quieter and more spread out toward The STRAT, with the Sphere just to the east.
Where is Las Vegas Chinatown and is it worth it?
Chinatown stretches along Spring Mountain Road just west of the Strip, in the Spring Valley area. It's one of the best and best-value dining districts in the country, with hundreds of Asian restaurants — Korean barbecue, ramen, dim sum, Sichuan, omakase and late-night noodles. It's absolutely worth the short rideshare; just plan to drive or ride since parking can be tight.
How far is Red Rock Canyon from the Strip?
Red Rock Canyon sits on the western edge of the valley, roughly a 30-minute drive from the Strip and only about 10 to 15 minutes from Summerlin. Its 13-mile scenic loop requires a timed-entry reservation from October 1 through May 31, so book ahead on Recreation.gov and bring your own water, as there's none along the drive or trails.
Do I need a car in Las Vegas?
Not necessarily. If you're sticking to the Strip and Downtown, you can get by with walking, the monorail and trams, the Deuce bus and rideshare. But for Chinatown, Summerlin, Henderson, Red Rock Canyon and day trips like Hoover Dam or Valley of Fire, a rental car or rideshare makes life much easier. Note that resort parking and resort fees may apply at many hotels.