50 Best Restaurants in Las Vegas 2026: Ultimate Dining Guide

Published on : 16 Mar 2026

Best restaurants in Las Vegas 2026 showing Michelin fine dining, celebrity chef steakhouses, lavish buffets, and vibrant Strip restaurant scene

Best Restaurants in Las Vegas — From Michelin Stars to $9.99 Locals’ Diners

By Travel Tourister | Updated March 2026 Las Vegas has quietly become one of America’s great dining cities—from JoĂ«l Robuchon’s three-Michelin-starred temple at MGM Grand to $1.99 shrimp cocktails at the Golden Gate, from Gordon Ramsay’s multiple Strip spectacles to James Beard Award-winning off-Strip Chinese dumplings, from Japanese omakase counters inside Aria to 24-hour diner classics at the Peppermill. No other city in America concentrates this much culinary firepower—celebrity chefs, international concepts, and local institutions—in such a compact geography. I’ve eaten my way through Las Vegas across dozens of visits spanning every tier and neighborhood—Michelin marathon dinners on the Strip, 2 AM biscuits and gravy at a 24-hour diner, $8 bánh mì on Spring Mountain Road’s Chinatown, omakase at a counter hidden inside a casino hotel, and legendary steakhouse rituals at Delmonico and CUT. Each visit revealed more layers: Las Vegas’s dining geography extends far beyond the Strip (Chinatown on Spring Mountain Road is one of America’s great Asian food corridors), the city’s casino economics distort pricing dramatically (some Strip restaurants are extraordinary value; many are tourist traps), and the sheer restaurant churn means keeping up requires recent intelligence. This comprehensive 2026 guide breaks down Las Vegas’s 50 best restaurants using verified data from Michelin Guide Las Vegas, neighborhood expertise from years of eating, and honest assessments of what delivers memorable meals versus overpriced Strip mediocrity. We’ll organize restaurants by category (Michelin/fine dining, steakhouses, celebrity chef, off-Strip gems, Asian, brunch, buffets), provide realistic cost and reservation expectations, and offer strategic advice for eating brilliantly across every budget Las Vegas accommodates. Whether planning a once-in-a-lifetime Michelin dinner, a high-roller steakhouse celebration, a budget week relying on locals’ favorites, or a comprehensive culinary tour, understanding Las Vegas’s restaurant landscape—from world-famous Strip institutions to the Vietnamese pho shops frequented only by locals—transforms good meals into unforgettable ones.

Las Vegas Restaurants by Category

Category Top Picks Best Location Cost Range (Per Person)
Michelin / Fine Dining Joël Robuchon, é by José Andrés, Twist MGM Grand, Aria, Mandarin Oriental $200–$500+
Celebrity Chef Steakhouses CUT, Delmonico, SW Steakhouse, STK Bellagio, Venetian, Wynn, Cosmopolitan $100–$300
Celebrity Chef (Non-Steak) Spago, Nobu, Momofuku, Gordon Ramsay Caesars, MGM, Park MGM, Paris $60–$180
Off-Strip Asian (Spring Mountain) Dim sum, Vietnamese, Korean BBQ, ramen Chinatown / Spring Mountain Rd $10–$50
Buffets Bacchanal, Wicked Spoon, The Buffet at Wynn Caesars, Cosmopolitan, Wynn $30–$75
24-Hour Diners & Budget Peppermill, Egg & I, Golden Gate shrimp Strip, Downtown, Locals neighborhoods $5–$25

Michelin-Starred & Fine Dining Restaurants

1. Joël Robuchon (MGM Grand) — MUST BOOK

Why Essential: The late JoĂ«l Robuchon’s flagship remains Las Vegas’s most prestigious dining address—three Michelin stars, a 16-course tasting menu of French cuisine at its most technically flawless, and a Belle Époque dining room of extraordinary beauty. This is the meal you save for the most special of occasions.
What to Expect:
  • Format: 6-course ($225) or 16-course tasting menu ($425), approximately 3–4 hours
  • Signature dishes: Pomme purĂ©e (the world’s most famous mashed potato), langoustine ravioli with foie gras cream, Le Caviar with smoked salmon and crème fraĂ®che
  • Setting: 40-seat jewel box dining room adjacent to the MGM Grand garden, deep burgundy and gold Art Nouveau interior
  • Wine list: 1,000+ selections including rare Burgundy and Bordeaux verticals

Reservation Reality:
  • Book 4–6 weeks ahead via OpenTable or hotel concierge
  • Tuesday–Sunday evenings; single seating at 6 PM
  • Dress code strictly enforced: jacket required for gentlemen

Cost: $225–$425 per person (food); wine pairing adds $175–$350

2. é by José Andrés (Cosmopolitan) — Three Michelin Stars

Why Extraordinary: Hidden inside the Jaleo restaurant at the Cosmopolitan, Ă© seats just 8 diners per evening in one of the most intimate fine dining experiences in America. JosĂ© AndrĂ©s’s avant-garde Spanish tasting menu—molecular techniques, liquid nitrogen tableside, edible wrappers—is as theatrical as anything the Strip offers, but with genuine culinary genius behind every course.
Highlights:
  • Cotton candy foie gras (iconic signature course)
  • Spherified olive oil “olives” in a martini glass
  • 18–20 courses over 3 hours: no menu printed in advance
  • Wine pairing by sommelier team curated specifically around each course

