Las Vegas Restaurants

Las Vegas is one of America's hottest restaurant markets. Nearly every big Strip property has at least one and often two or more celebrity-chef restaurants. Away from the Strip, the unprecedented population growth in the city's suburbs has brought with it a separate and continuous wave of new eateries, both familiar chains and increasing numbers of legitimate destination restaurants.

Casino-resort dining basically falls into one of three categories. In the top echelon are the properties that have a half dozen or more bona fide star-status restaurants: Aria, Bellagio, Caesars, The Cosmopolitan, Mandalay Bay, MGM Grand, Venetian/Palazzo, and Wynn/Encore. At the next level are those resorts with one or two stellar restaurants and a smaller range of worthwhile but not quite top-of-the-line options. On the Strip, these include The Cromwell, Mandarin Oriental, Mirage, Monte Carlo, New York–New York, Paris, Planet Hollywood, SLS Las Vegas, and Treasure Island. Off the Strip, you can add the Lucky Dragon, Palms, the Hard Rock, M Resort, The Rio All-Suite Hotel, Green Valley Ranch, the JW Marriott, and Red Rock Resort. Then there's everybody else: casino-resorts with maybe a decent eatery or two but that simply aren't known for great food.

Downtown Las Vegas has seen a big revitalization in the past several years, and that extends to restaurants. Although Downtown still lacks a destination restaurant, notable spots are Carson Kitchen, Therapy, Turmeric, Le Thai, and La Comida in Fremont East; and Pizza Rock and the older Triple George Grill in the Downtown 3rd District. There also are a number of good restaurants in the Downtown Container Park.

Outside the tourism corridor, Las Vegas has a number of marquee restaurants with increasing cachet among foodies from out of town—places such as Todd’s Unique Dining, Marché Bacchus, Nora's Italian Cuisine, and Lotus of Siam. There's great food to be had off the beaten path in Las Vegas, and you'll pay a lot less in these areas, too.

If you haven't been to Vegas in a few years, you'll notice some major changes. Names like Wolfgang Puck, Michael Mina, and Emeril Lagasse still have plenty of pull in this town, but the Vegas chefs commanding the most attention are French imports such as Pierre Gagnaire, Joël Robuchon, and Guy Savoy, along with vaunted U.S. chefs like Giada De Laurentiis, Charlie Palmer, and Mario Batali.

There's also a trend toward high-minded restaurants with exclusive-nightclub vibes. Note the success of see-and-be-seen Pan-Asian hot spot Hakkasan and Tao Asian Bistro & Nightclub, the youthful late-night haunts LAVO and FIX, and bordello-chic establishments such as Strip House—to name just a few. Elsewhere in town, Las Vegas's growing international—and especially Asian—population has created a market for some of the best Chinese, Thai, Vietnamese, and Pan-Asian restaurants in the country.

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  • 1. Craftsteak Las Vegas

    $$$$

    Top Chef star and James Beard Award–winning chef Tom Colicchio presides over this streamlined spot tucked into a corner of the MGM Grand’s Restaurant Row. The menu is as sophisticated as the surroundings, with an emphasis on top-shelf beef, including Japanese Certified A5 Wagyu as a rib eye or New York strip, plus domestic Wagyu, dry-aged and prime beef, and seafood, including lobster, diver scallops, a raw bar, and a tower. Combine the two in a surf and turf, or opt for the three-course menu.

    3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-891–7318

    Known For

    • Broad selection of seafood
    • Beef, including certified A5 Wagyu
    • Tom Colicchio's Top-Chef cuisine
  • 2. Morimoto Las Vegas

    $$$$

    When "Iron Chef" Masaharu Morimoto opened his restaurant in what he proudly called "the most famous city in the world," it marked his first foray into teppanyaki, sure to be popular with conventioneers. There's also sushi, of course, and some of his standbys: braised black cod with a ginger-soy reduction, and tuna pizza with anchovy aioli, olives, and jalapeños. The menu includes oysters with foie gras and uni, as well as ishi yaki chashu bop and ishi yaki buri bop—pork or yellowtail-rich dishes cooked at your table in a hot stone bowl. It's all served in an expansive, streamlined spot on MGM Resort's restaurant row. Morimoto After Dark is the place to go for small bites and cocktails with a DJ, from 10 pm to midnight on Fridays and Saturdays.

    3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-891–3001

    Known For

    • Food by the original Iron Chef
    • Sushi, teppanyaki, and conventional dining
    • Dramatic black-and-white interior

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 3. NoMad Library

    $$$$

    Grandiose, spectacular, and heart-stopping are three words to describe NoMad Library, the restaurant at NoMad Las Vegas. Inspired by the celebrated library of NoMad New York, the restaurant has 40-foot ceilings and is ringed with shelves of books—a backdrop that creates an intimate and sophisticated vibe. The food is worthy of this setting. Most dishes are communal, meaning they're designed to share. A signature dish is an American Wagyu prime rib (rubbed with porcini and black garlic) for two. Towers of seafood from the raw bar are nice starters, and tuna tartare is prepared tableside. Next door, in the NoMad Bar, a more casual menu is available for dinner and late-night bites. On weekends, there's jazz brunch, too.

