Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) · Sunday Night
Bauhaus on Sundays
Sunday at Bauhaus delivers farewell-night energy — lighter crowds, Techno, House, Tech House deep cuts, and the perfect final chapter to your weekend at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street).
What to Expect on Sundays at Bauhaus
Sunday Night at Bauhaus
Sunday at Bauhaus carries farewell energy — guests who partied Friday, rallied Saturday, and chose to extend the weekend into a third night at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street). The Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM window may shift for seasonal Nightswim programming. The 400-capacity room at thirty to forty percent occupancy fosters organic social connections between groups. The Normally $20-30 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list cover drops or disappears, and NoCoverVegas guarantees free entry.
Bauhaus is located at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101 in Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) and programs Techno, House, Tech House across its 400-capacity room. Bauhaus's strongest programming runs Friday and Saturday — the only nights open. — Sunday offers a different flavor of the Bauhaus experience. Peak Sunday energy at Bauhaus arrives during 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM. Sunday admission without a guest list runs Normally $20-30 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list — the NoCoverVegas Bauhaus guest list eliminates this cost.
About Bauhaus
About Bauhaus
Bauhaus Las Vegas opened in October 2025 at 115 North 7th Street in downtown's arts district, bringing the underground music philosophy of Houston's Bauhaus — one of the most respected electronic clubs in the American South — to a city better known for mega-club spectacle than for dedicated genre programming. The Las Vegas location occupies the building that previously housed Place on 7th, a multi-purpose events space, and was deliberately built outside the Strip casino resort corridor: no hotel integration, no casino floor routing traffic toward the entrance, no resort fee applied invisibly to drink prices. Bauhaus exists as a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of art galleries, independent bars, and working creative studios — a geography that shapes who shows up and why. The single defining characteristic that separates Bauhaus from every other nightclub in Las Vegas is genre exclusivity. Every Strip nightclub that programs electronic music also programs hip-hop, Top 40, or open format on rotating nights to capture the broadest possible demographic — Hakkasan and OMNIA alternate between EDM headliners and R&B nights, XS and Encore Beach Club balance electronic with hip-hop bookings, and Zouk's stage hosts a genre range wide enough to include rap concerts. Bauhaus does not. Techno, house, and tech house are the beginning and end of the programming brief, and no booking deviates from that range regardless of the potential attendance upside from a crossover act. The practical result is a crowd that self-selects around the music rather than the social experience — guests who arrive at Bauhaus on a Friday have come specifically for the music, producing a floor dynamic categorically different from the spectacle-and-bottle-service culture of production mega-clubs. The Danley sound system is Bauhaus's primary physical investment. Danley installs their speaker systems in professional concert venues and audiophile listening rooms, and the Bauhaus installation treats the 400-person room with the same acoustic engineering standards. When a resident DJ pushes a deep house set at 1 AM, the Danley system renders every drum transient, sub-bass frequency, and synthesizer harmonic with clarity that conventionally installed nightclub speaker arrays cannot achieve at comparable volume levels. The 60-foot LED wall serves as the venue's only major visual element — it responds to the DJ's output rather than running branded content loops — and its scale relative to the 400-person room creates an immersive visual context without the multi-screen production rigs that Vegas mega-clubs install to justify large visual budgets. After-hours programming defines Bauhaus's scheduling position within Las Vegas nightlife. Opening at 10 PM on Friday and Saturday and closing at 5 AM — one hour past the closing time of every major Strip nightclub and most downtown venues — Bauhaus operates in a time slot that exists separately from mainstream club culture. The peak energy window runs from 3 AM to 4:30 AM, the hours after Hakkasan, XS, and the Fremont East venues have pushed their last guests toward the exits. Las Vegas service industry workers — bartenders, dealers, floor managers, and performers finishing shifts at 2 AM — arrive to mix with underground electronic music travelers who specifically plan around the Bauhaus format and EDC Las Vegas attendees who use the 7th Street venue as an after-hours extension of festival weekend programming. The venue sits 4 miles from the Las Vegas Convention Center, making it a practical next stop for festival crowds when Convention Center grounds close. The all-black dress code operates as cultural shorthand rather than door enforcement. Unlike Strip club dress codes where doorstaff turn guests away for specific violations, the Bauhaus preference for all-black clothing functions as a self-identification signal: guests who arrive in black have already demonstrated awareness of the venue's culture, which produces a more cohesive room energy than a general-admission format that welcomes any demographic equally. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks is available on operating nights without charge, making Bauhaus the only major Las Vegas nightclub where most guests arrive by car rather than rideshare — a practical advantage that the downtown arts district provides by default, in contrast to Strip venues where valet queues and garage fees add friction to every arrival. With a capacity of approximately 400 guests, Bauhaus is an intimate, boutique-style space where the energy stays concentrated and every corner of the room feeds off the DJ booth.