Cost: $395 per person (food only); wine pairing $175 additional
Reservations: OpenTable, released 30 days ahead; sells out within hours of release—set a calendar alert

3. Twist by Pierre Gagnaire (Mandarin Oriental) — Two Michelin Stars

Why Special: Pierre Gagnaire’s Las Vegas outpost on the 23rd floor of the Mandarin Oriental brings the French master’s signature “chaos theory” cooking—multi-element dishes that defy categorization—to a room with panoramic Strip views that makes it one of the city’s most spectacular settings.
Must-Order:
  • Foie gras preparation (changes nightly, always multi-textured)
  • Seasonal fish with three simultaneous sauce preparations
  • Cheese course: French and domestic selections, exceptional accompaniments

Cost: $185–$275 tasting menu; Strip-view window tables book fastest
Tip: Bar seating occasionally available same-evening; call directly after 4 PM

4. Picasso (Bellagio) — Two Michelin Stars

  • French-Spanish cuisine under original Picasso paintings (artwork worth $30 million+)
  • Bellagio fountains visible from dining room—most spectacular restaurant view in Las Vegas
  • 4-course ($135) or 5-course ($165) prix-fixe with Julian Serrano’s seasonal menu
  • Roasted squab, sautĂ©ed medallions of fallow deer, cĂ´te du bĹ“uf for two
  • Reservations: OpenTable, 3–4 weeks ahead for fountain-view tables

5. Rivea (Delano Las Vegas) — One Michelin Star

  • Alain Ducasse’s Riviera-inspired restaurant on the 64th floor of Delano—highest restaurant in Las Vegas
  • Provençal vegetables, Mediterranean seafood, Nicoise tasting menu elements
  • Sunset views of the entire Strip from floor-to-ceiling windows
  • $95–$145 per person; reservations via OpenTable 2–3 weeks ahead
  • Sunday brunch exceptional value: $75 per person with Champagne

6. Bazaar Meat by José Andrés (Sahara Las Vegas) — One Michelin Star

  • JosĂ© AndrĂ©s’s carnivore palace: whole-animal cooking, wood-fire grill, avant-garde starters
  • Custom dry-aged porterhouse, whole roasted pig (advance order), bone marrow with caviar
  • Cotton candy foie gras from Ă© served as snack amuse—brilliant value preview of the mothership
  • Reservations: OpenTable, 2–3 weeks; bar seating walk-in friendly
  • Cost: $120–$220 per person

Celebrity Chef Steakhouses

7. CUT by Wolfgang Puck (Palazzo) — MUST VISIT

Why Best Steakhouse: Wolfgang Puck’s modern steakhouse defined how Las Vegas approached beef when it opened in 2008 and has never been bettered—USDA prime and American Wagyu aged in-house, a sleek Richard Meier-designed room, and a menu that takes steak seriously without stuffiness.
What to Order:
  • American Wagyu ribeye (14 oz): Extraordinary marbling, served with bone marrow flan ($175–$195)
  • USDA prime bone-in NY strip (20 oz): 35-day dry-aged, the steakhouse standard ($85–$95)
  • Austrian Wagyu beef “Wiener Schnitzel”: Veal pounded tableside—best non-beef dish ($55)
  • Truffle mac and cheese: Side dish that justifies its $22 existence
  • CUT cheesecake: Graham cracker crust, perfect texture, essential finish

Reservations: OpenTable; book 2–3 weeks ahead for weekends
Cost: $120–$250 per person

8. Delmonico Steakhouse (Venetian) — Emeril Lagasse

Why Great: Emeril Lagasse’s flagship Las Vegas restaurant in the Venetian’s stunning old-world room delivers steakhouse classics with New Orleans-inflected personality—andouille-crusted filet, Worcestershire-glazed prime rib, and banana cream pie that genuinely competes with the beef.
Best Orders:
  • USDA prime bone-in ribeye (22 oz): Properly dry-aged, outstanding crust ($89–$99)
  • Andouille-crusted filet with debris sauce: Emeril’s signature New Orleans twist ($79)
  • Creamed spinach and hash brown potatoes: Classic sides done properly
  • Banana cream pie: Legendary dessert, order at start of meal

Cost: $100–$200 per person; Sunday brunch $65 per person (exceptional value)

9. SW Steakhouse (Wynn Las Vegas)

  • Lakeside dining with water show synchronized to music—most romantic steakhouse setting in Las Vegas
  • USDA prime beef, Australian Wagyu, chef’s seasonal preparations
  • Wagyu beef carpaccio, prime beef tartare, dry-aged New York strip outstanding
  • Request lakeside table when booking—essential for the full effect
  • Reservations: Wynn.com or OpenTable, 2–3 weeks ahead; Cost: $110–$220 per person

