VIP Tables in Vegas: A Complete Price Guide for 2026
How much does a VIP table actually cost in Vegas? We break down pricing at every major club, what's included, and whether it's worth the splurge.
VIP table service is the premium Las Vegas nightlife experience — your own dedicated area, bottles of premium liquor, a sparkler arrival parade, and a dedicated server for the entire night. But navigating VIP table pricing can be confusing. Minimums vary by venue, night, table location, and headliner. Here is a comprehensive breakdown of what you will actually pay at every major club in 2026.
How Las Vegas VIP Bottle Service Works
Before diving into prices, understand the structure. When you book a VIP table in Las Vegas, you're committing to a drink spend minimum — not a flat fee. You must spend at least that minimum amount on bottles of alcohol. The bottles are priced at 3–5x retail cost (a $30 bottle of Grey Goose becomes $150–250 on the table menu). On top of your minimum, expect to add:
- Tax: ~8.4% of your total
- Gratuity: 18–20% of your total (usually automatically added)
So a $2,000 minimum actually costs approximately $2,570 all-in after tax and gratuity. Keep this in mind when budgeting per person.
VIP Table Pricing by Venue (2026)
XS Nightclub at Wynn/Encore
Consistently rated the most prestigious nightclub in Las Vegas. XS has some of the highest minimums, justified by world-class production and the most sought-after residency lineup.
- Weeknight minimum: $1,500–3,000
- Weekend minimum: $2,500–6,000+
- Headliner nights (Calvin Harris, etc.): $5,000–10,000+ for prime tables
- Best for: Groups of 6–10 who want the most prestigious address on the Strip
OMNIA at Caesars Palace
Three-room venue with an EDM main stage, the Heart of OMNIA hip-hop room, and the terrace. Pricing varies significantly by room.
- Weeknight minimum: $1,200–2,500
- Weekend minimum: $1,500–5,000+
- Terrace tables: Lower minimums, partially outdoor — great for groups who want a view without paying main room rates
- Best for: Groups wanting mixed music options (EDM + hip-hop in one venue)
Hakkasan at MGM Grand
Five-level venue. The Ling Ling Lounge (upper floor, more casual) has lower minimums than the main room. Smart groups book Ling Ling when main room minimums are too high.
- Main room weeknight: $1,500–2,500
- Main room weekend: $2,000–5,000+
- Ling Ling Lounge: $500–1,500 depending on night
- Best for: Flexibility — multiple room options at different price points
Zouk at Resorts World
The newest mega-club with arguably the best stage production in Vegas. Strong programming, two connected venues (Zouk and Ayu Dayclub for day events).
- Weeknight minimum: $1,500–2,500
- Weekend minimum: $2,000–6,000+
- Best for: Groups who want the newest experience with the best production tech
Marquee at Cosmopolitan
Marquee has multiple rooms (Main Room, Boom Box, Library) and a connected dayclub, giving it more table options at different price points than most venues.
- Weeknight minimum: $800–1,500
- Weekend minimum: $1,500–4,000+
- Best for: First-time bottle service groups or those wanting options at different minimums
Drai's at Vanderpump Hotel
The premier hip-hop club in Vegas, known for live performer appearances. Rooftop tables command a premium for their views.
- Weeknight minimum: $1,200–2,500
- Weekend minimum: $1,500–6,000+
- Rooftop tables: Premium pricing for outdoor experience with Strip views
- Best for: Hip-hop and R&B fans, live performer shows
TAO Las Vegas at Venetian
TAO combines Asian-inspired decor with strong open-format programming. One of the original mega-clubs on the Strip, with a dedicated following.
- Weeknight minimum: $800–2,000
- Weekend minimum: $1,500–4,000+
- Best for: Open-format/mixed music lovers, groups wanting an established classic
Weekday vs. Weekend Pricing
One of the biggest ways to save on VIP tables is choosing your night strategically:
- Tuesday/Wednesday: Minimums 40–60% lower than Saturday. Small but lively crowds. Some venues skip weekdays entirely during off-season.
