Nevada
The Strip
How to do the Las Vegas Strip on foot: the 4.2-mile layout, which free attractions are actually worth stopping for, when to walk it, and what to skip.
Where
Las Vegas, United States
Opening hours
The boulevard itself is open and lit 24/7. Bellagio fountains run every 30 min from 15:00 (12:00 weekends/holidays) to 19:30, then every 15 min from 20:00 to midnight. The Bellagio Conservatory is free and open 24/7; the Aria Express tram runs 24/7 and the Mandalay Bay tram about 10:00-00:00.
Tickets
Free to walk and to see the headline sights (fountains, Conservatory, Venetian canals, Sphere exterior, Welcome to Las Vegas sign). Paid extras sit on top: a gondola ride at the Venetian, the High Roller wheel, or a Sphere show inside.
Time needed
An evening for the Center Strip core (about 2-3 hours with stops). The full 4.2 miles end to end is roughly 1.5-2 hours of walking alone, before any resort detours โ most people never do it all in one go.
In short
Visiting 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.
How to do the Strip without melting or overpaying
The Strip is the 4.2-mile run of Las Vegas Boulevard lined with casino resorts, and the thing UK visitors get wrong first is scale. On a map the Bellagio to the Venetian looks like a five-minute stroll; on the ground itโs twenty minutes of footbridges, escalators and crowds, because each resort occupies a block in its own right. The second mistake is treating it like a daytime sight. In summer the pavement tops 100F and youโll be hiding in air-conditioning by mid-afternoon. Walk the Strip after dark, when itโs cooler and the whole boulevard is lit and animated.
The good news is that the best of it is free. You donโt need a casino booking or a ticket to see the headline acts. Base your evening on the Center Strip โ roughly Bellagio up to the Venetian โ and ride the free Aria Express tram (BellagioโVdaraโAria, 24/7) or the Mandalay Bay tram (Mandalay BayโExcaliburโLuxor, about 10:00 to midnight) for the long southern hops rather than walking the lot. Note the old MirageโTreasure Island tram closed in June 2024 โ Hard Rock has kept the track for a planned 2027 relaunch โ and the free trams are not the paid Monorail, which runs behind the casinos on the east side and charges a fare.
The free sights worth stopping for
Time your walk around the Fountains of Bellagio: shows run every 30 minutes from 15:00 (from noon at weekends and on holidays) until 19:30, then every 15 minutes from 20:00 to midnight, each lasting three to five minutes set to music. A weekday evening between 20:00 and 22:30 gives you the frequent 15-minute cadence without the full weekend crush. Step inside the Bellagio Conservatory & Botanical Garden too โ itโs free, open 24 hours, and changes its display five times a year. Across the road, the Venetianโs indoor canals and painted sky ceiling are free to wander (the gondola ride is the paid extra). At the north Center Strip, the Sphereโs 580,000-square-foot LED exterior plays free programmed content all evening โ you watch it from outside, no show ticket needed. For the classic photo, the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign sits at the far south end, past Mandalay Bay, so pin it to an airport run rather than a walk.
Is it worth it, and what to skip
Yes โ but as a free, one- or two-evening spectacle rather than a paid attraction. The Strip is at its best when you treat the walking, the fountains, the Conservatory and the Sphere exterior as the night, and gamble or buy a show on top only if you want to. Skip the temptation to march the full 4.2 miles end to end โ itโs 1.5 to 2 hours of walking alone before any resort detour, and the southern and northern fringes are mostly more of the same. Skip the daytime walk in July and August entirely. Pace the stops: the gaps between resorts that look short are 15 to 20 minutes apart, and the heat and sensory overload catch out anyone who tries to do it all in one push.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Las Vegas city guide.