Bottle service Las Vegas prices revolve around one number the host says and three numbers the bill adds. The quoted table minimum starts near $1,000 to $1,500 at an entry-level Strip club on a normal night and runs $5,000 to $20,000-plus for a dancefloor table when a headliner DJ plays. That minimum is spend before tax, venue fee, and gratuity, so a $2,000 minimum settles near $2,800 to $3,200 all-in. Split it across 8 to 12 people and the per-head math finally works.
The trick is that almost every quote you hear is the floor, not the ceiling. Learn how the rest stacks on and you stop getting surprised at 2am.
Decoding the bill: minimum, fees, and the 1.4x rule
When a host says "the minimum is two grand," that two grand is what you must spend on bottles and mixers, nothing more. The final charge is built on top of it. As of mid-2026, expect three stacked add-ons: Clark County sales tax around 8.375 percent, a venue or service fee often near 12 to 13 percent, and an auto-gratuity of 18 to 22 percent, usually 20.
Those percentages compound, which is why a flat estimate beats doing the math in your head at the table. The quick version: multiply the minimum by roughly 1.4 and you have your real out-the-door number. A $2,000 minimum lands near $2,800 to $3,200. A $5,000 dancefloor table clears $7,000. Knowing that figure before you nod yes is the single most useful thing in this entire guide.
Why the table costs what it costs
Two variables set the price, and the night matters less than people think. The first is where the table sits. Clubs tier their floor like a stadium: a booth tucked against a side wall carries the lowest minimum, and every step toward the DJ booth or the dancefloor raises it. The same room can list a $1,000 side table and a $12,500 dancefloor table on one Saturday.
The second is bottle pricing, which is marked up by design. Inside the club, spirits typically open around $675 to $725 a bottle, and Champagne and the big-format showpieces, the magnum that arrives with a sparkler parade, climb from there. You are not buying liquor so much as renting the real estate, the line skip, and the spectacle, with the bottles as the cover charge.
What the big rooms actually quote
The Strip mega-clubs live inside resort casinos and set the going rate. These figures are starting points, not quotes, and they move with the calendar.
XS Nightclub sits at Encore at Wynn, runs EDM, and is consistently ranked the top-grossing club in the country; tables open around $1,000 to $2,000 and dancefloor real estate runs well into five figures. Omnia Nightclub is the Tao Group flagship at Caesars Palace, famous for its kinetic chandelier, with tables from about $1,000 in its hip-hop side room, Heart of Omnia, up to around $12,500 on the floor. Hakkasan Nightclub at MGM Grand is one of the largest clubs anywhere at roughly 80,000 square feet, with minimums starting near $1,000.
A few more to keep on the list. LIV Nightclub at Fontainebleau is the celebrity-heavy Miami import, so tables tend to start higher, around $1,500-plus. Drai's Nightclub leans hip-hop and R&B and, as of late 2025, moved back into its original underground space at the Cromwell, now rebranded the Vanderpump Hotel; ignore any old listing that calls it a rooftop, because that closed. Tao Nightclub at The Venetian and Jewel Nightclub at Aria run hip-hop and Top 40 and usually carry the most accessible minimums of the bunch.
| Club | Resort | Typical table minimum (normal night) |
|---|---|---|
| XS | Encore at Wynn | ~$1,000-$2,000 |
| Omnia | Caesars Palace | ~$1,000+ (side room) |
| Hakkasan | MGM Grand | ~$1,000+ |
| LIV | Fontainebleau | ~$1,500+ |
| Tao | The Venetian | ~$1,000+ |
| Jewel | Aria | ~$1,000+ |
EDC week in mid-May, F1 weekend in November (Nov 19 to 21, 2026), New Year's Eve, and big fight nights are when these numbers detach from reality. Book around those dates if budget is the priority.
The three levers that drop the price
You have exactly three controls over what you pay, and pulling all three is how people end up spending $125 a head instead of $400.
Lever one is the night. Trade Saturday for a Thursday or an industry night and the minimum softens immediately; Jewel runs a Monday industry night, and Tao and Jewel generally undercut XS, LIV, and Drai's. Lever two is the room. Ask for a secondary room or a side booth instead of the dancefloor and you can land the $1,000 floor price rather than a $5,000 one. Lever three is headcount: a $1,000 minimum split eight ways is $125 a person before tip, which beats a $30 to $75 cover plus $9 to $16 club drinks all night. With a group of two it never pencils out; get on a guest list and pay the door instead.