The Sunday-night atmosphere at Bauhaus is best understood as Downtown Las Vegas's only venue built around a single-genre mandate: techno, house, and tech house exclusively — no hip-hop nights, no Top 40 Fridays, no open-format rotation. The Houston Bauhaus DNA runs through every programming decision, from the Danley sound system calibrated for concert-grade audio at nightclub volumes to the 60-foot LED wall functioning as the sole visual element. Opens at 10 PM and runs until 5 AM on Friday and Saturday, with peak energy arriving between 3 and 4:30 AM when every Strip mega-club has cleared out — the natural destination for Las Vegas service industry workers finishing shifts, underground electronic music travelers, and EDC attendees extending festival weekend into a proper club. The 400-person room fills completely on peak nights, producing floor density that 5,000-person clubs cannot replicate regardless of headliner. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks costs nothing. The downtown arts district location puts Bauhaus entirely outside the casino resort corridor — a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of galleries, studios, and independent bars.. Bauhaus is defined by its standout features: Danley sound system, 60-foot LED wall, Dedicated techno/house venue, Open until 5 AM, and Brand new (opened Oct 2025). Each of these elements contributes to the signature atmosphere that keeps guests coming back and has earned the venue its reputation among both first-time visitors and Vegas regulars.
Bauhaus opened in 2025, making it one of the newest additions to the Las Vegas nightlife lineup. The venue benefits from cutting-edge technology, modern design, and the buzz that comes with being the latest destination on the Strip. Bauhaus leans heavily into the electronic music spectrum with a focus on Techno, House, Tech House. The sound system and room acoustics are tuned for heavy bass drops and sweeping melodic builds that define the best EDM experiences in Las Vegas.
Sunday Crowd at Bauhaus
Sunday Night Crowd & Vibe at Bauhaus
Sunday at Bauhaus attracts weekend survivors extending their trip and locals who prefer the relaxed Sunday energy at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street). The atmosphere — Downtown Las Vegas's only venue built around a single-genre mandate: techno, house, and tech house exclusively — no hip-hop nights, no Top 40 Fridays, no open-format rotation. The Houston Bauhaus DNA runs through every programming decision, from the Danley sound system calibrated for concert-grade audio at nightclub volumes to the 60-foot LED wall functioning as the sole visual element. Opens at 10 PM and runs until 5 AM on Friday and Saturday, with peak energy arriving between 3 and 4:30 AM when every Strip mega-club has cleared out — the natural destination for Las Vegas service industry workers finishing shifts, underground electronic music travelers, and EDC attendees extending festival weekend into a proper club. The 400-person room fills completely on peak nights, producing floor density that 5,000-person clubs cannot replicate regardless of headliner. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks costs nothing. The downtown arts district location puts Bauhaus entirely outside the casino resort corridor — a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of galleries, studios, and independent bars. — manifests in a more communal, low-pressure form. The demographic skews slightly older and more experienced than the Friday-Saturday influx, and the Techno, House, Tech House sets reflect that maturity with deeper, more atmospheric selections.