    3772 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-730–6788

    Known For

    • Breathtaking atmosphere
    • Delicious communal dishes
    • Jazz brunch in the bar on weekends

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Wed.
  • 4. Bavette's Steakhouse & Bar

    $$$$

    With tufted leather banquettes and dark lighting, Bavette's, inside Park MGM, offers a much stronger dose of Gallic flair than the typical Las Vegas steak house. The restaurant offers a full complement of popular steak cuts ranging from bone-in rib eye to fillet, as well as baked crab cakes, oysters on the half shell, and a small vegan menu. The peppered duck and goat cheese terrine is a starter you'll be dreaming about for months. The bar pours strong cocktails in a classic style and curates an international wine list. In the back, a speakeasy-style lounge provides an exclusive experience to eat and drink.

    3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-730–6700

    Known For

    • French flair
    • Stiff cocktails and lively bar scene
    • Classic steak-and-seafood preparations
  • 5. Best Friend

    $$$$

    Famous Los Angeles chef Roy Choi debuted in Las Vegas with this lively concept inside Park MGM serving Korean BBQ as well as a panoply of favorites from Choi's Koreatown experience. While a DJ spins tunes at a turntable in the corner, the meal starts with a sampling of banchan: tiny dishes that include kimchi, broccoli, cucumbers, spinach, and more. From there, try the slippery shrimp, the kimchi fried rice, the kogi short rib tacos, and the pork belly hot pot. Service is family style, meant for sharing. Before you leave, be sure to peruse the shelves at the working convenience store out front.

    3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-730–6770

    Known For

    • Working convenience store out front
    • All-you-can eat option
    • Family-style dishes made for sharing

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. Border Grill Mandalay Bay

    $$$$

    Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger are the popular, green-minded chefs who created this cheery, sophisticated outpost of their now-closed Santa Monica restaurant. Service is snappy, and you'd be hard-pressed to find a tastier margarita in town—particularly the blood orange and chili-citrus versions. Starters include green-corn tamales, three citrusy ceviches, and house-made guacamole, and grilled sustainable fish and hormone-free meats, such as skirt steak and short ribs, make healthful, flavorful fillings for tacos and tortillas. For dinner, opt for dishes such as jamon Serrano pollo relleno, seafood molcajete, or portabello mushroom mulitas with black beans and roasted peppers. The all-you-can-eat weekend brunch, served from 10 to 3, features creative small plates, such as horchata French toast, diablo chicken with a churro waffle, and cajeta churros with cinnamon and raspberry sauce.

    3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89119, USA
    702-632–7403

    Known For

    • Urban Mexican cuisine
    • Fun, flavored margaritas
    • Patio overlooking Mandalay Bay Beach
  • 7. Citizens Kitchen & Bar

    $$$

    This pub serves up some of the best comfort food Vegas has to offer. Dishes include a bacon, egg, and cheese sandwich; chicken and waffles; a prime rib dinner; and loaded nachos with corn chips, black beans, jalapeños, and your choice of meat. Citizens, as it's known, also offers a mélange of side dishes and signature cocktails. Try the Sam's mac and cheese, or maple bacon coffee cocktail. This handy space between the hotel and convention center is lively but casual; sometimes it can get loud during peak hours.

    3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89119, USA
    702-632–9200

    Known For

    • Tasty comfort food
    • Convenient location right off the casino
    • Fun sides such as loaded nachos
  • 8. Della's Kitchen

    $$

    Della's is of the new school of updated, farm-to-table resort coffee shops. Both breakfast and lunch are available all day. For breakfast, consider a ricotta toast with local honey, hot smoked salmon or carnitas Benedict, or the pumpkin pie stuffed French toast. At lunch try the barnyard chopped salad or toasted cheese with tomato soup. The restaurant squeezes fresh juices to order.

    3940 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89119, USA
    702-632–9250

    Known For

    • Best casual breakfast and lunch spot at Delano
    • Regional specialties
    • Quiet atmosphere for a coffee shop

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 9. Emeril's New Orleans Fish House

    $$$$

    Chef Emeril Lagasse's first restaurant in Las Vegas dates back to the opening of the MGM Grand, but it's still a popular choice and has been periodically updated. The menu still puts the spotlight on the chef's Creole-inspired cuisine, such as barbecued shrimp, Louisiana-style jambalaya, and oysters on the half shell with cucumber and seaweed mignonette. Sides like Creole fries, creamy Anson Mills grits, and sautéed local mushrooms provide hearty accompaniments for a prime ribeye steak or whole Mediterranean sea bass for two. The central bar is great for a glass of white with Emeril's barbecued shrimp or a beer with chilled blue crab aguachile at lunch. Be sure to finish with a slice of banana cream pie or pecan praline bread and butter bread pudding.

