Home / Where to Eat / Celebrity-Chef Dining in Las Vegas
A special night out

Celebrity-Chef Dining in Las Vegas

More marquee chefs cook within a mile of each other here than just about anywhere on earth. When the night calls for white tablecloths and a tasting menu, the Strip delivers like nowhere else.

LAS VEGASFINE DINING · NV

There is a reason food people make pilgrimages to Las Vegas. Within a short walk of one another, the resorts on the Strip have stacked up a roster of chefs you usually only read about: Robuchon, Savoy, Puck, Keller, Ramsay, José Andrés. Some came for a single splashy room; many never left. The result is a stretch of casino floor that quietly punches at the level of any great dining city in the world.

This page is for the night you want to dress up and make it count, whether that's a milestone, an anniversary, or just a once-a-trip splurge. We'll point you to the tasting menus and the special-occasion steakhouses, then cover the practical stuff: how to land a table, roughly what to expect on the bill, and what to wear so you feel right at home. Most of these rooms sit inside the big resorts along the Strip, and they pair beautifully with a show earlier or later in the evening.

Tasting menus

The big-occasion rooms

When you want the full multi-course experience — the rooms people plan a trip around.

Joël Robuchon
FRENCH · MGM GRAND

Joël Robuchon

The grande dame of Vegas fine dining and, historically, the only restaurant in town ever to hold three Michelin stars. Expect a hushed, jewel-box dining room and a long degustation that unfolds course by course — the bread cart alone is the stuff of legend. This is the top of the mountain, priced accordingly.

Tasting menu
Restaurant Guy Savoy
FRENCH · CAESARS PALACE

Restaurant Guy Savoy

The Paris master's only U.S. outpost, set in elegant rooms overlooking the Roman pools. The signature artichoke-and-black-truffle soup, served with a feather-light truffle brioche, is worth the trip on its own. Go for the multi-course Celebration menu if you want the whole story.

Tasting menu
é by José Andrés
SPANISH AVANT-GARDE · COSMOPOLITAN

é by José Andrés

One of the most coveted and intimate tables in America: a hidden counter tucked behind Jaleo that seats only a handful of guests per seating for a playful, theatrical Spanish tasting. Seats are released well in advance and vanish fast — treat it like booking a show, not a dinner.

Book ahead
Bouchon by Thomas Keller
FRENCH BISTRO · THE VENETIAN

Bouchon by Thomas Keller

If a full tasting menu feels like a lot, Keller's classic French bistro is the gentler, à la carte way into this world — roast chicken, steak frites, oysters and a famously good weekend brunch in a sunny, garden-side room. A reliably lovely splurge without the marathon.

À la carte
Steaks & statement rooms

Special-occasion steakhouses

When the table wants a great steak with a marquee name behind it.

CUT by Wolfgang Puck
STEAK · THE VENETIAN

CUT by Wolfgang Puck

Puck's sleek, modern steakhouse — a roll call of prime cuts and Japanese wagyu done with serious technique. It's polished and lively rather than stuffy, which makes it a great pick for a celebratory group that still wants the white-tablecloth treatment.

Steakhouse
SW Steakhouse
STEAK · WYNN LAS VEGAS

SW Steakhouse

Wynn's flagship steakhouse, with a terrace looking out over the resort's Lake of Dreams light show. Classic cuts, a deep wine list and a genuinely special setting after dark. Ask about a patio table when you book if you want the view.

Steakhouse
Bazaar Meat by José Andrés
LIVE-FIRE STEAK · SAHARA

Bazaar Meat by José Andrés

A carnivore's playground from José Andrés: theatrical live-fire cooking, whole roasts, and showpieces meant to be shared across the table. Loud, fun and a little wild for a fine-dining room — a great change of pace from the hushed temples up the Strip.

Steakhouse
Gordon Ramsay Steak
STEAK · PARIS LAS VEGAS

Gordon Ramsay Steak

The most theatrical of Ramsay's several Vegas rooms, entered through a Chunnel-style tunnel, with the signature Beef Wellington as the headline act. Big, bold and crowd-pleasing — exactly what a lot of people picture when they imagine a celebrity-chef dinner in Vegas.