Bauhaus Music
Techno, House, Tech House
Bauhaus Hours
Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM
Bauhaus Cover
Normally $20-30 cover
Sunday Deep Dive
The Last Dance — Sunday Night Farewell at Bauhaus
Sunday at Bauhaus occupies a psychological space no other night touches: it is simultaneously the end of the weekend and the beginning of departure logistics, and the guests who walk into Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) on Sunday evening have made a deliberate choice to squeeze one more memory out of their trip before Monday's flight home. The Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM window on Sunday often compresses or shifts to accommodate seasonal Nightswim programming — outdoor pool-and-nightclub hybrids that leverage the desert warmth and Bauhaus's full-scale production infrastructure under the open sky. The 400-guest capacity operates at perhaps thirty to forty percent on a standard Sunday, creating a spatial openness where groups merge organically — bachelor parties link up with birthday crews, couples befriend solo travelers, and by midnight the room functions as one extended social circle bound by the shared sentiment of making the last night count.
The late-night dining ecosystem surrounding Bauhaus shapes Sunday strategy in ways that do not apply to other nights. The restaurants near Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) operate late-night service that catches the Sunday crowd — post-club meals become a decompression ritual where groups recount the weekend over plates arriving after 2 AM. Getting home after Sunday at Bauhaus: Rideshare dropoff at 115 N 7th St. Located in downtown's arts district, a few blocks from Fremont Street. Sunday-night surge pricing drops to near-baseline because the majority of tourists have already retreated to their hotels by midnight, leaving the roads clear and the pricing flat. The financial calculus favors closing out the trip at Bauhaus: drinks remain at Mixed drinks $12–18, Beers $8–12, Bottles from $400, but the relaxed pace means each drink lasts longer, the bartender conversation is genuine rather than transactional, and the overall per-person spend drops naturally because nobody is racing to keep up with weekend tempo.
Departure logistics for Monday morning add a practical dimension to Sunday at Bauhaus that veteran Vegas visitors plan around. The Normally $20-30 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list cover reduces or vanishes on Sunday — the NoCoverVegas guest list guarantees free admission regardless, preserving cash for the airport taxi and any last-minute hotel checkout incidentals. Sunday bottle service at Bauhaus starts well below the Starting at $400 weekend standard, and some hosts build promotional packages — complimentary bottle upgrades, waived gratuity on the first round, or comp'd champagne toasts — specifically designed to fill the room on a night when occupancy is not guaranteed. The Techno, House, Tech House programming at Bauhaus on Sunday gravitates toward deeper, more atmospheric selections — DJs read the farewell energy in the room and construct sets that feel like a soundtrack to the end credits of a film, balancing euphoria with the bittersweet awareness that the trip is winding down. For the last time this trip, take in the full scope of what makes Bauhaus singular — bauhaus las vegas opened in october 2025 at 115 north 7th street in downtown's arts district, bringing the underground music philosophy of houston's bauhaus — one of the most respected electronic clubs in the american south — to a city better known for mega-club spectacle than for dedicated genre programming — and let Sunday's lower intensity reveal details you missed during the weekend's beautiful chaos.
Sunday at Bauhaus
Inside Bauhaus on Sundays
Bauhaus is a major venue with a capacity of approximately 400 guests. On Sunday nights, the venue operates at or near full capacity, creating an intense, immersive atmosphere where the music, lights, and crowd energy merge into one experience. The overall vibe at Bauhaus is best described as: Downtown Las Vegas's only venue built around a single-genre mandate: techno, house, and tech house exclusively — no hip-hop nights, no Top 40 Fridays, no open-format rotation. The Houston Bauhaus DNA runs through every programming decision, from the Danley sound system calibrated for concert-grade audio at nightclub volumes to the 60-foot LED wall functioning as the sole visual element. Opens at 10 PM and runs until 5 AM on Friday and Saturday, with peak energy arriving between 3 and 4:30 AM when every Strip mega-club has cleared out — the natural destination for Las Vegas service industry workers finishing shifts, underground electronic music travelers, and EDC attendees extending festival weekend into a proper club. The 400-person room fills completely on peak nights, producing floor density that 5,000-person clubs cannot replicate regardless of headliner. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks costs nothing. The downtown arts district location puts Bauhaus entirely outside the casino resort corridor — a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of galleries, studios, and independent bars.. This atmosphere is amplified on Sundays when every element of the venue is running at peak performance. Peak hours at Bauhaus are 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM. On Sunday nights, plan to be on the dance floor during peak hours for the best energy. The DJ's set builds toward these moments with carefully curated transitions and production cues.
