Nightclubs

On The Record

11,000 Sq Ft Hidden Speakeasy at Park MGM — Enter Through the Record Store

Park MGM · 3770 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109

Key Facts

On The Record — Quick Facts

Age

21+

Cover

Normally $20-40 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list

Location

3770 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109

Hours

Wed, Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 4 AM

Free Entry

Guest List Available

Dress Code

Upscale casual to nightclub attire. No athletic wear or sandals.

Cover:Normally $20-40 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list
Hours:Wed, Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 4 AM
Dress Code:Upscale casual to nightclub attire. No athletic wear or sandals.
Size:11,000 sq ft
Capacity:800
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About On The Record

On The Record at Park MGM is the most creatively designed nightlife venue in Las Vegas — a 11,000-square-foot speakeasy concept where entry is hidden behind a working record store storefront off the Park MGM casino floor. Once inside, three distinct rooms offer completely different atmospheres: a main room dance floor with a DJ booth built into a salvaged Rolls-Royce, an outdoor patio anchored by a double-decker bus that serves as a second DJ stage, and private karaoke rooms for groups who want their own sound. Opened in 2018 by Two Bit Circus creators with a vinyl and music memorabilia aesthetic throughout, On The Record celebrates music culture in a way no other Vegas club does — framed platinum records, vintage gear, and curated sound define every room. The craft cocktail program is one of the most considered in Vegas nightlife, with bartenders who rotate in as guest artists alongside the DJs. The venue programs hip-hop, Top 40, and open format across its intimate 800-person capacity, making it the go-to for groups who want energy without the overwhelming scale of the Strip mega-clubs. Wednesday night has become a local industry staple, drawing off-duty service industry workers from across the Strip.

Located at Park MGM Las Vegas

Highlights

  • Enter through a working record store
  • DJ booth built into a Rolls-Royce
  • Double-decker bus outdoor DJ stage
  • Private karaoke rooms available
  • Craft cocktail + guest bartender program
  • 800 capacity — intimate alternative to mega-clubs

First Timer?

What to Expect at On The Record

The Vibe

The most creatively designed nightclub in Las Vegas — 11,000 square feet hidden behind a working record store, with a Rolls-Royce DJ booth in the main room, a double-decker bus outdoor DJ stage on the patio, and private karaoke rooms bookable by groups. Three completely different environments under one roof: interior dance floor with the Rolls-Royce booth as the visual anchor, open-air patio with the bus stage above the crowd, and private rooms where the group controls its own sound and pace entirely. The craft cocktail program rotates guest bartenders alongside the DJs, making the bar a parallel performance stage rather than a service counter. At 800-person capacity, the venue operates at a social scale where groups maintain cohesion across the room — large enough for genuine energy, intimate enough that a group of 8 to 10 stays together rather than fragmenting across a massive floor. Best for groups who want creativity over spectacle, intimacy over scale, and a club entrance that becomes its own story the moment the group walks through the record store into the speakeasy.

Music

Hip Hop, Top 40, Open Format

Best Nights

Friday and Saturday are the busiest nights. Wednesday is a great low-key option.

View night guide →

Peak Hours

11:30 PM – 2:00 AM

Drink Prices

Mixed drinks $16–25, Beers $12, Bottles from $500

Bottle Service

Starting at $500

View pricing →

Parking

Self-parking at Park MGM garage ($15). Valet at Park MGM main entrance ($30+).

Rideshare

Rideshare dropoff at Park MGM main entrance on Las Vegas Blvd. Enter through the casino floor — look for the record store entrance.

