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Las Vegas, United States
Las Vegas

Nevada / Southwest

Las Vegas

Three nights on the Center Strip near the Bellagio fountains plus a Grand Canyon day; budget for the resort fees and tipping the room rate hides, and skip July and August.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights (add a day for Grand Canyon)

Airport

Harry Reid International (LAS), ~3 miles from the Strip

Airport to centre

Taxi flat zone $21-29 + card fee; rideshare ~$15-40 off-peak

Best base

Center Strip for first-timers; South Strip for cheaper transfers

In short

Las Vegas at a glance

Las Vegas is a 3- or 4-night long-haul trip best treated as one walkable strip of casinos plus a Grand Canyon day: base yourself on the Center Strip near the Bellagio fountains, budget for the resort fee and US tipping that never show in the room rate, and avoid July and August when it is too hot to stand outside.

The short version

  • Stay on the Center Strip (Bellagio to Caesars Palace) so the best fountains, shows and free trams are a walk away rather than a taxi.
  • Every quoted room rate hides a resort fee of roughly ยฃ30-ยฃ45 a night plus tax, and US tipping adds 18-20% to bars, restaurants and taxis.
  • Do the Grand Canyon as a day trip, but pick the West Rim (about 2.5 hours) over the South Rim (4.5 hours each way) unless you want a 14-hour day.
  • Walk or use the $8 Deuce bus 24-hour pass along the Strip; the monorail only runs the east side and a hire car is pointless here.
  • You need an ESTA before you fly (statutory facts inherit the United States country guide); never restate the cost or rules in casual planning.

Las Vegas is two trips stacked on top of each other: a 24-hour playground of casinos, fountains and shows packed into a 4-mile boulevard, and a launchpad for the Grand Canyon and the wider Southwest. The mistake UK first-timers make is treating it like a European city break and underbudgeting. The headline room rate is fiction once you add the mandatory resort fee of around $40-$55 a night, and US tipping quietly tacks 18-20% onto every drink, dinner and cab. Build both in before you decide anything looks cheap.

The geography is simpler than the neon suggests. Stay on the Center Strip, between the Bellagio fountains and Caesars Palace, and the best of it is on foot. South Strip is closest to the airport and cheaper to reach; the North Strip and Fremont Street downtown are cheaper to gamble but a ride away from the core. Walk at night when it is cooler, save one evening for the old neon of Fremont Street, and book a single big show rather than feeding the budget into the slots.

Three or four nights is plenty, with one full day carved out for the Grand Canyon, the West Rim if you want to be back for dinner, the South Rim only if you can spare a near-14-hour day. Avoid July and August, when 104F afternoons make the Strip unwalkable, and aim for spring or autumn midweek. The structured planning below, where to stay, what each thing costs in pounds, how to get in from Harry Reid, and how to time it, picks up from here.

Plan your Las Vegas trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Las Vegas

Grand Canyon West / Skywalk

Grand Canyon West is the rim you do as a day trip from Las Vegas โ€” about 2.5 hours each way, on Hualapai tribal land, not the national park. Book a coach package before you fly: West Rim day tours run roughly $95โ€“$135, with the Skywalk glass bridge a +$30-ish add-on you buy on top. The Skywalk is the headline, but you photograph it from the side because cameras and phones are banned on the deck itself. Allow a full day door to door, and pick the West Rim over the South Rim (4.5 hours each way) unless you want a 14-hour coach day.

A full day From about $59

The High Roller

Book a timed High Roller ticket online before you fly and pick a night slot โ€” the 550ft wheel at The LINQ is a view machine, and the lit-up Strip after dark is what justifies the price over the free observation points nearby. One full rotation takes 30 minutes inside a fully enclosed, air-conditioned cabin that holds up to 40 people, so allow about 45 minutes door to door. The standout upgrade is the Happy Half Hour cabin with an open bar; the plain day ticket is the one to skip.

About 45 minutes dโ€ฆ From about $25

Bellagio Fountains

The Bellagio fountains are free, run every day, and are the one free Strip set-piece worth timing your evening around โ€” but only after dark. Each show lasts three to five minutes on a 1,000-foot lake, with jets firing up to 460 feet to music. Don't wait around in daylight: come back between 20:00 and midnight, when shows run every 15 minutes and the water is lit. Stand on the sidewalk railing in front of the lake, or the Bellagio pedestrian bridge for the wider view.

Five minutes for tโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

The Strip

The Strip is a free, 4.2-mile boulevard of casino resorts, and the best of it costs nothing: the Bellagio fountains, the Conservatory, the Venetian canals and the Sphere's LED exterior are all walk-up free. Do it on foot after dark when it is cooler and lit, but don't try to march the whole length end to end โ€” the resorts are far larger than they look, so pick the Center Strip core and use the free trams for the long hops.