Bauhaus Las Vegas opened in October 2025 at 115 North 7th Street in downtown's arts district, bringing the underground music philosophy of Houston's Bauhaus — one of the most respected electronic clubs in the American South — to a city better known for mega-club spectacle than for dedicated genre programming. The Las Vegas location occupies the building that previously housed Place on 7th, a multi-purpose events space, and was deliberately built outside the Strip casino resort corridor: no hotel integration, no casino floor routing traffic toward the entrance, no resort fee applied invisibly to drink prices. Bauhaus exists as a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of art galleries, independent bars, and working creative studios — a geography that shapes who shows up and why. The single defining characteristic that separates Bauhaus from every other nightclub in Las Vegas is genre exclusivity. Every Strip nightclub that programs electronic music also programs hip-hop, Top 40, or open format on rotating nights to capture the broadest possible demographic — Hakkasan and OMNIA alternate between EDM headliners and R&B nights, XS and Encore Beach Club balance electronic with hip-hop bookings, and Zouk's stage hosts a genre range wide enough to include rap concerts. Bauhaus does not. Techno, house, and tech house are the beginning and end of the programming brief, and no booking deviates from that range regardless of the potential attendance upside from a crossover act. The practical result is a crowd that self-selects around the music rather than the social experience — guests who arrive at Bauhaus on a Friday have come specifically for the music, producing a floor dynamic categorically different from the spectacle-and-bottle-service culture of production mega-clubs. The Danley sound system is Bauhaus's primary physical investment. Danley installs their speaker systems in professional concert venues and audiophile listening rooms, and the Bauhaus installation treats the 400-person room with the same acoustic engineering standards. When a resident DJ pushes a deep house set at 1 AM, the Danley system renders every drum transient, sub-bass frequency, and synthesizer harmonic with clarity that conventionally installed nightclub speaker arrays cannot achieve at comparable volume levels. The 60-foot LED wall serves as the venue's only major visual element — it responds to the DJ's output rather than running branded content loops — and its scale relative to the 400-person room creates an immersive visual context without the multi-screen production rigs that Vegas mega-clubs install to justify large visual budgets. After-hours programming defines Bauhaus's scheduling position within Las Vegas nightlife. Opening at 10 PM on Friday and Saturday and closing at 5 AM — one hour past the closing time of every major Strip nightclub and most downtown venues — Bauhaus operates in a time slot that exists separately from mainstream club culture. The peak energy window runs from 3 AM to 4:30 AM, the hours after Hakkasan, XS, and the Fremont East venues have pushed their last guests toward the exits. Las Vegas service industry workers — bartenders, dealers, floor managers, and performers finishing shifts at 2 AM — arrive to mix with underground electronic music travelers who specifically plan around the Bauhaus format and EDC Las Vegas attendees who use the 7th Street venue as an after-hours extension of festival weekend programming. The venue sits 4 miles from the Las Vegas Convention Center, making it a practical next stop for festival crowds when Convention Center grounds close. The all-black dress code operates as cultural shorthand rather than door enforcement. Unlike Strip club dress codes where doorstaff turn guests away for specific violations, the Bauhaus preference for all-black clothing functions as a self-identification signal: guests who arrive in black have already demonstrated awareness of the venue's culture, which produces a more cohesive room energy than a general-admission format that welcomes any demographic equally. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks is available on operating nights without charge, making Bauhaus the only major Las Vegas nightclub where most guests arrive by car rather than rideshare — a practical advantage that the downtown arts district provides by default, in contrast to Strip venues where valet queues and garage fees add friction to every arrival.