- Thursday: A sweet spot — minimums 25–35% lower than Friday/Saturday, but the club energy is closer to a real weekend feel.
- Friday: Full weekend pricing at most venues. Slightly less crowded than Saturday.
- Saturday: Highest minimums of the week. Most headliners play Saturday. Peak experience AND peak cost.
What's Actually Included in Bottle Service
When you book a VIP table, here's what comes with it:
- Table in a dedicated VIP section — you have a designated space your group owns for the night
- Bottles of liquor totaling your minimum spend (you choose what to order)
- Mixers — sodas, juices, Red Bull, ice, garnishes (usually complimentary)
- Dedicated table server who manages your bottles and handles orders
- Expedited entry — bypass the general admission line
- The sparkler parade when your first bottle arrives — this is the iconic moment
Birthday, bachelor, and bachelorette groups often receive complimentary upgrades like champagne, a banner, or a custom cake when arranged through a host.
Is Bottle Service Worth It?
For groups of 6–8+, the math often works out in favor of bottle service. A $2,000 minimum split among 8 people is $250 per person. At bar prices in a Las Vegas nightclub ($20–25 per drink), 10 drinks would cost you $200–250 anyway — and that's without a dedicated seat, without skipping the bar line, and without the VIP experience.
For groups smaller than 4–5, the per-person cost gets high fast. A $1,500 minimum split 3 ways is $500 per person before tax and tip. In that case, free NoCoverVegas guest list entry and buying your own drinks at the bar is a far better value.
How to Get the Best VIP Table Deal
- Book through a host (not the door). Hosts can negotiate minimum reductions, table upgrades, and birthday extras. NoCoverVegas hosts work with every major club.
- Go on a weeknight. Thursday VIP tables at the same venue can cost 30–50% less than Saturday.
- Book early. Last-minute tables get worst locations at highest prices. Book 2–4 weeks out for prime weekend tables.
- Consider the second tier. At multi-room venues (Hakkasan, OMNIA, Marquee), secondary rooms have lower minimums with often comparable energy.
- Compare headliner nights vs. resident DJ nights. A resident DJ (not a headliner) show might have 30–40% lower minimums with similar club energy.
2026 Minimum Spend Changes: What's New
Las Vegas VIP table minimums have shifted since 2024. Several clubs raised their weekend minimums in 2025–2026 in response to increased demand and higher programming costs for residency artists. XS at Wynn now starts at $2,500 for standard weekend side tables — up from $2,000 in 2024. OMNIA at Caesars Palace introduced tiered weekend pricing based on specific DJ residency nights, with Martin Garrix and Tiesto nights commanding $500–1,000 premium over their standard weekend minimums. Zouk at Resorts World has held pricing more steady as the newer entrant trying to attract groups away from established clubs — its minimums represent the best value among the top-tier clubs in 2026 for groups who prioritize production quality over venue prestige.
The one direction minimums have moved consistently lower: secondary rooms and off-peak nights. Hakkasan's Ling Ling Lounge is more accessible than it was two years ago, with minimums as low as $400–500 on slower Tuesdays. Marquee's Boom Box Room (hip-hop) and Library Bar offer similar value reductions. For groups with a $400–600 per-person budget, these secondary room options at flagship venues provide the bottle service experience at a fraction of the main room commitment.
How Minimums Actually Work in Practice
The minimum spend is not a flat fee — it is a floor for your alcohol purchases. If your group hits the minimum before the night ends (common for groups who arrive early and drink throughout), the minimum is satisfied. Any additional bottles beyond the minimum are charged at the standard menu price. If your group does not reach the minimum (common for groups who underdrink relative to their commitment), you pay the minimum regardless of actual consumption — you do not get a refund for the gap.
