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Where to Stay on the Las Vegas Strip

Four miles of neon, sixty-odd resorts, and a surprising amount of walking. Where you book on the Strip decides how your whole trip feels — so here's how we'd choose, from the dead-center action to the quieter bookends.

LAS VEGASON THE STRIP · NV

Here's the thing first-timers never quite believe until they're out there: the Strip is huge. Las Vegas Boulevard runs roughly four miles, the resorts are enormous, and the distance between two hotels that look neighborly on a map can be a sweaty fifteen-minute hike past a casino, a moving walkway and a pedestrian bridge. So the single most important hotel decision you'll make isn't the brand or the pool — it's where on the Strip you land.

We break the Strip into three stretches: center, south and north. Center keeps you within a short walk of the most famous sights. South leans family-friendly, event-heavy and a touch more affordable. North runs from glittering luxury to the cheapest beds in town. This guide is for anyone trying to match an address to their trip; for the lay of the land, pair it with our guide to the Strip and our wider Where to Stay overview.

The three stretches

Center, south & north

Same boulevard, three very different home bases. Pick the stretch first, then the hotel.

Center Strip
MOST WALKABLE · CENTER STRIP

Center Strip

The heart of it, roughly from the Bellagio fountains up to The Venetian. Stay here and you can leave the car parked all weekend: the dancing fountains, Caesars Palace, the LINQ Promenade and its High Roller observation wheel, and the Sphere just behind The Venetian are all within an easy stroll. The trade-off is crowds — the center sidewalks get genuinely packed on weekend nights — and prices that reflect the address.

Best for first-timers
South Strip
EVENTS & VALUE · SOUTH STRIP

South Strip

The southern end runs from about MGM Grand and the Park down past Mandalay Bay, and it's where the big crowds gather for shows and sports — T-Mobile Arena and Allegiant Stadium sit just off the boulevard, and the airport is minutes away. Room rates here often run a little gentler than dead center. One honest note: with the old Tropicana site cleared for a ballpark, a couple of the southern blocks feel emptier than they used to, so you'll rely more on rideshares to bridge the gaps.

Near the arenas
North Strip
LUXURY TO BUDGET · NORTH STRIP

North Strip

The north end is a study in contrasts. At the high end you've got Wynn and Encore, the newest tower in town at Fontainebleau, and the sprawling Resorts World complex. Keep heading north and you reach the Strip's value bookends, where the lowest nightly rates and the last free self-parking tend to live. The catch is distance — you're a longer walk or a quick ride from the center action.

Quieter, wider spaces
By budget

Luxury, mid-tier & value

A few honest picks at each level — all open and operating as we write this, though the Strip changes fast, so confirm before you book.

The luxury tier
SPLURGE · CENTER & NORTH

The luxury tier

For top-of-the-line, look at Bellagio and Aria in the center, the Venetian and Palazzo all-suite towers, and Wynn and Encore up north — perennial five-star favorites. Fontainebleau is the newest big swing on the north end. These come with the highest rates and the highest resort fees, but also the best pools, spas and restaurants on the boulevard.

Five-star
The mid-tier
SWEET SPOT · ACROSS THE STRIP

The mid-tier

This is where most people should look. Caesars Palace, The Cosmopolitan, Paris Las Vegas and Planet Hollywood anchor the center; Park MGM and New York-New York sit at the south end near the arenas. You get a famous name, a great location and full resort amenities without the very top rate. The Mirage is gone now (it's being rebuilt as a Hard Rock), so don't go looking for it.

Best value/location mix
The value tier
EASY ON THE WALLET · SOUTH & FAR NORTH

The value tier

For lower rates on the Strip itself, the Excalibur and Luxor at the south end and the Flamingo in the center are dependable budget-friendly stays. Way up north, Sahara and Circus Circus tend to post the cheapest nightly numbers — and are among the last Strip resorts with free self-parking. You sacrifice some polish and walking distance, but you're still on the boulevard.

Lower rates
The fees nobody mentions: almost every Strip resort tacks on a daily resort fee (covering Wi-Fi, the gym and the pool) on top of the room rate — it's real money per night and it's easy to miss at checkout, so read the fine print. Most big resorts also charge for self-parking and valet, with rates that climb on weekends and during big events; a short list of north-Strip properties still park you free. Build both into your budget before you compare rooms.
Do it like a local

How we'd choose

A quick way to land on the right address in about five minutes.

  1. First trip and you want to walk to everything? Book the center Strip — Bellagio, Caesars Palace, The Cosmopolitan or Paris put the fountains and the shows at your doorstep.
  2. In town for a concert, fight or game? Stay south near MGM Grand, the Park or Mandalay Bay so T-Mobile Arena and Allegiant Stadium are a short walk.
  3. Chasing newest-and-shiniest or a quieter scene? Head north to Fontainebleau, Resorts World, or Wynn and Encore.
  4. Watching the budget? Anchor at the Excalibur or Luxor in the south or Sahara or Circus Circus up north, and rideshare to the center when you want it.
  5. Whatever you pick, add the resort fee and parking to the headline rate before you compare, then go fill the days with our things to do guide.
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Good to know

Common questions

What's the best part of the Las Vegas Strip to stay on?

For most first-time visitors it's the center Strip, roughly between the Bellagio fountains and The Venetian. From there you can walk to the most famous sights — Caesars Palace, the LINQ Promenade and High Roller wheel, and the Sphere — without much rideshare. The south end is better if you're here for an event at T-Mobile Arena or Allegiant Stadium, and the north end mixes top luxury with the lowest rates.

Are resort fees and parking really mandatory on the Strip?

Resort fees are effectively unavoidable — nearly every Strip resort adds a daily fee on top of your room rate to cover Wi-Fi, the gym and the pool, and it's charged whether you use those amenities or not. Most big resorts also charge for self-parking and valet, with prices rising on weekends and during major events. A handful of north-Strip properties like Sahara and Circus Circus still offer free self-parking. We'd add both fees to the room rate before comparing hotels.

Is the Strip walkable, or do I need a car?

It's walkable in stretches but bigger than it looks — the boulevard runs about four miles and the resorts are massive, so two hotels that seem close can be a long, hot walk apart, especially in summer. Staying center Strip cuts your walking the most. You don't need a car: the Las Vegas Monorail, the free trams between some resorts, the bus, and rideshares all help bridge the gaps, and parking on the Strip usually costs money anyway.

What are some affordable hotels actually on the Strip?

On the boulevard itself, the Excalibur and Luxor at the south end and the Flamingo in the center are reliable budget-friendly picks. Up north, Sahara and Circus Circus typically post the lowest nightly rates and are among the last Strip resorts with free self-parking. Rates everywhere swing hugely with the calendar, so midweek and off-peak dates save the most.

Which Strip hotels have closed or changed recently?

The Strip changes fast. The Tropicana has been demolished to make way for a ballpark at the south end, and The Mirage closed and is being rebuilt as a Hard Rock with a guitar-shaped tower. The Cromwell's hotel rooms went offline as it converts into the Vanderpump Hotel, though its casino and restaurants stayed open during the work. Always confirm a property is open under its current name before you book.

When is the cheapest time to stay on the Las Vegas Strip?

Midweek nights — Sunday through Thursday — are almost always cheaper than weekends, and you'll dodge the worst sidewalk crowds too. Rates spike around big conventions, fights, concerts and holidays, so check the events calendar for your dates. Summer brings desert heat well over 100°F, which can mean lower room rates but tougher midday walking, so plan pool time and indoor sights accordingly.