One door reality worth saying plainly: men frequently need to roll with women, or pay more, to get a good table or even a good guest-list spot, while women often enter free on a normal night. It is not subtle, and it is how the door economy works here.
Tipping without paying twice
Read the bill before you reach for your wallet, because the gratuity is almost always already on it. Most clubs auto-add 18 to 22 percent, with 20 the norm, plus the venue fee. Adding another full 20 percent on top is just double-paying for the same service.
What actually buys you something is cash handed to your host on arrival. If you want fast pours, your table held, and someone watching your group all night, $100 or more up front earns real goodwill on a big spend. On a promoter or comp table where no minimum applies, the rough standard is $20 to $30 per person per bottle. Look after the servers running sparklers to your table too.
Booking it, or skipping it for a crawl
Reserve through the venue's VIP host, a table-booking concierge, or a club promoter, ideally a few days out for a weekend. Have your group size, budget, and date ready, and get the all-in including tax and fees confirmed in writing so the final bill holds no surprises. Arrive before midnight; tables fill and the dancefloor crush makes it hard to even reach your host past 1am.
If a full table is more than you want to commit, the cheaper route into several rooms is a party-bus club crawl with skip-the-line entry. You hit three or four venues in a night, drinks are often poured on the bus, and you dodge the cover at each door. For a bachelor or bachelorette group chasing the VIP feel without one $3,000 table, it is the smarter move.
At the door: ID, dress, and getting home
The mega-clubs enforce dress codes and the door is subjective. For men that means dark jeans or trousers, a collared shirt or a clean fitted top, and dress shoes or minimal clean sneakers; skip athletic wear, shorts, sandals, and hats. Women have more latitude but should read nightlife-appropriate. A table booking moves you past the general line, but it does not exempt you from the dress code.
Carry a physical government photo ID or passport. You must be 21, and plenty of doors will not accept a phone photo of an ID. Open containers are legal on the Strip but glass is banned, and Nevada has no last call, so the mega-clubs run to around 4am and afterhours spots push past dawn. Every club here sits inside a Strip resort, so plan your exit before you are three bottles deep: rideshare pickups happen at designated zones inside the parking structures, not curbside on Las Vegas Boulevard, and a short hop between adjacent resorts is often faster on foot than in a car during peak congestion. The Deuce bus runs the Strip 24/7 on roughly a $6 day pass if you want the cheap way back at 3am.
Last gut check. Bottle service in Vegas is a group sport and a status purchase as much as a drinks purchase. With 8 to 12 people and a plan, it is a genuinely good night at a sane per-head number. With two people chasing the fantasy, you will spend $1,400 just to sit down. Pick the version that fits your crew, book early, and confirm the all-in before you commit.
Frequently asked questions
How much does bottle service cost in Las Vegas?
Plan on a table minimum of roughly $1,000 to $1,500 for an entry-level spot on a normal night, and $5,000 to $20,000-plus for a dancefloor table on a headliner DJ night. That minimum is spend before extras, so a quoted $2,000 minimum usually lands near $2,800 to $3,200 all-in once you add tax and gratuity.
How much do you tip for bottle service in Vegas?
Most clubs auto-add an 18 to 22 percent service charge, with 20 percent the common figure, plus a venue fee. Read the bill before you tip again. If you want extra attention from your host on a big night, an additional cash tip of $100 or more is standard for high spenders, but it is optional on top of the auto-gratuity.
What is the minimum spend for a table in Vegas?
Entry-level table minimums start around $1,000 to $1,500 at most Strip mega-clubs on a regular Friday or Saturday. Better real estate near the dancefloor runs $5,000 and up, and headliner nights or holiday weekends push minimums far higher. The minimum is what you must spend on bottles and mixers, not the final bill.
What is the cheapest bottle service in Las Vegas?
The cheapest tables are in side rooms and on weeknights. As of mid-2026, Omnia's Heart of Omnia hip-hop room has listed a table around $1,000 for up to 10 people, which works out cheaply per head with a full group. Tao and Jewel also tend to run lower minimums than XS, LIV, or Drai's.
Is bottle service worth it in Las Vegas?
It is worth it if you have a group of 6 to 12 splitting the cost, because you skip the line, get a guaranteed spot, and dodge per-person covers and drink prices that add up fast. For a couple or a pair, the math rarely works, and a guest list plus paid cover is far cheaper.
How many bottles do you need for a table in Vegas?
You buy enough bottles to hit your table minimum, not a set count. A $1,000 minimum is often one or two premium bottles once you factor club pricing, where spirits start around $675 to $725 and Champagne climbs from there. Your host will help you reach the minimum without overshooting.