The strategic approach for hitting a minimum efficiently: order your most expensive selections first. The minimum is typically 2–3 bottles at a standard club. Starting with a $700 bottle of Grey Goose and a $600 bottle of Patron satisfies a $1,300 minimum with two bottles. If you order three $400 bottles instead, you need more to hit a $1,300 minimum but the alcohol volume is similar. Knowing your menu pricing before you sit down prevents the awkward end-of-night discovery that you are $200 short of the minimum with one hour left.
Shots ordered at the table are charged at inflated per-shot menu pricing against your minimum. A single shot that would cost $12 at the bar appears on the table menu at $20–25. If shots are planned, order them at the bar where the per-unit cost is lower. This is the most common way groups overpay at their minimum: ordering round after round of shots at the table when bar pricing would have been significantly cheaper for the same consumption.
Spirits Menu: What to Order and What to Avoid
Every Las Vegas nightclub runs a tiered spirits menu, and knowing which selections represent value versus markup helps your group make better ordering decisions. At the standard mid-tier level, Grey Goose vodka ($500–700 per bottle) and Patron Silver tequila ($600–800) are the workhorses — quality is consistent, volume is reliable, and they mix well for groups with varied drink preferences. Moét & Chandon champagne ($500–700) is the entry-level celebration bottle that works for toasts without the premium of Dom Pérignon.
The markups to avoid: retail-priced vodkas (Tito's, Ketel One) that appear on club menus at premium pricing disproportionate to their quality difference from Grey Goose. Mid-shelf whiskey selections at top-shelf club pricing. Display bottles like Ace of Spades or Armand de Brignac ($1,500–3,000+) which are purchased for the visual presentation and sparkler service more than the champagne inside — if your group genuinely appreciates premium champagne, Dom Pérignon at $1,200–2,000 is the quality investment; if you want the visual moment without the quality investment, Moét does the same sparkler service at one-third the price.
The most versatile single-bottle selection for a group with mixed preferences: vodka. A $600–700 bottle of Grey Goose with unlimited mixers (sodas, juices) handles drinkers who want vodka-sodas, cranberry vodkas, and any other combination. If half the group prefers tequila and the other half prefers vodka, order one of each at the lowest qualifying minimum — the combination satisfies both preferences and typically hits or approaches the minimum on its own.
Daytime VIP: Pool Party Table Pricing 2026
Las Vegas pool party bottle service operates on the same minimum structure as nightclubs but with different table types — poolside daybeds, cabanas, and bungalows replace the club's indoor seating. Pricing reflects the outdoor premium and the summer season demand. Encore Beach Club daybeds start at $1,500 minimum on standard Saturdays; front-row bungalows during headliner days reach $10,000–20,000+ minimum. Marquee Dayclub is more accessible — daybeds starting around $800–1,200 on weekdays and $1,500–3,000 on peak Saturdays.
The new entrant for 2026 is OMNIA Dayclub at Caesars Palace, which opened May 15 as the most anticipated new dayclub in years. Opening-season pricing is competitive — OMNIA Dayclub is establishing its demand premium and current minimums are below what established EBC charges for comparable placement. Groups who book OMNIA Dayclub in 2026 are getting below-market pricing for a venue with a DJ roster (Tiesto, Martin Garrix, Chris Lake, Fisher) that rivals EBC on most weekends. The Skybar rooftop level within OMNIA Dayclub offers Strip panoramic views that EBC, with its ground-level pool setting, cannot provide. Text (725) 999-9293 for current OMNIA Dayclub pricing and to access free guest list as an alternative to paying for bottle service.
The Cocktail Menu Strategy: Maximizing Value Within Your Minimum
The bottle you order determines how well your minimum is spent. A standard bottle service arrangement for a group of 8 requires 2–4 bottles to hit most mid-tier minimums. Here is the optimal approach for different group compositions:
For groups who prefer vodka: Grey Goose or Belvedere ($500–700) as your primary bottle, Moët champagne ($500–700) for the celebration moment. Two bottles covers most entry-level minimums ($800–1,200) and satisfies both vodka drinkers and those who want a champagne toast. For groups with tequila preference: Patrón Silver ($600–800) or Casamigos Blanco ($600–800) as the primary selection. For mixed groups: one premium vodka and one premium tequila covers the widest range of drink preferences. Champagne is optional on top — add it if your group wants the presentation moment, skip it if the group genuinely does not drink champagne.
