Off-Strip & Local Eats
The meals locals rave about happen a few miles west of the neon: Chinatown's Spring Mountain Road, the Arts District scratch kitchens, and the late-night ramen and pho that make the Strip's buffet line look silly.
Updated June 2026
The food on the Strip is some of the best in the country, and it knows it — the prices show it, the wait shows it, the resort fee on the way out shows it. But the meals locals actually rave about happen a few miles west, in a stretch of strip-mall plazas along Spring Mountain Road that quietly became one of the great Asian dining corridors in America. This is where casino chefs eat on their night off.
This page is for travelers who want the real Las Vegas table: the late-night ramen, the dumplings folded by hand, the Korean BBQ that smokes until 2 a.m., and the Arts District scratch kitchens that locals book weeks out. It is a short rideshare from your hotel and a different city entirely. Pair it with our wander through Chinatown & Spring Mountain and the bigger picture over on Where to Eat.
Chinatown, the heart of it
Hundreds of restaurants packed into low plazas, from Tokyo-style izakaya to hand-pulled noodles. A handful we'd send anyone to.





The Arts District
A walkable few blocks of scratch kitchens, breweries and chef-driven rooms, almost all locally owned, centered on Main Street south of downtown.



A perfect off-Strip night
Skip the buffet line. This is how regulars eat their way through the real Las Vegas.
- Grab a rideshare off the Strip to Spring Mountain Road and start with a round of soup dumplings at Shanghai Taste.
- Walk the plazas, peer in a few windows, then settle in for robata and sake at Raku (reserve first) or a sizzling table at one of the Korean BBQ rooms.
- Cool down with shaved ice or a parfait at Sweets Raku, the dessert spot just down the row.
- If you want a slower, sit-down meal instead, point the night at the Arts District for pasta at Esther's Kitchen and a nightcap at a Main Street taproom.
- End the night the local way — a 1 a.m. bowl of pho at Pho Kim Long while the Strip is still trying to charge you twelve dollars for water.
Where to go next
More of the Las Vegas that locals keep to themselves.

Chinatown & Spring Mountain
Walk the plazas behind the food: the shops, the temples and the late-night soul of off-Strip Vegas.

The Arts District
Murals, breweries, vintage shops and First Friday — downtown's most creative few blocks.

Where to Eat
The full dining picture, from celebrity-chef Strip rooms to the best cheap eats in town.

Neighborhoods
The Strip, Downtown, the Arts District and beyond — how the city actually fits together.
Common questions
Where do locals actually eat in Las Vegas?
Mostly off the Strip. The biggest concentration is Chinatown along Spring Mountain Road, a few miles west of the casinos, with hundreds of Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Thai and Vietnamese restaurants. The other hot spot is the Arts District ("18b") on Main Street just south of downtown, full of independent scratch kitchens, breweries and brunch spots.
How far is Chinatown from the Las Vegas Strip?
It is close — Spring Mountain Road runs just west of the Strip, and most of Chinatown is a five-to-ten-minute rideshare or short drive from a Strip hotel. There is no admission or gate; it is a long stretch of plazas you can explore at your own pace. The RTC bus also serves the corridor if you would rather not drive.
Is off-Strip dining cheaper than the Strip?
Generally yes, and often by a lot. Off-Strip restaurants do not carry the resort overhead, so you usually get larger portions and lower prices than comparable Strip rooms, with no resort fee attached to the meal. Some destination spots like Raku or Esther's Kitchen are still a splurge, but even those tend to cost less than their Strip equivalents.
What is the best late-night food off the Strip?
Chinatown is the late-night capital of Las Vegas. Several Vietnamese, Korean and ramen spots stay open into the early hours — Pho Kim Long is a long-running favorite for very late bowls of pho, and many Korean BBQ rooms grill past midnight. Hours change, so confirm the current closing time before a 2 or 3 a.m. run.
Do I need reservations for off-Strip restaurants?
It depends on the place. Casual Chinatown noodle and dumpling shops are usually walk-in only and you simply wait for a table. Destination rooms like Raku in Chinatown and Esther's Kitchen in the Arts District book up well in advance, so reserve those ahead of time if they are on your list.
What is the Las Vegas Arts District known for food-wise?
The Arts District, or "18b," is centered on Main Street just south of downtown and is one of the city's strongest independent dining scenes. Expect locally owned scratch kitchens, craft breweries and taprooms, coffee roasters, brunch spots and chef-driven restaurants — Esther's Kitchen is the best-known. It is at its liveliest during the monthly First Friday arts night.