10. STK Steakhouse (Cosmopolitan)

  • Younger, louder, more fun than traditional steakhouses—DJ, scene atmosphere, excellent beef
  • Little gem lobster salad, bone-in filet, truffle butter with everything
  • Sunday brunch with bottomless rosĂ© and DJ: best brunch party on the Strip ($75)
  • Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead; Cost: $90–$180 per person

11. Old Homestead Steakhouse (Caesars Palace)

  • New York original (since 1868) transplanted to Caesars Forum Shops
  • 40-oz Tomahawk steak for two, USDA prime porterhouse, lobster bisque
  • Traditional steakhouse atmosphere: dark wood, leather, white tablecloths
  • Celebrity sightings common during fight weekends and major events
  • Cost: $120–$250 per person; Reservations: OpenTable

12. Mastro’s Ocean Club (Crystals at CityCenter)

  • Seafood-forward luxury steakhouse inside Crystals’ stunning architecture
  • Bone-in ribeye, Chilean sea bass, seafood towers, live jazz nightly
  • Tableside service for butter cake dessert: theatrical, delicious, worth the upcharge
  • Cost: $110–$220 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 2 weeks ahead for weekends

Celebrity Chef (Non-Steakhouse)

13. Spago by Wolfgang Puck (Caesars Palace)


Why Classic: Wolfgang Puck’s Las Vegas debut (1992) launched the celebrity chef restaurant era and remains essential—smoked salmon pizza invented here, seasonal California cuisine, and the Forum Shops location that proved fine dining and casinos could coexist.
Must-Order:
  • Smoked salmon pizza with crème fraĂ®che and caviar: Puck’s signature, invented at Spago ($32)
  • Wiener Schnitzel: Austrian veal heritage, pounded thin, perfectly fried ($48)
  • Seasonal tasting menu: Market California ingredients, changes monthly ($95–$125)
  • Strudel dessert: Apple and raisin, old-world Austria meets Beverly Hills

Cost: $80–$150 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead

14. Nobu (Hard Rock / Nobu Hotel)

Why Essential: Nobu Matsuhisa’s Las Vegas flagship—inside its own dedicated Nobu Hotel—delivers the master’s Japanese-Peruvian fusion that spawned a thousand imitators. New Style sashimi with jalapeño and yuzu, black cod miso, and yellowtail with ponzu remain as brilliant as when invented.
Best Orders:
  • Black cod with miso: The iconic dish that made Nobu famous globally ($45)
  • New Style sashimi: Fish with hot sesame oil poured tableside ($28–$38)
  • Yellowtail sashimi with jalapeño: Cool heat, citrus, and fresh fish ($24)
  • Rock shrimp tempura with ponzu or creamy spicy: Crispy, addictive ($28)

Cost: $80–$160 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead

15. Momofuku (Cosmopolitan) — David Chang

  • David Chang’s Las Vegas outpost in a stunning two-floor space at the Cosmopolitan
  • Bo ssam (whole pork shoulder for the table, advance order), spicy rice cakes, bing bread
  • Milk Bar bakery attached: crack pie, cereal milk soft serve, compost cookies for dessert
  • Reservations: OpenTable; Cost: $60–$110 per person

16. Gordon Ramsay Hell’s Kitchen (Caesars Palace)

  • Theatrical dining inside a replica of the TV show set—Red Team vs Blue Team kitchen visible
  • Beef Wellington (Gordon’s signature), pan-seared scallops, sticky toffee pudding
  • Best intro to Ramsay’s cooking at mid-tier Strip pricing; popular with families
  • Reservations: opentable.com, 1–2 weeks ahead; Cost: $65–$120 per person

17. Gordon Ramsay Fish & Chips (The LINQ)

  • Quick-service British fish and chips done properly—beer-battered cod, mushy peas, malt vinegar
  • Best quick, affordable Ramsay experience on the Strip—no reservations needed
  • Scotch eggs, Cornish pasties, proper British curry sauce
  • Cost: $15–$30 per person; walk-in only

18. Estiatorio Milos (Cosmopolitan)

  • Costas Spiliadis’s Greek seafood temple—fish flown daily from Mediterranean and Atlantic markets
  • Order fish by weight at the display counter: whole grilled branzino, sea bream, Dover sole
  • Greek mezze, spreads with pita, grilled octopus with capers and olive oil outstanding
  • Pre-theater 3-course lunch: $29.95—best fine dining value on the Strip
  • Cost: $90–$180 per person dinner; Reservations: OpenTable

19. Bouchon by Thomas Keller (Venetian)

  • Thomas Keller’s French bistro adjacent to the Venetian pool deck—one of the most civilized meals on the Strip
  • Croque madame, steak frites, moules marinières, roasted chicken—perfect bistro execution
  • Weekend brunch 8 AM–2 PM: best eggs Benedict and French pastries on the Strip
  • Reservations: OpenTable; Cost: $55–$100 per person