Plan Your Sunday at Bauhaus
Sunday Night Tips for Bauhaus
Sunday Arrival at Bauhaus
Sunday events at Bauhaus may start earlier, especially for Nightswim or special programming at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street). Standard hours are Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM — check for Sunday modifications. For standard Sunday night events, arriving by 11:00 PM is ideal. Arrive at Bauhaus well before 12:00 AM – 3:00 AM to clear the 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101 entrance queue.
Bauhaus Dress Code
Bauhaus enforces: All black preferred. Creative nightlife attire welcome. No athletic wear. Sunday night security at Bauhaus is the most selective of the week — dress to impress.
Sunday Guest List at Bauhaus
Guest list available through NoCoverVegas. Sunday guest list at Bauhaus fills up fastest — sign up through NoCoverVegas early.
Bauhaus Sunday Bottle Service
Table minimums at Bauhaus: Starting at $400. Sunday nights at Bauhaus carry the highest minimums — book through NoCoverVegas for the best rates.
Sunday Costs at Bauhaus
Bauhaus Sunday Night Pricing
Without a guest list, Sunday night at Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) costs: Normally $20-30 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list. With the NoCoverVegas Bauhaus guest list, you skip the Sunday cover charge entirely — saving $40-75 per person. Once inside Bauhaus, Sunday drink prices are: Mixed drinks $12–18, Beers $8–12, Bottles from $400. Tipping at Bauhaus is expected — $1-2 per beer, $2-5 per cocktail, or 18-20% for Bauhaus bottle service. VIP bottle service at Bauhaus starts at Starting at $400. Sunday night minimums at Bauhaus are typically at the higher end of the range. Bottle service includes a dedicated table, VIP entry (bypassing all lines at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101), a personal server, and mixers.
Sunday at Bauhaus Without Guest List
Normally $20-30 cover
Sunday at Bauhaus With NoCoverVegas
FREE
Sunday Transportation to Bauhaus
Getting to Bauhaus on Sunday
NoCoverVegas includes a free guest list entry from your hotel to Bauhaus at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101. This eliminates rideshare surge pricing ($30-50 on busy nights near Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street)), parking hassles, and the need to navigate to Bauhaus. Simply mention it when you sign up for the Bauhaus guest list, and we coordinate everything. If you prefer to drive to Bauhaus: Street parking on 7th Street and surrounding blocks. Nearby paid lots ($5-10). No valet — downtown industrial area. For rideshare to Bauhaus: Rideshare dropoff at 115 N 7th St. Located in downtown's arts district, a few blocks from Fremont Street. Sunday night rideshare surge near Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) peaks between midnight and 2 AM — the NoCoverVegas ride eliminates this cost entirely.
Bauhaus — Sunday Night Address
115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101
Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street)
Sunday Local Knowledge for Bauhaus
Insider Tips for Sundays at Bauhaus
Pre-Game Strategy for Bauhaus
Sunday nights at Bauhaus draw the biggest crowds, so eat a solid meal before heading to Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street). Drink prices inside Bauhaus run Mixed drinks $12–18, Beers $8–12, Bottles from $400, so having a couple of drinks at your hotel bar before arriving saves money and gets the energy building. Doors open at the start of the Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM window — time your dinner reservation to finish ninety minutes before you plan to arrive at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101.
Bauhaus Dress Code on Sundays
The Bauhaus dress code: All black preferred. Creative nightlife attire welcome. No athletic wear. Security at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101 enforces this strictly, especially on Sunday nights when the 400-capacity room is at peak occupancy. A common mistake is wearing designer sneakers — most venues including $Bauhaus reject them. Stick to dress shoes or clean boots for men and heels or stylish flats for women. With a 400-guest capacity, Bauhaus door staff can afford to be selective about who they admit. The fashion expectation aligns with the venue's atmosphere — Downtown Las Vegas's only venue built around a single-genre mandate: techno, house, and tech house exclusively — no hip-hop nights, no Top 40 Fridays, no open-format rotation. The Houston Bauhaus DNA runs through every programming decision, from the Danley sound system calibrated for concert-grade audio at nightclub volumes to the 60-foot LED wall functioning as the sole visual element. Opens at 10 PM and runs until 5 AM on Friday and Saturday, with peak energy arriving between 3 and 4:30 AM when every Strip mega-club has cleared out — the natural destination for Las Vegas service industry workers finishing shifts, underground electronic music travelers, and EDC attendees extending festival weekend into a proper club. The 400-person room fills completely on peak nights, producing floor density that 5,000-person clubs cannot replicate regardless of headliner. Street parking on surrounding 7th Street blocks costs nothing. The downtown arts district location puts Bauhaus entirely outside the casino resort corridor — a pure nightclub in a neighborhood of galleries, studios, and independent bars.