    3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 87109, USA
    702-891–7374

    Known For

    • Creole and Cajun specialties
    • Lively, family-friendly atmosphere
    • Killer banana cream pie

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Light lunch Fri.–Sun. only
  • 10. Fleur

    $$$$

    Chef Hubert Keller's Fleur has two dining spaces, one fairly intimate and one open to Mandalay Bay's restaurant row, so you can watch the world (or at least Las Vegas) go by. Small plates perfect for starting include foie gras with beignets and a seasonal fruit preserve, or grilled octopus with crispy garbanzo. Steaks include a bone-in New York, ribeye, or 7-ounce filet mignon, and the seasonal menu may offer such choices as halibut with black mussels and shrimp, risotto carbonara, and butternut squash agnolotti. For a side, consider fontina mac and cheese or charred broccolini. Call ahead for the Fleur Burger 5000, a Wagyu beef hamburger with foie gras, truffles, and a bottle of 1996 Chateau Petrus, costing—you guessed it—$5,000.

    3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-632–9400

    Known For

    • Upscale yet fun menu
    • Indulgent Wagyu "Burger 5000" with foie gras, truffles, and Chateau Petrus
    • Great people-watching on the indoor patio
  • 11. Gallagher's Steakhouse

    $$$$

    This credible remake of the famed 1927 Manhattan original offers an old-school carnivore experience inside the cleverly decorated New York–New York casino. The convivial tavern's walls are lined with black-and-white photos of sports stars, actors, and politicos, and the hardwood floors and tray ceilings transport guests directly to Gotham. You can admire the aged steaks in a big cooler visible from the cobblestone promenade near the entrance. The menu's refreshingly simple: pick your main dish (center-cut filet mignon, bison ribeye, and so on) and maybe add one of the six sauces (béarnaise, brandied peppercorn, Stilton blue cheese, among others) to accompany it.

    3790 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-740–6450

    Known For

    • Aged-meat display near entrance
    • Old New York atmosphere
    • Sublime sauces

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 12. Il Fornaio Las Vegas

    $$$$

    This soothingly neutral Italian restaurant will satisfy carb cravings as well as yearnings for dishes that Grandma used to make. Crusty loaves of freshly baked bread, pasta, and dough for the excellent thin-crust, wood-oven pizzas are all made in-house. You can not only taste the love in your lasagna, but also feel the comfort that comes from watching it prepared in the exhibition kitchen, whence seasoned fish, grilled meats, and pork osso buco are also created and plated with fresh ingredients. Tiramisu is a must and best enjoyed from the terrace, where you can watch passersby. Buy a loaf to go in the diminutive bakery, just steps away; other foodie finds are also available.  Il Fornaio is a great place for breakfast and brunch or for pastry takeout from the bakery.

    3790 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-650–6500

    Known For

    • Hearty and reliable breakfast
    • Wood-oven-baked pizzas
    • People-watching from indoor terrace
  • 13. Kumi Japanese Restaurant + Bar

    $$$$

    Kumi presents a Japanese menu with a slight Korean twist in a sleek space with natural woods and hammered steel. Among the cool shared plates are a bluefin tuna pizza and steak tartare with Japanese milk bread; the warm shared plates highlight dishes like Wagyu gyoza and pork belly bao buns. There also are salads, sides, entrées from land (chicken katsu) and sea (pan-seared ora king salmon), rice and noodles dishes, sashimi, nigiri sushi, and sushi rolls. Two tasting menus are available, showcasing dishes like Jidori chicken with kimchi Brussels sprouts and hirame carpaccio with dried shallots, as well as more conventional tataki, tempuras, and a wide variety of sushi. 

    3590 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89119, USA
    702-632–9100

    Known For

    • Japanese food with a Korean twist
    • Sleek, contemporary decor
    • Artisanal cocktails

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 14. La Pizza e La Pasta

    $$$$

    If you’re looking for something a little more sit-down-and-relax than Eataly’s forage-style food hall, consider this mid-priced part of the Italian behemoth. Two towering, gold-tiled pizza ovens turn out Neapolitan-style pies in numerous varieties, while the pasta side offers house-made fresh pasta dishes, such as pappardelle con funghi, lasagna Emiliana, and ravioli di zucca, and others made with dried pasta imported from Gragnano, Italy, such as spaghetti cacio e pepe, and linguine con frutti di mare. Antipasti and salads are also served.