20. Lotus of Siam (East Flamingo) — Off-Strip LEGEND

Why Pilgrimage-Worthy: Sirilak Chutima’s Northern Thai restaurant has been called the best Thai restaurant in America for 20+ years—Gourmet Magazine agreed in 2000, and nothing has changed. The Strip is a 10-minute Uber away; the khao soi, sour sausage, and larb are worth 10 times that journey. Must-Order:
  • Khao soi: Northern Thai curry noodle soup with crispy noodles on top—definitive version ($16)
  • Sai oua (Northern Thai sausage): Herb-packed, grilled, unforgettable ($14)
  • Larb phet (duck larb): Spicy minced meat salad, toasted rice, herbs ($16)
  • Nam tok (waterfall beef): Grilled beef with lime, mint, toasted rice powder ($16)
Wine list: Extraordinary German Riesling selection—best in Las Vegas for the price
Cost: $35–$65 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead for dinner

Off-Strip Dining: Spring Mountain Road & Chinatown

21. Raku (Spring Mountain Road) — HIDDEN GEM


Why Locals Love It: After their restaurants close, Las Vegas Strip chefs—from Thomas Keller to Gordon Ramsay staff—end their nights at Raku. Mitsuo Endo’s Japanese izakaya on Spring Mountain Road serves yakitori, tofu handmade daily, charcoal-grilled meats, and seasonal sashimi at prices that make the Strip look predatory.
What to Order:
  • Housemade tofu with dashi broth (this alone is worth the Uber ride)
  • Foie gras skewer with balsamic and sea salt
  • Bacon-wrapped mochi, pork belly, duck neck yakitori
  • Daily seasonal specials—ask what’s best that night

Details: Dinner only, closed Sunday, no reservations (arrive at 6 PM or expect wait) Cost: $45–$80 per person; cash and credit accepted

22. Chengdu Taste (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Authentic Sichuan cooking from the capital of Sichuan cuisine—this is not Americanized Chinese food
  • Toothpick lamb, sliced fish in hot chili oil, dandan noodles, cold appetizers section
  • Mala (numbing-spicy) heat levels are real—warn your dining companions
  • Weekend waits 45–60 minutes; arrive early or weekdays
  • Cost: $20–$40 per person

23. Monta Ramen (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Hakata-style tonkotsu ramen with 18-hour pork bone broth—consistently voted Las Vegas’s best ramen
  • Original tonkotsu, spicy miso, and black garlic ramen all excellent
  • Add-ons: seasoned soft-boiled egg, extra chashu pork, bamboo shoots
  • No reservations, small space—arrive before 7 PM or expect a wait
  • Cost: $15–$25 per person

24. Bocho (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Korean-Japanese fusion izakaya with some of the best fried chicken (karaage) in Las Vegas
  • Kimchi pancakes, spicy tuna on crispy rice, wagyu beef yakitori
  • Late-night hours (until 2 AM) make this a chefs’ post-service destination
  • Cost: $30–$55 per person; no reservations for small parties

25. Yui Edomae Sushi (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Omakase counter with Chef Ryuichi Nakano’s Edo-style sushi—technically flawless, ingredient-obsessed
  • Fish aged and prepared to 19th-century Edo techniques; rice temperature precisely controlled
  • $150–$200 per person omakase—fraction of Strip prices for equivalent or better quality
  • Reservations essential: call directly, limited seats, popular with Strip chefs on days off
  • Cost: $150–$200 per person

26. Gangnam Asian BBQ (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Korean BBQ done right: tabletop grills, quality marinated cuts, banchan parade of small sides
  • Galbi (short rib), samgyeopsal (pork belly), bulgogi beef—grill your own at the table
  • AYCE (all-you-can-eat) option $35–$45 per person: extraordinary value for group dining
  • Cost: $35–$70 per person; no reservations for small groups

27. Baguette Café (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Vietnamese bakery and café—bánh mì sandwiches ($6–$9) that destroy any Strip sandwich at 10x the price
  • Pork and pâtĂ© bánh mì, lemongrass chicken, pho and vermicelli noodle bowls
  • Popular with Las Vegas casino workers, hotel staff, and anyone who knows better than to eat on the Strip for lunch
  • Cost: $8–$20 per person

28. Sparrow + Wolf (Summerlin / Arts District)

  • Brian Howard’s avant-garde neighborhood restaurant is Las Vegas’s most exciting off-Strip fine dining
  • Duck confit pierogi, miso-glazed pork shoulder, seasonal vegetable preparations
  • Cocktail program exceptional; genuinely creative wine list
  • Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead; Cost: $60–$100 per person

Best Buffets in Las Vegas

29. Bacchanal Buffet (Caesars Palace) — Best Overall


Why #1: Las Vegas’s most celebrated buffet—500+ dishes across 9 live cooking stations, Dungeness crab legs, prime rib carved tableside, sushi and sashimi prepared fresh, and a dessert section of extraordinary variety. The benchmark against which all Strip buffets are measured.
Best Stations:
  • Seafood: Snow crab legs, shrimp cocktail, oysters on weekends ($5 upcharge)
  • Carving station: Prime rib, roasted lamb, seasonal whole proteins
  • Asian station: Dim sum, wok-fried noodles, fresh sushi rolls
  • Dessert: 70+ items including made-to-order crepes, soft-serve ice cream

Pricing: Brunch $45–$55, Dinner $65–$75, Weekend Brunch $55–$65
Tip: Reserve online to skip the standby line—waits of 45–90 minutes common without reservations on weekends

