Las Vegas Is Going All-Inclusive — and the Biggest Casino Brands on the Strip Are Leading the Charge
MGM Resorts, Caesars Entertainment, and downtown hotels are rolling out all-inclusive packages across Las Vegas, starting at $104 per night.
Las Vegas is borrowing a page from the Caribbean playbook. Multiple casino operators — including MGM Resorts and Caesars Entertainment — are now offering all-inclusive packages across some of the Strip most recognizable properties, bundling rooms, meals, drinks, and entertainment into a single nightly rate.
The push marks a significant shift for a city that has traditionally monetized every experience separately. At Caesars, the new package covers stays at Harrah Las Vegas, The LINQ Hotel, and Flamingo Las Vegas, starting at $200 per night. It includes accommodations, two meals per day, complimentary drinks, High Roller Observation Wheel tickets, and free parking — resort fees included.
MGM Resorts is taking a similar approach at Luxor and Excalibur, bundling two-night stays with meals at Strip restaurants, show tickets, and pool access. Downtown, the Plaza Hotel and Casino is offering its own version starting at $104 per person per night, covering all meals, unlimited drinks, parking, and waived resort fees for summer travel.
The trend reflects a broader industry pivot toward value-driven travel. With visitors increasingly comparing Las Vegas trip costs against all-inclusive beach vacations in Cancun or Punta Cana, Strip operators are trying to make pricing more predictable and competitive.
Whether Las Vegas can sustain a true all-inclusive model — where margins depend on volume rather than per-transaction spending — remains an open question. But for travelers used to the sticker shock of a Vegas weekend, bundled pricing could change how they think about the destination entirely.
