Las Vegas Casino Map
Las Vegas has more casinos than any other city, several dozen major floors spread across four areas. This Las Vegas casino map covers the whole city: the resort corridor of the Strip, the older clubs downtown on Fremont Street, the off Strip resorts a short hop east and west, and the locals casinos out in the suburbs. The legal age to gamble is 21 across Nevada, with no exceptions.
Illustration An illustrated overview, not to scale. See the interactive map below for exact locations.
Where the casinos cluster in Las Vegas
The casinos in Las Vegas fall into a few clear groups, and knowing which is which matters more here than the exact address of any one resort. The famous one is the Strip, the stretch of Las Vegas Boulevard lined with the large theme resorts. Most of it sits outside the city limits, in the unincorporated town of Paradise, which is why people say they are going to Las Vegas but spend their trip in another jurisdiction entirely.
A few miles north, downtown Las Vegas on and around Fremont Street is the original casino district. The floors there are older, closer together, and usually cheaper, gathered under the lighted Fremont Street Experience canopy and walkable end to end. A separate set of off Strip resorts sits just east and west of the boulevard, near enough to reach in a few minutes but away from the crowds.
Then there is the other Las Vegas, the locals casinos. These neighborhood resorts ring the valley out toward Summerlin in the west and Henderson in the southeast, run mostly by Station Casinos and Boyd Gaming, and they cater to residents with cheaper food, looser rules, and easy parking. For a visitor they are a quieter, lower cost alternative to the Strip. This page covers all of it and links up to the wider map of casinos in Nevada.
Las Vegas casinos on the map
Pins Verified locations. The Strip and downtown floors sit close together and group into clusters until you zoom in.
A representative set of major casinos by area, not every floor in the valley. Rosters drift with openings, closures, and rebrands; dated May 2026.
§ Casinos by area
The Strip Las Vegas Boulevard · Paradise
The resort corridor, and the reason most people come. The big floors run from Mandalay Bay and MGM Grand at the south end through Bellagio, Caesars Palace, the Venetian, and Aria in the center, up to Wynn, Resorts World, and the 2023 Fontainebleau at the north end. There is far more here than one section can hold, so the detail, resort by resort, lives on the dedicated Las Vegas Strip casino map.
Downtown and Fremont Street a few miles north
The original district. The Golden Nugget anchors Fremont Street, with the Stevens family’s Circa, the D, and Golden Gate at the west end and Boyd Gaming’s Fremont, California, and Main Street Station nearby. The Plaza caps the head of the street and the historic Binion’s and the independent El Cortez fill out the east end. Everything sits within a walk under the canopy.
Off the Strip just east and west of the boulevard
A short distance off the Strip sit several resorts that trade proximity for value. The Westgate to the east holds the SuperBook, while the Rio, Palms, Gold Coast, and the Orleans cluster to the west. South Point sits at the far south end of Las Vegas Boulevard. These draw a mix of visitors and locals.
Summerlin and the west valley suburban locals casinos
Out toward the Spring Mountains, Red Rock Resort is the flagship of the western locals scene, with the Suncoast and Santa Fe Station nearby and the new Durango anchoring the fast growing southwest. These are full resorts built for residents, with movie theaters, bowling, and cheaper dining than the Strip.
Henderson southeast of the valley
Henderson, the valley’s second city, has its own locals resorts. Green Valley Ranch is the showpiece, with Sunset Station and the M Resort at the southern edge of the metro. They serve a large suburban population and make an easy base away from the tourist core.
Boulder Highway and North Las Vegas east and north
Along the old Boulder Highway toward the dam, Sam’s Town and Boulder Station are longtime locals floors, and north of downtown the Aliante serves North Las Vegas. This is the everyday, low key side of Las Vegas gambling, far from the boulevard.
Planning a visit to Las Vegas
- Getting there
- Harry Reid International (LAS) sits just southeast of the Strip, minutes from the south end resorts and a short ride from downtown.
- Getting around
- The Strip is walkable but longer than it looks; a monorail, buses, and rideshare help. Downtown is a few miles north, and the locals casinos really need a car.
- Minimum age
- 21 to gamble, statewide in Nevada, with no exceptions. Verify at the property before a visit.
- Hours & parking
- Casino floors run 24/7. Some Strip resorts charge for parking; downtown and the locals casinos are usually free.
Sportsbooks and sports betting in Las Vegas
Las Vegas is the home of the American sportsbook, and the city wears it well. Nevada has taken legal sports bets since 1949, and almost every major resort runs a book, from a small counter to a wall of screens. The Westgate SuperBook, east of the Strip, is one of the largest anywhere at around 30,000 square feet, and Circa downtown built a giant stadium style room to rival it. The minimum age to bet is 21, the same as the casino floor. One local rule still holds: to use a mobile betting app in Nevada you generally have to register in person at the affiliated casino first, rather than signing up entirely from your phone.