30. Wicked Spoon (Cosmopolitan) — Most Creative


Why Different: The Cosmopolitan’s buffet rejects casino buffet convention—individual portions in stylish vessels rather than industrial warming trays, artisan ingredients, and a room that doesn’t feel like a feeding hall. Duck confit, short rib, and lobster mac and cheese arrive in individual cast iron pots.
Standouts:
  • Duck confit with cherry reduction (individual cast iron pan)
  • Lobster mac and cheese with Gruyère crust
  • Smoked brisket carved to order
  • Pastry section with croissants, macarons, seasonal tarts

Cost: Brunch $35–$45, Dinner $50–$65; weekend brunch most popular

31. The Buffet at Wynn

  • Wynn’s signature approach: quality over quantity, live cooking stations, seasonal menu rotation
  • Peking duck carved tableside, whole roasted suckling pig on weekends, exceptional prime rib
  • Most elegant buffet room in Las Vegas: natural light, floral arrangements, no casino floor adjacency
  • Cost: Brunch $30–$40, Dinner $45–$60; Reservations recommended via Wynn.com

32. Studio B Buffet (M Resort) — Locals’ Favorite

  • Off-Strip at the M Resort, 15 minutes south of the Strip—locals consider this Las Vegas’s best buffet value
  • Live cooking theater with open kitchen, wood-fire grill, dessert studio
  • No tourist markup: Friday dinner $28.99, Saturday brunch $26.99
  • Crab leg nights (Friday/Saturday) draw queues—arrive 30 minutes before opening
  • Cost: $19–$35 per person depending on day and meal

Brunch, Breakfast & Casual Dining

33. Sadelle’s (Bellagio)


Why Great: The New York beloved bagel institution arrived at the Bellagio and brought its legendary smoked salmon towers, oversized bagels with every cream cheese imaginable, and brunch boards piled with Nova lox, capers, tomato, and onion that justify every photo taken of them.
Order This:
  • Smoked fish tower: Three-tier presentation of salmon, whitefish, and trout ($75–$95 for two)
  • Everything bagel with scallion cream cheese: Made fresh hourly
  • Brioche French toast with seasonal compote
  • Latkes with sour cream and apple sauce: Crispy, proper, worth it

Cost: $35–$75 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead for weekends

34. Eggslut (Cosmopolitan)

  • LA cult breakfast institution inside the Cosmopolitan—egg-forward sandwiches on brioche buns, clarified butter, quality ingredients
  • The Slut: coddled egg on potato purĂ©e in a glass jar with baguette—the dish that started the brand
  • Fairfax sandwich: soft-scrambled eggs with caramelized onion and cheddar on brioche
  • Walk-in only; 20–40 minute waits on weekends; opens 8 AM
  • Cost: $12–$22 per person

35. Peppermill Restaurant & Fireside Lounge (Strip)


Why Iconic: Open since 1972, the Peppermill is Las Vegas’s most beloved 24-hour diner—pink neon, fireside lounge with glowing drinks, enormous portions, and a menu that hasn’t needed to change because it was already perfect. Order the Peppermill Burger or the massive omelettes at 4 AM after losing money and feel whole again.
Must-Order:
  • Peppermill Burger: Double patty, cheese, thousand island, enough for two
  • Massive breakfast omelettes with hash browns and sourdough toast
  • Scorpion Bowl cocktail: Theatrical flaming drink in the Fireside Lounge
  • Strawberry cream pie: Made fresh daily, genuinely excellent

Details: 24 hours, no reservations, Strip-adjacent location (2985 Las Vegas Blvd S) Cost: $15–$35 per person

36. The Henry (Cosmopolitan)

  • All-day American cafĂ© inside the Cosmopolitan—best straightforward breakfast on the Strip
  • Avocado toast, grain bowls, excellent eggs Benedict, freshly squeezed juices
  • Outdoor terrace seating facing the Strip pool deck: great people-watching
  • Open 7 AM–11 PM; Cost: $20–$40 per person

37. Hash House A Go Go (multiple Strip locations)

  • Absurdly large “Twisted Farm Food” portions that Las Vegas visitors photograph and struggle to finish
  • Sage-fried chicken and waffles stack (famous), farm scrambles, giant pancakes
  • Best at the original LINQ location; waits 30–60 minutes on weekend mornings
  • Cost: $18–$35 per person; no reservations

Budget Dining, Late-Night & Local Essentials

38. In-N-Out Burger (multiple Las Vegas locations)

Why Essential: The Strip location (at the Linq Promenade) stays open until 1:30 AM (3 AM weekends) and serves as the most reliable $10 meal in Las Vegas—Double-Double, Animal Style, with a neapolitan milkshake. A Las Vegas ritual, particularly after a long night.
Order Correctly:
  • Double-Double Animal Style: Two patties, extra sauce, grilled onion, pickles—the secret menu standard
  • Animal Style fries: Cheese, grilled onions, secret sauce on the fries
  • Neapolitan milkshake: Chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry layered