What to avoid: ordering multiple bottles of different spirits to "have options" when your group is small. Two people pouring from four open bottles at the table creates waste and confusion. Order one or two bottles for the group, finish them before ordering more, and keep the table organized. A well-managed table of 6 splitting two vodka bottles and a champagne throughout a 3-hour session creates a better experience than the same group with six half-open bottles of different spirits going warm in ice buckets.
Negotiating Minimums: What Actually Works
Las Vegas club minimums are not fixed prices — they are starting points subject to negotiation based on relationship and timing. The variables that create negotiating room: weeknight versus weekend (minimums are consistently more flexible Tuesday through Thursday), table location (back-of-house tables at lower minimums are always available even when the venue claims all tables are at a certain floor), first-time group versus repeat client (hosts sometimes offer first-timer promotions that the venue's direct booking line does not), and early-season versus peak season (clubs opening for the year in March are more willing to offer promotional minimums to build early season momentum than the same club in July).
The channel matters more than the ask. A group calling XS's direct VIP line has no leverage — the reservation agent has no authority to discount minimums and no incentive to help the group find a better price. A group booking through NoCoverVegas has a host with an active venue relationship who can make the call to the VIP coordinator directly, communicate group size and occasion, and ask about available promotional pricing for the specific night. The host's relationship with the venue contact — built over months or years of referrals — creates access to information and flexibility that the public booking channel does not offer. For any group where the minimum matters to budget, this is the correct channel. Text (725) 999-9293 with your venue, date, group size, and budget to see what is actually available rather than what the website lists.
What Happens If You Don't Reach Your Minimum
One of the most common questions from first-time bottle service groups: what happens at the end of the night if the group has not spent up to the minimum? The answer is straightforward and non-negotiable — you pay the minimum regardless of actual consumption. If your group committed to a $2,000 minimum and spent only $1,400 on alcohol, the bill will reflect $2,000 (plus tax and service charge) when your server closes the tab. The minimum is a commitment to spend, not an estimate of what you will spend. This is disclosed in the table agreement when you book.
The strategies to avoid this situation: order conservatively to start. Groups that pre-order three bottles for the table "because we think we'll drink that much" frequently discover that the reality is two bottles over a four-hour session. Order two bottles initially and add a third only if the pace of consumption warrants it. Track your running spend throughout the night — your server can tell you the current tally at any point. In the last 30–45 minutes before you plan to leave, if you are tracking short of the minimum, order an additional bottle or upgrade to a bottle that closes the gap rather than discovering the deficit at checkout. The minimum creates an obligation, not an incentive to overspend — order what your group will genuinely consume and track toward the floor, not above it.
Booking Timeline: When to Reserve for Every Type of Night
The booking window matters as much as the booking channel for getting the table you want at the pricing you want. Here is the practical timeline by event type.
For standard weekend residency nights (any Friday or Saturday without a named headliner premium), 1–2 weeks in advance secures adequate placement at most major clubs. Within a week, availability is reduced and pricing moves toward premium tiers. Day-of booking typically leaves only last-minute tables at top minimums — walk-up VIP bookings are available but represent the most expensive option at the worst placement.
For headliner residency nights (Calvin Harris at XS, Martin Garrix at OMNIA, Fisher at Marquee), 2–4 weeks is the appropriate window. The best tables sell out quickly once headliner dates are announced, and the second-tier inventory fills within two weeks of the show. Inside two weeks, groups are choosing from remaining table positions rather than selecting from the full floor map.
For peak holiday weekends — New Year's Eve, EDC Weekend (mid-May), Memorial Day, Labor Day, July 4th — the booking window extends to 4–8 weeks for prime placement. New Year's Eve tables at XS or OMNIA can sell out 60+ days in advance. Groups planning a New Year's Vegas trip should begin the table conversation in October. For EDC Week, start in March for Memorial Day. Starting your booking conversation early does not lock in pricing prematurely — it lets you understand what is available and negotiate from a position of multiple options rather than scrambling for the last available slots.