Navigating Bauhaus on Sundays
Once inside Bauhaus on Sunday, head to the main bar first to orient yourself. Your first Sunday-night order at Bauhaus will run Mixed drinks $12–18, Beers $8–12, Bottles from $400 — tip well and the bartender remembers you all night. On Sundays, the dance floor at Bauhaus has room to move and the bars are less crowded — faster service and a more personal experience with the Techno, House, Tech House programming. Do not miss danley sound system — it is a defining feature of the Bauhaus Sunday-night experience.
Leaving Bauhaus on Sunday
Plan your Sunday exit from Bauhaus before you need it. Sunday rideshare from 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101: Rideshare dropoff at 115 N 7th St. Located in downtown's arts district, a few blocks from Fremont Street. The NoCoverVegas free entry eliminates the Sunday-night surge — your ride home from Bauhaus is included when you sign up for the guest list. If you drove to Bauhaus: Street parking on 7th Street and surrounding blocks. Nearby paid lots ($5-10). No valet — downtown industrial area.
Bauhaus Sunday Character
What Defines Bauhaus on Sundays
The compact footprint of Bauhaus is the secret weapon that separates it from the mega-clubs on the Strip. At 400 capacity, every patron stands close enough to the DJ booth to read the tracklist. The bartenders learn faces by the second round, the sound pressure stays even across the entire floor, and the Sunday-night atmosphere vibrates with a concentrated intensity that larger rooms dilute. Intimate does not mean quiet here — it means every watt of the sound system hits harder because there is nowhere for the energy to dissipate.
Built in 2025, Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) benefits from infrastructure that older Strip clubs simply cannot retrofit. The acoustic paneling inside Bauhaus was modeled using 3D simulation software, the lighting rig uses the same fixtures touring arena shows carry, and the HVAC system was designed to handle a full 400-guest Sunday crowd without turning the room into a sauna. That engineering advantage means crisper Techno, House, Tech House sound at the back wall, more dynamic light shows during the Sunday headliner set, and a comfortable temperature even when the Bauhaus dance floor is shoulder-to-shoulder.
Bauhaus is positioned in Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street), giving it a distinct neighborhood character compared to the main Strip corridor. The venue attracts a blend of hotel guests and locals who know the best rooms in the city. On Sundays, the NoCoverVegas guest list handles the logistics of getting your group door-to-door, so the off-Strip location becomes an advantage rather than an obstacle — fewer crowds at the entrance, faster entry, and a dedicated parking zone for VIP transport.
A defining feature of {venue.name} is danley sound system, which shapes the entire {dayCapitalized}-night experience in ways you notice the moment you step past the velvet rope. Combine that with 60-foot led wall and the {dayCapitalized}-night package at {venue.name} starts to separate itself from every other option on the Strip. Factor in dedicated techno/house venue and the total offering justifies the reputation {venue.name} carries among repeat Vegas visitors. Round it out with open until 5 am and you have a venue that checks every box on the {dayCapitalized}-night wishlist.
Sunday Questions About Bauhaus
Bauhaus Sunday FAQ
Is Bauhaus open on Sundays?
Bauhaus (Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street)) operates Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM. Sunday is one of the peak programming nights at Bauhaus with headliner talent and full production. The venue's strongest nights are typically Friday and Saturday — the only nights open..
Is there a guest list for Bauhaus on Sunday?
Yes. NoCoverVegas offers free guest list at Bauhaus on Sunday nights when the club is open. Guest list available through NoCoverVegas. Ladies-free nights at Bauhaus: Friday and Saturday on guest list. Sunday guest list fills fastest — sign up early.