Cost: $8–$15 per person; open late most nights

39. Golden Gate Hotel Shrimp Cocktail (Downtown)

  • Las Vegas legend since 1955: giant shrimp cocktail served in a proper glass with cocktail sauce ($1.99–$3.99)
  • Located at the Golden Gate Hotel & Casino, oldest hotel in Las Vegas (1906)
  • Not a meal—an experience, a tradition, a Las Vegas ritual
  • Downtown Fremont Street location: combine with Fremont Street Experience
  • Cost: $2–$4 per cocktail

40. Atomic Liquors (Downtown Arts District)

  • Las Vegas’s oldest freestanding bar (1952)—now with excellent bar food and a kitchen
  • Smash burgers, duck fat fries, Korean fried chicken wings
  • Beer selection exceptional for Las Vegas; craft cocktail program solid
  • Arts District location: combine with 18b (18th & Bonneville) neighborhood exploration
  • Cost: $15–$30 per person

41. Kabuto Edomae Sushi (Spring Mountain Road)

  • Omakase counter with strictly seasonal Edo-style sushi—one of Las Vegas’s most serious Japanese restaurants
  • Chef Ryusuke Nakagawa’s 20-course progression: $180–$250 per person
  • Reservations essential: book 3–4 weeks ahead via Tock
  • No substitutions, no special requests—trust the chef completely
  • Cost: $180–$250 per person (food only)

42. Pizza Rock (Downtown)

  • Tony Gemignani’s 13-time World Pizza Champion operates this Downtown Las Vegas destination
  • Neapolitan, New York, Sicilian, and California-style pizzas all made with championship technique
  • Coal-fired ovens, proper mozzarella di bufala, house-cured meats
  • Best pizza in Las Vegas, period; Downtown Fremont area location
  • Cost: $20–$40 per person; Reservations: OpenTable

43. Herbs & Rye (West of Strip)

  • Nectaly Mendoza’s cocktail bar doubles as one of Las Vegas’s best late-night restaurants
  • Truffle fries, skirt steak with chimichurri, excellent bar snacks
  • Cocktail program is the main event: pre-Prohibition classics, seasonal originals
  • Open until 3–4 AM; no reservations; locals’ bar, no tourists
  • Cost: $20–$45 per person

Views, Romance & Special Occasion Dining

44. Top of the World (STRAT Hotel)

Why Spectacular: Dining 844 feet above Las Vegas in the STRAT tower’s revolving restaurant—full 360-degree view of the Strip, Valley, Spring Mountains, and Mojave Desert. The rotating platform completes one full revolution per 80 minutes while you eat. What to Order:
  • Prime filet mignon or rack of lamb—the setting elevates the food significantly
  • Tableside presentations: Caesar salad, bananas Foster
  • Request west-facing table at sunset for Strip lit-up views
Cost: $75–$140 per person; Reservations: topoftheworldlv.com, book sunset seatings 3–4 weeks ahead

45. Carbone (Aria Resort)

  • The legendary New York Italian institution—tableside Caesar, veal parmesan, pasta e fagioli
  • Tuxedoed captains, red leather booths, Frank Sinatra soundtrack: old-school New York Italian theatre
  • Spicy rigatoni vodka and chicken scarpariello consistently outstanding
  • Reservations: Aria dining reservations, 2–3 weeks ahead; Cost: $90–$180 per person

46. Bardot Brasserie (Aria Resort) — One Michelin Star

  • Michael Mina’s stunning French brasserie inside Aria—Art Deco room, impeccable service
  • Plateau de fruits de mer (seafood tower), steak frites, French onion soup au gratin
  • Weekend brunch: $55 prix-fixe with bottomless Champagne or juice—best brunch deal on the Strip
  • Cost: $65–$130 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 2 weeks ahead

47. Beauty & Essex (The Cosmopolitan)

  • Lavish New York-imported restaurant hidden behind a pawn shop façade—theatrical entrance, gorgeous interior
  • Small plates designed for sharing: tuna tartare cones, truffle flatbread, lobster and shrimp sliders
  • Complimentary champagne upon arrival—one of the Strip’s better hospitality gestures
  • Cost: $65–$120 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead

48. MajordĹŤmo Meat & Fish (Palazzo)

  • David Chang’s full-service Las Vegas restaurant concept—whole animal cooking, Korean-American influences
  • Whole roasted duck for two, bone-in short rib, raw bar with Pacific oysters
  • More relaxed than Momofuku but same quality ingredients and kitchen sensibility
  • Cost: $80–$160 per person; Reservations: OpenTable

49. Ferraro’s Italian Restaurant & Wine Bar (East Paradise Road)

  • Family-owned since 1985—Las Vegas’s most beloved authentic Italian, entirely off-Strip
  • Hand-rolled pasta, osso buco, veal piccata, tiramisĂą made daily since opening
  • Wine cellar of 1,400+ labels; James Beard recognized multiple times
  • Las Vegas locals’ anniversary restaurant: book 2–3 weeks ahead for weekends
  • Cost: $55–$100 per person