Guest List Rules

To enter On The Record at Park MGM, navigate to the working vinyl record store on the Park MGM casino floor — a staffed retail shop, not a themed prop — and walk through the hidden speakeasy entrance concealed behind the back wall of the store. No visible nightclub signage exists from the casino floor; the record store itself is the only landmark. Women receive complimentary entry all night with the NoCoverVegas guest list on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. Men enter free before 12:30 AM on Fridays and Saturdays with an equal or better female-to-male ratio; Wednesday has significantly more relaxed ratio enforcement and a lower walk-in cover, making it the most accessible night for groups that skew male-heavy or for visitors on a midweek Las Vegas trip. Guest list sign-up closes at 10:00 PM on event nights — register in advance via NoCoverVegas, not at the door. Dress code: upscale casual nightclub attire required; no athletic wear, sandals, or sports jerseys on any night. The guest list covers all three rooms under one entry: the main Rolls-Royce DJ booth dance floor, the outdoor double-decker bus DJ patio, and the private karaoke rooms — though private karaoke rooms are bookable separately by reservation if the group wants a dedicated window of the evening entirely under their own control. Park MGM is directly adjacent to T-Mobile Arena via a covered interior footbridge, making On The Record the most practical post-concert destination for groups leaving UFC events, NBA games, or arena shows next door. Open Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, 10 PM – 4 AM. 21+ with valid government-issued photo ID.

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Cover Charge Info

On The RecordCover Charge & Free Entry

On The Record typically charges $20–40 depending on night and DJ at the door for general admission. The NoCoverVegas guest list eliminates the cover charge entirely — sign up below for free entry.

How much is cover at On The Record?

General admission cover charge at On The Record typically ranges from $20–40 depending on night and DJ per person, depending on the night, event, and performing DJ. Holiday weekends and special events like New Year's Eve or EDC week can push cover prices even higher, sometimes exceeding $100 at the door. Women generally pay less than men at the door, but both can avoid the cover entirely by signing up for the free NoCoverVegas guest list before arriving.

How to get free entry at On The Record?

The easiest way to get free entry at On The Record is through the NoCoverVegas guest list. Save the full cover charge — $20–40 per person with free guest list. Simply fill out the guest list form on this page with your name, group size, and date — you'll receive a text confirmation within minutes. Show up before the guest list cutoff time, check in at the guest list entrance, and walk in without paying cover. No app download, no tickets, no hidden fees.

Is the On The Record guest list really free?

Yes — the On The Record guest list through NoCoverVegas is completely free with no hidden costs, no minimum spend requirement, and no obligation to purchase anything once inside. You skip the general admission cover charge ($20–40 depending on night and DJ) and enter through the guest list line, which is typically faster than the GA line. The only requirements are arriving before the guest list cutoff time and meeting the venue's dress code: Upscale casual to nightclub attire. No athletic wear or sandals..

What's included with the On The Record guest list?

The NoCoverVegas guest list at On The Record includes free entry (no cover charge), priority access through the guest list line, and entry for your entire group. Groups of 6+ should submit via the group form. Private karaoke rooms available for groups who want their own space. Once inside, you have full access to all public areas of the venue including the dance floor, bars, and any open rooms. Bottle service and VIP tables are separate and can be arranged through NoCoverVegas for an additional cost.

Does the On The Record cover charge change on holidays or special events?

Yes — cover charges at On The Record increase significantly on holiday weekends and major event weeks. New Year's Eve, Halloween, Valentine's Day, Memorial Day weekend, EDC Week (May), and major convention weeks like CES and SEMA all command premium door prices — sometimes two to three times the standard rate, occasionally exceeding $100 per person. The most reliable way to avoid elevated holiday cover charges is the NoCoverVegas guest list, which provides free entry regardless of the night or event. Submit your guest list reservation in advance for busy dates to guarantee your spot.

