Where to stay in Las Vegas
The Center Strip puts first-timers beside the fountains, the South Strip eases family arrivals, and the North Strip wins on rates once you factor in resort fees.
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In short
Where to stay in Las Vegas
For a first Las Vegas trip, base yourself on the Center Strip between the Bellagio and Caesars Palace, where the fountains, the best free attractions and a walkable cluster of resorts sit on your doorstep. Choose the South Strip near Mandalay Bay for cheaper airport transfers and the easiest family arrivals, the North Strip around Resorts World and the Sahara for the lowest room rates, and Downtown Fremont Street only for one big night out rather than your whole stay.
The short version
- Best all-rounder: Center Strip, Bellagio to Caesars Palace.
- Best value: North Strip around Resorts World and the Sahara.
- Best atmosphere: Downtown Fremont Street, but as a night out, not a base.
- Best for families and easy arrivals: South Strip near Mandalay Bay and the airport.
- Avoid booking on the headline room rate alone; the resort fee is the real Las Vegas filter.
Best areas to book
Center Strip (Bellagio to Caesars Palace)
ยฃยฃยฃ premiumThe cleanest first-timer choice: the Bellagio fountains, the Forum Shops at Caesars, Paris and the Venetian are all walkable, and you cut a taxi out of most evenings. It is the most expensive cluster and the rooms are not the biggest, but you are paying to be in the middle of everything.
Best for: First-timers, couples, short stays
South Strip (Mandalay Bay to MGM Grand)
ยฃยฃ mid-rangeClosest to Harry Reid Airport, so the shortest and cheapest transfer, with a free tram linking Mandalay Bay, Luxor and Excalibur. Mandalay Bay's beach pool and the T-Mobile Arena are here. The trade-off is a 15-20 minute walk or tram ride to the Bellagio core where most of the night happens.
Best for: Value, easy arrivals, families, pool days
North Strip (Resorts World to the Sahara)
ยฃ valueThe cheapest Strip rooms, around Resorts World, the Sahara and the Strat tower, with the monorail running this side to link you back to the centre. The honest trade-off is a real walk past the construction and quieter blocks to reach the Bellagio-Caesars action, which is where you will actually want to be at night.
Best for: Budget stays, monorail users, longer trips
Downtown / Fremont Street
ยฃ valueThe original neon Vegas: lower table minimums, cheaper drinks and the SlotZilla zip-line under the Fremont Street canopy. It is grittier and more intense than the Strip and sits about three miles north, so treat it as one wild evening by Deuce bus or taxi rather than your hotel base.
Best for: Cheap gambling, one big night out, old-school atmosphere
East of the Strip (Paradise Road / Harmon Avenue)
ยฃ valueA block or two off the Strip around Paradise Road and the Westgate, where rooms run noticeably cheaper and several hotels skip or trim the resort fee. You lose the walkable buzz and the views, and you will lean on the monorail or rideshare to reach the action, so it suits budget travellers who do not mind a short hop each evening.
Best for: Budget travellers avoiding resort fees, quieter sleep
The simple choice
If you are booking in a hurry, filter for the Center Strip between the Bellagio and Caesars Palace first, then compare the South Strip if the prices look steep. That single rule keeps most first-timers out of the two common traps: paying North Strip prices for a long nightly walk to the action, or basing yourself Downtown and taxiing to the Strip every evening. The Center Strip costs more, but on a 3- or 4-night trip the saved taxis and the time on your feet are worth it.
Compare Center Strip hotelsResort fees vs the headline rate
The real Las Vegas booking skill is reading past the room rate. Almost every Strip resort adds a mandatory resort fee of roughly $40-$55 (about ยฃ30-ยฃ45) a night plus tax at check-out, which never shows clearly when you book, and many also charge for parking. A North Strip room that looks ยฃ20 cheaper can end up costing the same once the fee is added, so always work out the all-in nightly price before you compare hotels. A handful of off-Strip places around Paradise Road waive the fee entirely, which is the main reason to consider them.
Add the resort fee and tax to every quoted nightly rate before you decide a hotel looks cheap.
Safety and noise
The Strip itself is busy and heavily policed, but GOV.UK notes that US violent crime concentrates in specific neighbourhoods rather than tourist areas, so the practical move is to check the exact block rather than the city. For accommodation that means a tower set back from the casino floor beats a cheap room right above a club if you want sleep, and the streets immediately north and east of Downtown are quieter to skip late at night. Walking the Strip after dark is fine; wandering far off it on foot is not the point of the trip.
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