50. Javier’s (Aria Resort)

  • Sophisticated Mexican from the legendary Newport Beach original—hacienda-style room, guacamole tableside
  • Chile relleno with lobster, whole fried red snapper, carne asada with handmade tortillas
  • Margarita program exceptional: 40+ tequilas, fresh-squeezed lime, house-made mixes
  • Cost: $60–$110 per person; Reservations: OpenTable, 1–2 weeks ahead

Las Vegas Dining: Practical Tips

Topic What to Know
Reservations Michelin restaurants: 4–6 weeks ahead. Celebrity chef Strip restaurants: 1–3 weeks. Off-Strip gems like Raku and Lotus of Siam: 1–2 weeks or arrive early. Always check OpenTable day-of for cancellations.
Tipping 20–22% standard in Las Vegas fine dining. Strip restaurants often suggest 20–25% on POS screens. Buffets: $2–$5 for drink service. Casual off-Strip: 18–20%.
Best Value Strategy Michelin lunch (Estiatorio Milos $29 lunch, Picasso not available lunch) far cheaper than dinner. Off-Strip Asian (Spring Mountain) offers Strip quality at half the price. Buffet brunch beats buffet dinner on value.
Getting Off-Strip Uber/Lyft to Spring Mountain Road costs $10–$15 from the Strip. Many visitors never leave the casino corridor and miss the best value meals. Spring Mountain Road alone is worth the trip.
Fight/Event Weekends During major boxing or UFC events, Strip restaurant prices surge and reservations disappear 6–8 weeks out. Always check the T-Mobile Arena/Raiders Stadium event calendar before booking any Las Vegas trip.
Late-Night Dining Las Vegas excels at late-night: Peppermill (24 hrs), In-N-Out (until 3 AM weekends), Raku and Bocho (kitchen open until 2 AM), most casino restaurants until midnight. Off-Strip Asian spots often close earlier—check before going.

Frequently Asked Questions: Las Vegas Restaurants

What is the most famous restaurant in Las Vegas?

JoĂ«l Robuchon at MGM Grand (three Michelin stars) is Las Vegas’s most celebrated fine dining address and the clear answer for prestige. For broader fame, Gordon Ramsay’s multiple restaurants draw the biggest tourist crowds, and the Bacchanal Buffet at Caesars Palace is arguably the city’s most recognized dining institution. Off-Strip, Lotus of Siam has maintained a 20+ year reputation as one of America’s best Thai restaurants that transcends Las Vegas entirely.

How far in advance do you need to book Las Vegas restaurants?

Three-Michelin-star restaurants (Joël Robuchon, é by José Andrés): 4–6 weeks, sometimes more. Two-star (Picasso, Twist): 3–4 weeks for premium tables. One-star and celebrity chef restaurants: 1–3 weeks for weekend evenings. Major fight and event weekends (UFC, boxing): add 3–4 additional weeks to all estimates—restaurants fill completely. Off-Strip gems like Raku: walk-in if you arrive by 6 PM, or call 1–2 weeks ahead. Lotus of Siam: 1–2 weeks for dinner, walk-in for lunch.

Is it cheaper to eat off the Strip in Las Vegas?

Dramatically cheaper—this is the most important Las Vegas dining insight most visitors miss. A meal that costs $150 per person on the Strip costs $40–$60 for equivalent or better quality on Spring Mountain Road. Raku’s chef’s omakase ($60–$80) compares to Strip Japanese at $180–$250. Spring Mountain Road Korean BBQ AYCE ($35–$45) beats any Strip equivalent. The off-Strip premium over locals’ pricing is roughly 2–4x on comparable food quality. Visitors who spend their entire Las Vegas food budget on the Strip are subsidizing casino overhead, not eating better.

What is Las Vegas’s signature dish?

Las Vegas doesn’t have a single native dish the way San Francisco has cioppino or New Orleans has gumbo—the city imports and perfects. But three items define the Las Vegas food experience:
(1) Prime beef—more high-grade steakhouses per capita than anywhere in America;
(2) The buffet—even as the form has evolved, the Las Vegas all-you-can-eat institution remains uniquely, irreplaceably itself;
(3) The Golden Gate’s $1.99 shrimp cocktail—a 70-year tradition that survived when literally everything else changed around it. Order all three on any Las Vegas visit.

Where do Las Vegas locals actually eat?

Locals eat on Spring Mountain Road (Chinatown corridor)—Raku, Monta Ramen, Chengdu Taste, Yui Edomae Sushi, and dozens of Vietnamese, Korean, and Chinese restaurants that casino workers discovered years before food media did. Downtown Las Vegas (Fremont East, Arts District) hosts a genuine neighborhood food scene: Atomic Liquors, Pizza Rock, Herbs & Rye, and a growing number of independent restaurants. Locals avoid the Strip for daily eating—the premium is too steep when Spring Mountain Road exists 10 minutes away by Uber.

Are Las Vegas buffets worth it?

The best ones are—but the category has bifurcated sharply. Bacchanal Buffet (Caesars, $55–$75 dinner) and Wicked Spoon (Cosmopolitan, $50–$65 dinner) are genuine culinary experiences with quality ingredients and live cooking stations worth the price. The Buffet at Wynn is excellent. However, many mid-tier casino buffets have cut quality dramatically since 2020 and offer poor value. The Studio B Buffet at the M Resort (off-Strip, $19–$35) is what all buffets should be—high quality, honest pricing, local crowd. Rule of thumb: if a buffet costs over $65 without a specific featured item (Dungeness crab, prime rib carving), look for a better option.