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What Sets It Apart

What Makes On The Record Unique

On The Record at Park MGM is entered through a working record store — a storefront staffed with an actual vinyl selection, operating as a retail shop — whose back wall conceals the club entrance. No other Las Vegas nightclub has a hidden entry point functioning as a real business rather than a theatrical prop. Once inside, the venue distributes across three entirely distinct rooms: the main dance floor where the DJ booth is constructed from the body of a salvaged Rolls-Royce automobile, the outdoor patio where a vintage double-decker bus serves as an elevated second DJ stage, and a bank of private karaoke rooms bookable by groups who want to control their own sound for part of the evening. The 11,000-square-foot space at 800-person capacity was created by Two Bit Circus developers in 2018 with music memorabilia as the unifying aesthetic — framed platinum records, vintage amplifiers, and production equipment integrated into the décor rather than applied as set dressing. The craft cocktail program rotates guest bartenders alongside the DJs, treating the bar as a parallel performance stage rather than a service station. On The Record operates Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday — three nights rather than the five-to-seven night schedules of Strip mega-clubs — with Wednesday serving as the strongest industry night in Park MGM's nightlife program, drawing off-duty service workers from across the Strip in an intimate setting that has become one of the most reliably attended midweek evenings in Las Vegas nightlife. The Park MGM location on the south end of the Strip places it directly adjacent to T-Mobile Arena — the footbridge connecting the two properties takes under 10 minutes — making On The Record the default post-concert venue for groups leaving arena events at the adjacent 20,000-seat stadium that hosts UFC fights, NBA games, and arena concerts year-round. The venue's three-night operating schedule concentrates its programming quality rather than spreading it thin: the DJ talent and craft cocktail program are applied to three focused evenings rather than diluted across five to seven nights of varying quality.

Group Experiences

Planning a Group Night at On The Record

Groups planning a night at On The Record navigate the venue's defining design feature before the night begins: the entrance. Park MGM's casino floor flows from the hotel lobby through gaming tables and a food hall, eventually opening into the Grand Hall entertainment complex. On The Record is accessed through a record store storefront — a functioning vinyl shop with actual stock, an operating cash register, and the full visual appearance of a retail business rather than a nightclub entrance. For a group entering together, the moment of discovering that the record store back wall opens into the club creates a shared experience before any drink has been ordered or any DJ set has begun. The discovery happens simultaneously for the whole group, which produces a collective reaction that staggered arrivals to a standard nightclub entrance cannot manufacture. For bachelorette groups, birthday groups, and celebrating groups, this entrance moment becomes the first story of the evening — something to reference all night and remember afterward.

The 800-person capacity is the most important number for understanding what the On The Record group experience delivers. At this scale, a group of 6 to 10 maintains consistent visual contact across the room, can move between the three distinct environments without losing cohesion, and remains a social unit for the entire evening rather than fracturing across a massive floor. The Rolls-Royce DJ booth in the main room — a salvaged automobile body elevated behind the DJ position — creates a single clear visual focus that orients the room regardless of where a group positions itself. Groups that station near the booth experience the DJ set at a proximity that Strip clubs at 3,000 to 7,500 capacity reserve exclusively for bottle service tables; at On The Record, that proximity is available to general admission groups that arrive before the main floor fills.

The three environments structure how groups plan their time. The main room DJ floor provides the primary dance experience, with the Rolls-Royce booth and production lighting running through the full programming window. The outdoor patio with the double-decker bus DJ stage operates as an entirely separate acoustic environment — open air, with DJ programming from the upper level of the vintage bus positioned above the crowd. A group moving from the main room to the outdoor patio midway through the evening transitions between interior club production and open-air programming without exiting the venue. The private karaoke rooms bookable by groups represent the third option: a defined period where the group controls its own sound, pace, and energy entirely within the venue rather than on the DJ's program.

For bachelorette groups and birthday celebrating groups, the karaoke rooms function as the structural anchor of the evening. A group booking a 60-minute room can plan the night in three acts: arrive and explore the record store entrance and the main room dance floor during the first hour, transition to the private karaoke room for the booked window, then return to the main floor for the late-night DJ peak. This three-part arc gives the group an evening with genuine structural variety — discovery, private celebration, shared dance floor — rather than a single mode sustained from 10 PM to 3 AM. No other Las Vegas nightclub offers this combination: the speakeasy entrance moment, the intimate capacity, and the private rooms as a bookable segment within the larger evening.