    770 Las Vegas Blvd. S., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-730–7644

    Known For

    • Fresh pasta and dried imported from Italy
    • Pizzas made in state-of-the-art ovens
    • Price point not far above food hall

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Two-course prix-fixe menu available at lunch
  • 15. Libertine Social

    $$$$

    This casual spot from James Beard Award–winning chef Shawn McClain and modern mixologist Tony Abou-Ganim puts the emphasis on "social." The food's fun but seriously good: try the caviar fried egg, in which fish eggs are paired with a chicken one and corn pudding, or boards like charcuterie, house-baked bread or pretzels, bacon-wrapped dates, or short rib flatbread. Among the entrées are a skirt steak and a filet mignon, and other large plates might be a truffled half chicken or seared scallops. There are conversation-inducing seating areas and a cocktail program that include swizzles for four, finished at the table with an original swizzle stick custom cut in the Caribbean. There's also a to-go window for those who want the flavors but don't want to leave the tables or the pool.

    3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89119, USA
    702-632–7558

    Known For

    • Serious but fun menu
    • Emphasis on the "social"
    • Updated versions of historic cocktails

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 16. Michael’s Gourmet Room

    $$$$

    Michael’s has long had the somewhat dubious distinction of being arguably the most expensive restaurant in Las Vegas; suffice it to say South Point owner Michael Gaughan knows how to treat his high rollers. That ladies’ menus don’t have prices (and you’ll have to hunt long, and probably in vain, to find them online) feels like more of a throwback than a misogynistic move. And throwbacks are what this menu is all about, with dishes like coquilles St. Jacques and shrimp, lobster, or lump crab cocktail to start, plus entrées of Chateaubriand, Dover sole, veal saltimbocca, and prime steaks. Service and decor are definitely on the elegant side.

    9777 Las Vegas Blvd. S., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89183, USA
    702-796–7111

    Known For

    • Menu of classic dishes
    • Impeccable service
    • Quietly elegant surroundings

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No children younger than 12
  • 17. Nellie’s Southern Kitchen

    $$$$

    The Jonas Brothers have captured the hearts of a generation of music fans, and Nellie’s has claimed dominion over their stomachs. Named after their great-grandmother and an offshoot of the original in North Carolina, the restaurant serves appropriately Southern riffs-on-classics at lunch and dinner. You can start with a basket of biscuits with cinnamon butter and jam, pimento cheese or collards and artichoke dip, or fried green tomatoes, and proceed to dishes like fried chicken with four-cheese mac and drunken collard greens, a waffle with lobster tail dipped in Nashville hot sauce, meatloaf, or a rib-eye steak. Live music is, as you might expect, a staple.

    3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-640–1056

    Known For

    • Biscuits with cinnamon butter
    • Southern cuisine with a few tweaks
    • Owned by Jonas Brothers' family
  • 18. Primrose

    $$$

    The sunlit Primrose perfectly reflects the all-about-nature theme of Park MGM and is a great place to stop for a quick morning coffee or pressed juice, a bountiful breakfast, or sparkling rosé all day (or at least until 2 pm). Breakfast ranges from the traditional to the likes of deep-dish pancakes with almond whipped cream, with pastas, poultry, burgers, and salads for later on.

    3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-730–6600

    Known For

    • Rosé all day
    • Light, airy atmosphere
    • Casual spot for coffee or a quick bite

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No dinner
  • 19. Rainforest Cafe

    $$$ | South Strip

    The Rainforest Cafe moved out of its longtime berth in the MGM Grand in 2015, but its current location just up the Strip on Harmon Avenue still has plenty of animatronic animals. The menu offers an eclectic mix of classic American food like fried chicken and pot roast, with a mix of seafood, pastas, and burgers with Caribbean and South American influences. The atmosphere is kind and includes weather and jungle sounds, as well as a 25-foot faux boa constrictor, Julius Squeezer. The menu is kid-friendly, too, with selections like Python Pasta and Jurassic Chicken Tidbits created just for them.

    3717 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-891–8580

    Known For

    • Animatronic wildlife
    • Periodically changing (indoor) weather
    • Family-friendly food
  • 20. Rivea

    $$$$

    Culinary lion Alain Ducasse replaced his renowned Mix with the equally stunning Rivea, offering unparalleled views of the Strip and Riviera-style interpretations of his cuisine from the 64th floor of Delano Las Vegas. It's suitably more casual fare, with shared plates like paccheri pasta with braised short rib, and sautéed calamari and prawns with artichokes and crushed red chilies. Traditionalists will find comfort in dishes such as pepper-crusted bison tenderloin and Alaskan wild halibut with gnocchi. The wine list is among the best in all of Vegas. Try one of Ducasse's famous babas for dessert, but with a limoncello twist.

    3940 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89119, USA
    877-632–5400

    Known For

    • Riviera spin on Alain Ducasse's cuisine
    • 64th-floor location
    • Unparalleled views up the Strip

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch

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