Steakhouse
Carbone
ITALIAN-AMERICAN · ARIA

Carbone

Major Food Group's see-and-be-seen Italian-American room, all tuxedoed captains and tableside flourish — the spicy rigatoni vodka has a cult following. A sister concept, the seafood-leaning Carbone Riviera, looks out over the Bellagio fountains. Not a chef's name on the door, but very much a destination.

Book ahead
Booking & budget: Reserve as early as you can — most of these rooms open tables a month out (and the tiny tasting counters even earlier), with the prime slots going first. OpenTable and Resy cover many of them; a few, like é by José Andrés, book direct. Expect dinner for two with wine to run well into the hundreds, and into four figures at the top tasting menus, before tax and tip. We don't quote exact prices because they move, but plan generously and check the current menu before you go.
Dress the part

What to wear

Vegas is more relaxed than the price tags suggest — but these rooms still expect you to make an effort.

Most of the celebrity-chef rooms land somewhere between business casual and dressy/casual elegant. In practice that means a collared shirt or a smart top, slacks or a nice dress, and closed shoes. Almost universally off the list: shorts, flip-flops, baseball caps, tank tops, athletic wear and pool attire. A jacket for men is never wrong at the top tasting menus, even where it isn't strictly required, and it never hurts to dress up a notch for a milestone.

One Vegas quirk worth flagging: it can hit 100°F outside in summer, but the dining rooms run cold. Whatever you wear, bring a layer — and remember most of these spots are 21-and-up vibes after dark, so this is a grown-up night, not a kids' outing.

Do it like a local

A perfect night

How we'd build an evening around one great meal on the Strip.

  1. Book the table weeks out, then build the night around it — pick a show for either side of dinner so the timing is locked.
  2. Start with a cocktail somewhere with a view, then walk a stretch of the Strip to work up an appetite.
  3. Settle in for the main event — say a long degustation at Joël Robuchon or Guy Savoy, or steaks and showmanship at Bazaar Meat.
  4. If you went earlier, catch a late show or a lounge act; if dinner ran long, take the night slow and let it be the whole event.
  5. Save the over-the-top buffet for another day — this is a one-meal-matters night, not an all-you-can-eat one.
Good to know

Common questions

Which celebrity chefs have restaurants in Las Vegas?

A lot of the biggest names in the world cook on the Strip. Among the marquee ones are Joël Robuchon and CUT's Wolfgang Puck at MGM Grand and The Venetian, Guy Savoy at Caesars Palace, Thomas Keller (Bouchon), Gordon Ramsay, and José Andrés (é, Bazaar Meat, Jaleo). The lineup shifts as rooms open and close, so confirm the current restaurant before you book.

What is the best fine-dining restaurant in Las Vegas?

It depends on the night. For a top-end tasting menu, Joël Robuchon at MGM Grand and Restaurant Guy Savoy at Caesars Palace are the classic picks, while é by José Andrés is the most intimate and hardest table to get. For a celebratory steak, CUT, SW Steakhouse and Bazaar Meat are all excellent. There's no single best — pick the experience you want.

How far in advance should I make reservations?

As early as you can. Many of these rooms release tables about a month ahead and the best times go quickly, especially on weekends and around big events. The tiny tasting counters like é by José Andrés open seats even further out and sell out almost immediately, so book the moment they're available.

How much does celebrity-chef dining in Las Vegas cost?

Plan generously. À la carte at a chef steakhouse can run a few hundred dollars for two with wine, and the top multi-course tasting menus can climb into four figures per couple before tax and tip. Prices change often, so we don't quote exact figures — always check the current menu when you book.

What should I wear to fine dining in Las Vegas?

Most celebrity-chef rooms ask for business casual to dressy, meaning a collared shirt or smart top, slacks or a dress, and closed shoes. Shorts, flip-flops, ball caps, tank tops and pool attire are generally not allowed. A jacket is a safe bet at the top tasting menus, and bring a layer — the dining rooms run cold even when it's blazing hot outside.

Does Las Vegas have Michelin-starred restaurants?

Michelin stopped publishing a Las Vegas guide after 2009, so for years there were no active stars in town. That's changing: the new MICHELIN Guide Southwest covers Nevada and announces its first selection in 2026, with the inaugural ceremony slated for August 2026. Check the latest guide to see which Vegas rooms earn stars this time around.