An evening for theโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Center Strip

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The first-timer default: Bellagio, Caesars Palace, Paris and the Venetian within a walk, the best fountains and shows on your doorstep, and free trams nearby. It is not the cheapest, but it cuts a taxi out of most days.

Best for: First-timers, couples, short stays

Browse hotels Middle of the Strip

South Strip

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Closest to the airport, so the shortest and cheapest transfer (often under $20 by rideshare), with a free tram linking Mandalay Bay, Luxor and Excalibur. Slightly more spread out from the central action.

Best for: Value, easy arrivals, families

Browse hotels Airport end of the Strip

North Strip

ยฃ value

Cheaper rooms around the Sahara and Resorts World end, with the monorail running this side. The trade-off is a longer walk or ride to the Bellagio-Caesars core where most of the evening happens.

Best for: Budget stays, monorail users

Browse hotels 10-15 min by tram or monorail

Downtown / Fremont Street

ยฃ value

Vintage, neon-lit and far cheaper to gamble, but a few miles north of the Strip and best as a night out rather than a base. Save it for one evening unless you actively want the old-school, intense atmosphere.

Best for: Cheap gambling, one big night out

Browse hotels ~3 miles north of the Strip

Airport to city centre

Las Vegas airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Taxi (flat airport zone fare) ~10-20 min $21.25-$29.25 + $3 card fee Best for groups or with luggage
Rideshare (Uber/Lyft) off-peak ~10-20 min about $15-$40 depending on zone Cheapest most days; surges during events
Shared shuttle ~30-50 min with hotel stops from about $19 one-way Slowest; only if budget is tight
RTC Route 108/109 bus ~30-45 min plus transfer $4 single / $6 two-hour pass For solo budget travellers, not luggage
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: March to May and September to November are the sweet spot: daytime highs in the 70-90F range make walking the Strip and a Grand Canyon day comfortable rather than punishing. Midweek (Tuesday to Thursday) is cheaper than weekends year-round.

July and August regularly top 104F, too hot to stand outside for long, which is exactly why summer rooms are cheapest, if you can live by the pool and in air-conditioned casinos. January is also cheap but avoid CES week in early January, when hotels and rideshare prices spike across the city.

What it costs

Direct UK return flights to Las Vegas (BA, Virgin Atlantic and American from Heathrow; Norse/budget options from Gatwick) are typically ยฃ450-ยฃ750 return, rising in summer and over school holidays. The flight is about 10.5-11 hours out, and the eight-hour time difference means jet lag is real on day one.

Daily budget per person

Resort fee (per night, on top of room) about $40-$55 / ยฃ30-ยฃ45 + tax
Deuce bus 24-hour pass $8 (3-day pass $20)
Headline show ticket from about $49, often $80-$200
Grand Canyon West Rim coach day about $95-$115 (Skywalk +$30)
Sample trip: A realistic 4-night mid-range Vegas break for one person is roughly ยฃ1,150-ยฃ1,600 before gambling and shopping: ยฃ500-ยฃ700 flights, ยฃ320-ยฃ500 hotel share including resort fees, ยฃ180-ยฃ260 food and tips, and ยฃ90-ยฃ150 for one show plus a Grand Canyon coach day.

Two costs ambush first-timers. The mandatory resort fee adds roughly $40-$55 (about ยฃ30-ยฃ45) a night on top of the headline room rate, and US tipping means 18-20% on every bar tab, restaurant bill and taxi. Build both in before you decide a room looks cheap.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in United States

See the full United States guide

Las Vegas FAQs

How many days do you need in Las Vegas?
Three to four nights is the practical first-timer trip: a couple of evenings on the Strip and Fremont Street, one show, and a full day out to the Grand Canyon. Any longer and the heat, prices and sensory overload tend to outstay their welcome.
Why is my Las Vegas hotel more expensive than the rate I booked?
Because of the resort fee, a mandatory daily charge of roughly $40-$55 plus tax that is added at check-out and rarely shown clearly when you book. Add it to every quoted nightly rate before you compare hotels, then add 18-20% tipping on top of food and drink.
Should you do the West Rim or South Rim of the Grand Canyon from Vegas?
For a day trip from Vegas the West Rim wins on time: about 2.5 hours each way, with the Skywalk glass bridge as the headline. The South Rim is the classic National Park view but a 4.5-hour drive each way, making it a 14-hour day better suited to an overnight.
Do you need a car in Las Vegas?
No. The Strip is walkable, the Deuce bus and trams cover the rest, and parking plus valet fees make a hire car a liability. Only hire one if you are driving yourself to the Grand Canyon or on to a wider Southwest road trip such as Zion or Bryce.

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