The locals casinos
Beyond the boulevard, Las Vegas runs a parallel casino economy aimed at residents rather than tourists. The locals resorts, run largely by Station Casinos and Boyd Gaming and ringing the valley from Summerlin to Henderson, compete on value: cheaper buffets, better odds on some games, generous players clubs, and free parking. Many bundle in movie theaters, bowling alleys, and bingo. For a visitor willing to drive ten or fifteen minutes off the Strip, they are a cheaper, calmer way to gamble, and they are where most Las Vegas residents actually play.
A changing Strip: recent closures and what is next
The Las Vegas lineup turns over more than most cities, so a map from a few years ago is already wrong. Two landmarks closed in 2024. The Mirage, which opened in 1989 and reshaped the modern Strip, shut its doors and is being rebuilt as Hard Rock Las Vegas, expected around 2027 with a guitar shaped tower where the volcano stood. The Tropicana closed the same year and was demolished to make room for a Major League Baseball stadium for the Athletics and a new resort. On the upside, Fontainebleau opened at the north end in late 2023 and Durango brought a new locals resort to the southwest valley. Always check that a property is still open and under the name you expect before planning around it.
Las Vegas casino questions
Q. How many casinos are in Las Vegas?
Several dozen major casinos. Roughly thirty resorts line the Strip, about ten more cluster downtown on Fremont Street, and many neighborhood locals casinos spread across the valley and into Henderson and North Las Vegas. The exact number drifts with openings and closures, so treat it as a snapshot dated 2026.
Q. What is the gambling age in Las Vegas?
It is 21, the legal age across Nevada, with no exceptions at any casino, sportsbook, or slot machine. Under state law anyone under 21 may not play or even loiter on a casino floor. Confirm at the venue, since policies can change.
Q. Where are the casinos in Las Vegas?
In four main areas: the Strip, the resort corridor along Las Vegas Boulevard; downtown on and around Fremont Street, older and closer together; the off Strip resorts a short distance to the east and west; and the locals casinos spread through the suburbs, Summerlin, Henderson, and the Boulder Highway.
Q. What is the difference between the Strip and downtown Las Vegas?
The Strip is the line of large resorts on Las Vegas Boulevard, most of it outside the city limits in Paradise. Downtown, a few miles north on Fremont Street, is the original casino district: older, denser, often cheaper, and walkable under the Fremont Street Experience canopy. The Strip has its own full guide.
Q. Where are the best sportsbooks in Las Vegas?
The Westgate SuperBook east of the Strip is one of the largest in the world at around 30,000 square feet, and Circa downtown runs a giant stadium style book. Nearly every major resort has its own sportsbook. To bet on a mobile app in Nevada you usually have to register in person at the affiliated casino first.
Q. Can you still visit the Mirage and the Tropicana?
No. The Mirage closed in 2024 and is being rebuilt as Hard Rock Las Vegas, expected around 2027, and the Tropicana closed in 2024 and was demolished for a Major League Baseball stadium and a new resort. Both are off the current map.
Q. Are Las Vegas casinos open 24 hours?
Yes. Casino floors in Las Vegas run 24 hours a day, every day. Restaurants, sportsbooks, and amenities keep their own hours, so check the property for those.
Gamble responsibly. Gambling should be entertainment, not a way to make money, and only with money you can afford to lose. If gambling stops feeling like a choice, help is free, confidential, and available 24/7. Call or text the National Problem Gambling Helpline at 1-800-MY-RESET, or visit 1800myreset.org. You must be of legal age to gamble. More on recognizing a problem and finding help.
Editorial note
Reviewed by the CasinosMap editorial desk. The casino roster across the Strip, downtown, off Strip, and locals areas, the recent closures and rebrands, the sportsbook details, and the legal and age facts were checked against current authoritative sources, not prior knowledge. Las Vegas has more casinos than any other city, so the dataset lists the major and representative floors by area rather than every property, and counts are dated and treated as a snapshot.
Byline is a placeholder pending a named author with relevant credentials.
Sources
- Nevada Gaming Control Board regulator, minimum age, sports betting framework
- Nevada Revised Statutes 463.350 minimum gambling age of 21, no exceptions
- Las Vegas Review-Journal Mirage and Tropicana closures, Fontainebleau and Durango openings
- Operator official sites Boyd Gaming, Station Casinos, Caesars, MGM Resorts property and hours