What is the dress code at Bauhaus on Sunday?
The Bauhaus dress code: All black preferred. Creative nightlife attire welcome. No athletic wear. Security at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101 enforces this every night, but Sunday is the most selective because the 400-guest room is at peak capacity. Sunday Nightswim events at Bauhaus may have a swimwear dress code instead — check the specific event.
How much does Bauhaus cost on Sunday night?
General admission at Bauhaus on Sunday: Normally $20-30 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list. Inside Bauhaus, drinks cost Mixed drinks $12–18, Beers $8–12, Bottles from $400 — tip $2-5 per cocktail. VIP bottle service at Bauhaus starts at Starting at $400. The NoCoverVegas guest list eliminates the Sunday cover charge at Bauhaus entirely, saving $40-75 per person.
What time should I arrive at Bauhaus on Sunday?
Sunday events at Bauhaus may start earlier, especially for Nightswim or special programming at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street). Standard hours are Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 5 AM — check for Sunday modifications. For standard Sunday night events, arriving by 11:00 PM is ideal.
How do I get to Bauhaus on Sunday night?
NoCoverVegas provides a complimentary Sunday-night guest list from any Strip hotel directly to Bauhaus at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101. Rideshare option for Bauhaus: Rideshare dropoff at 115 N 7th St. Located in downtown's arts district, a few blocks from Fremont Street. Driving to Bauhaus: Street parking on 7th Street and surrounding blocks. Nearby paid lots ($5-10). No valet — downtown industrial area. Sunday rideshare pricing near Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) stays at base rates.
Can I bring a group to Bauhaus on Sunday?
Yes, groups of all sizes are welcome on the Sunday NoCoverVegas guest list at Bauhaus. For the smoothest Sunday entry at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101, maintain an even gender ratio. All-male groups of 4 or more should consider Bauhaus bottle service (starting at Starting at $400) for guaranteed Sunday entry. Sunday nights are more relaxed about group composition at Bauhaus , making it a great option for larger groups.
Is the Sunday guest list at Bauhaus really free?
Yes, the NoCoverVegas Sunday guest list for Bauhaus is 100% free with no hidden fees or deposits. You save the full Normally $20-30 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list Sunday cover charge at Bauhaus and receive a free guest list entry at your hotel to 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101. We are an official promoter partner with Bauhaus and every major venue on the Las Vegas Strip. Sunday guest list approval at Bauhaus is nearly automatic. Our service is funded by the venues themselves — you pay nothing.
More Sunday Options at Bauhaus
Explore Bauhaus
Bauhaus Guest List
Skip the Normally $20-30 cover Sunday cover — free entry at Bauhaus at 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101.
Bauhaus Bottle Service
VIP tables starting at Starting at $400, Sunday pricing, and how to book bottle service at Bauhaus .
Friday Night
What to expect at Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) on Fridays.
Saturday Night
What to expect at Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) on Saturdays.
Monday Night
What to expect at Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) on Mondays.
March 2026 Events
Upcoming Sunday events and DJ calendar at Bauhaus .
Sunday Group Experiences at Bauhaus
Bachelor Party
VIP packages from Starting at $400 for bachelor parties at Bauhaus .
Birthday
Celebrate your birthday at Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) — free Bauhaus guest list, VIP upgrades, and bottle service from Starting at $400.
Girls Night
Girls night at Bauhaus — ladies free Friday and Saturday on guest list plus free entry at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street).
One Last Night at Bauhaus
Get on the Sunday Night Guest List at Bauhaus
Skip the Normally $20-30 cover at Bauhaus at Downtown Las Vegas (7th Street) this Sunday. Join the NoCoverVegas Sunday guest list and walk into the 400-guest Bauhaus for free — plus a free guest list entry at your hotel to 115 N 7th St, Las Vegas, NV 89101. Or text us anytime at (725) 999-9293.
Complete Guide
Explore Everything at Bauhaus
Detailed guides for every aspect of your Bauhaus experience — from guest list signup to bottle service pricing, best nights, and upcoming events.