What’s the best cheap eat in Las Vegas?

The Golden Gate’s $1.99 shrimp cocktail (Downtown) is the historical answer. For actual meals: In-N-Out Double-Double Animal Style ($7.50), Baguette CafĂ© bánh mì ($7–$9 on Spring Mountain), Monta Ramen tonkotsu ($16–$18), and the In-N-Out at the Linq which uniquely serves Las Vegas Strip tourists the same quality for the same price as suburban locals. For sit-down dining, Estiatorio Milos’s $29.95 prix-fixe lunch at the Cosmopolitan is the best fine-dining value in all of Las Vegas—three courses of Mediterranean fish cuisine for less than a Strip burger combo.

Final Thoughts: Eating Brilliantly in Las Vegas

After dozens of Las Vegas meals across every tier—from Joël Robuchon tasting menus to Spring Mountain Road izakaya to 4 AM Peppermill runs—three principles emerge for eating well in a city that makes it simultaneously very easy and very expensive:
1. Las Vegas rewards diners who leave the Strip corridor, even briefly. The fundamental Las Vegas dining mistake is never leaving the casino-hotel ecosystem. Within that ecosystem, economics are brutally distorted—casino overhead, celebrity name fees, tourist pricing, and resort markups inflate costs 2–4x beyond what comparable food costs elsewhere. Spring Mountain Road’s Chinatown corridor, just a $12 Uber from the center of the Strip, contains some of the best Japanese, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Korean food in America at entirely honest prices. Raku alone—where Strip chefs go after their restaurants close—justifies the concept of Las Vegas as a serious food city. Any Las Vegas dining plan that allocates zero time off-Strip is leaving the best of the city unvisited.
2. The Michelin scene has genuine depth, but requires strategic investment. Las Vegas receiving Michelin Guide coverage (since 2021) formalized what food-focused visitors already knew—the city contains world-class dining at the absolute top tier. JoĂ«l Robuchon’s three-star experience, Ă© by JosĂ© AndrĂ©s’s 8-seat theatrical omakase, and Picasso’s fountain-view French-Spanish cuisine represent dining experiences that compete with any city globally. The investment ($200–$425 per person for food alone) is real and requires advance planning, but these experiences deliver proportionate value. The strategic approach: one exceptional Michelin meal anchored by two or three evenings of outstanding off-Strip eating at a quarter of the price creates a more complete Las Vegas culinary picture than three consecutive Strip splurges.
3. Las Vegas’s 24-hour, always-open food culture is genuinely unique and worth embracing. No other major American city serves quality food at 3 AM with this density and variety. The Peppermill’s late-night diner energy, In-N-Out’s Strip-adjacent 3 AM service, Raku’s kitchen running until 2 AM for the post-service chef crowd, and casino room service available at any hour create a food accessibility unlike anywhere else. Las Vegas visitors who eat on a normal city schedule—dinner at 7 PM, nothing after midnight—miss the city’s most distinctive dining characteristic. Adjusting your eating schedule to Las Vegas’s actual rhythms (later everything, no rigid mealtimes, opportunistic eating across 20-hour days) produces a more authentic and satisfying experience. Las Vegas dining reflects the city’s fundamental nature: concentrated excess, imported talent, democratic access alongside extreme luxury, and a genuine lack of pretension about what it is and what it’s for. The city that houses both JoĂ«l Robuchon’s three-Michelin-star palace and a $1.99 shrimp cocktail institution is being completely honest about its culinary range—and that range is, taken as a whole, extraordinary. Whether your Las Vegas food ambition is a once-in-a-decade tasting menu at Ă© by JosĂ© AndrĂ©s, a prime dry-aged ribeye at CUT, a late-night Bacchanal crab leg session, or a Spring Mountain Road crawl ending at Raku—Las Vegas delivers. The city never closes, never judges your order, and never runs out of options. In dining, as in gambling, the house always has something for you. Unlike gambling, here you can almost always win. For official restaurant listings and current Michelin star awards, consult Michelin Guide Las Vegas, Eater Vegas, and Las Vegas Review-Journal Food for current reviews and the latest openings. —

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About Travel Tourister Travel Tourister’s Las Vegas specialists provide honest restaurant recommendations based on extensive dining across the Strip, off-Strip neighborhoods, and every budget tier from shrimp cocktail to three-Michelin stars. We understand Las Vegas’s dining landscape requires strategic planning—balancing celebrity chef spectacle with off-Strip authenticity, Michelin ambition with buffet tradition, and Strip convenience with locals’ neighborhood value. Need help planning your Las Vegas dining itinerary? Contact our specialists who can recommend optimal restaurant combinations, reservation strategies for fight and event weekends, and tactical approaches for eating brilliantly across every budget Las Vegas accommodates. We help travelers create memorable Las Vegas dining adventures without overpaying for casino floor proximity.

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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