VIP Table Location Strategy
Not all tables are created equal, and where your table is positioned on the floor significantly affects your night. At XS, the tables nearest the DJ booth on the main floor command the highest minimums and produce the highest energy — you are in the first ring of the crowd surrounding the booth. Outdoor pool deck tables at XS are the most unique placement in Vegas bottle service: private tables with a view of the Wynn pool and the outdoor DJ setup, available at somewhat lower minimums than the indoor premium positions. For groups who want the most exclusive XS experience, the Bungalows on the pool deck (the most expensive option) are private outdoor cabana sections with individual service distinct from the main club environment.
At Hakkasan, the main floor tables directly in front of the DJ stage command the highest minimums. Tables on the mezzanine level offer an elevated view of the floor with more personal space at lower minimums. The Ling Ling Lounge (upper floor) provides bottle service with a view down into the main room — more intimate, lower energy, but significantly more accessible pricing. For first-time groups trying bottle service for the first time, the Ling Ling Lounge at a $600–800 minimum is a reasonable entry point that provides the full bottle service experience without the main room premium commitment.
At OMNIA, table placement relative to the kinetic chandelier matters. The chandelier is the visual centerpiece of the room — tables with a clear sightline to the chandelier, positioned at mid-floor distance (close enough for impact, far enough to see the full scale), are the best OMNIA main room tables. The outdoor terrace tables at OMNIA offer Strip views and fresh air but separate the group from the main room experience during the chandelier moments that are OMNIA's defining feature. Contact the NoCoverVegas host at (725) 999-9293 to ask specifically about table positioning when booking — a host who knows the venue can tell you which tables have the best sightlines and recommend placement based on your group's priorities.
Your Complete VIP Table Checklist
Before booking your Las Vegas VIP table, confirm each of the following with your host or booking contact:
- The exact minimum spend (in USD, confirmed in writing or text)
- Whether the minimum is per person or per table (almost always per table)
- The gratuity percentage added automatically and whether it is included in the minimum or added on top
- Nevada sales tax rate (8.375%) and whether it is included or added on top of the minimum
- Your table's location on the floor map (ask for the section number or reference description)
- Whether the arrival window has an early cutoff — some tables require arrival before midnight to be held
- Whether the table can be held if one person in the group arrives first to anchor the reservation while others are in transit
- Whether birthday, anniversary, or special occasion service (cakes, banners, champagne presentation) requires pre-coordination and any associated costs
- The policy on additional bottles ordered after the minimum is satisfied — standard menu pricing applies, confirm the specific bottle prices in advance
Every confirmed VIP table booking through NoCoverVegas includes a host confirmation message with the minimum, table location, and arrival window. Text (725) 999-9293 with your venue, date, group size, and occasion. The host provides current pricing, available placement, and any promotional minimums before you commit. Compare two or three venue options on the same night if your date is flexible — the right combination of venue, table placement, and minimum varies significantly by night and by DJ — and book when you have the information you need rather than before you do.
Keep Reading
Related Articles
Vegas Bottle Service Explained: Prices, Tips, and What to Expect
Everything you need to know about Vegas bottle service — how much it costs, what's included, and whether it's worth it for your group.
TipsIs Bottle Service in Vegas Worth It? A Complete Breakdown
We break down the real costs of Vegas bottle service — when it's worth it, when it's a waste, and how to get the best deal at every major club.
TipsHow to Get on the Guest List at Any Vegas Club
A step-by-step guide to how Vegas guest lists actually work — the rules, the timing, and how to guarantee free entry every time.
Ready to Party?
Get on the Free Guest List
Skip the cover charge at any club on the Strip. Submit your info below and we'll get you on the guest list — completely free. Or text us anytime at (725) 999-9293.