Park MGM's T-Mobile Arena adjacency makes On The Record the default post-concert venue for groups attending events at the neighboring stadium. T-Mobile Arena hosts UFC fights, NBA games, arena concerts, and major productions year-round. The footbridge between T-Mobile Arena and Park MGM puts the record store entrance under 10 minutes from any arena exit. For a group that structured its evening around an arena event, the speakeasy discovery format absorbs post-concert energy differently than a standard nightclub entrance — arriving at a working record store after a fight or concert creates a deliberate tonal shift that amplifies the transition between the arena and the club.

Wednesday at On The Record is the Las Vegas industry night that hospitality workers from across the Strip treat as the midweek gathering. The crowd on Wednesday skews toward local service workers, off-duty hotel staff, and Las Vegas residents who want intimate scale and genuine music programming rather than the tourist-optimized Friday-Saturday production format. For a group visiting Las Vegas midweek, Wednesday delivers the insider version of the city's nightlife: smaller, more music-focused, and socially genuine in a way that peak weekend nights engineered for maximum throughput are not. The cover charge on Wednesday is also lower or waived compared to Friday and Saturday, making midweek the most cost-effective On The Record experience.

Guest list entry through NoCoverVegas removes the $20-40 cover charge. For a group of 8, that represents $160-320 saved before entering. Men are on the guest list free before 12:30 AM with an even female-to-male ratio requirement — the ratio rule is somewhat more flexible on Wednesday than on peak weekend nights. Bottle service starting at $500 eliminates the ratio requirement, provides a dedicated table in the main room, and for a group of 8 divides to $62.50 per person. At that per-person figure, the reserved position, guaranteed entry for the full crew, and dedicated service represent competitive economics compared to individual bar spending over a full evening. Arrive around 11 PM to position near the Rolls-Royce booth during the early DJ build, move to the outdoor bus patio around midnight for the second phase, and close with the karaoke room or return to the main floor for the late-night peak.

Celebrity & VIP Culture

Why On The RecordAttracts Entertainment Industry & Sports VIPs

On The Record at Park MGM operates as the Las Vegas nightclub most explicitly built around music culture as a design language rather than club spectacle as a production category. The Rolls-Royce DJ booth — a salvaged automobile body repurposed into the main room's central performance structure — positions the DJ as an artist occupying a singular object rather than an equipment platform elevated above a crowd. This design philosophy attracts music industry visitors whose relationship to nightclub culture runs through artist appreciation rather than spectacle consumption, separating On The Record from the production-heavy EDM residency venues that define the rest of the Strip's nightclub identity.

Park MGM's entertainment infrastructure extends beyond On The Record to Dolby Live at Park MGM — the 5,200-seat concert hall inside the same property formerly known as Park Theater. Dolby Live has hosted major residency programming including Lady Gaga's JAZZ & PIANO residency, which drew a significant entertainment industry audience to Park MGM across its Las Vegas run and positioned the property as a destination for music industry visitors attending residency concerts. Bruno Mars, Silk Sonic, and Maren Morris have performed at Dolby Live, creating a consistent pull of music business attendees to the Park MGM campus whose evening itineraries naturally extend toward On The Record after the show. Grammy season and music award circuits bring industry delegations to Las Vegas annually, and Park MGM's dual-identity as both a concert destination (Dolby Live) and a curated boutique hotel creates the property alignment that attracts music business visitors who might stay at the Standard or Ace in other cities but find Park MGM's programming-forward positioning the Las Vegas equivalent.

Wednesday night at On The Record documents the depth of the venue's music community adoption more precisely than any other metric. Off-duty service workers from across the Las Vegas Strip — cocktail servers, bartenders, event staff, entertainment industry workers — have made Wednesday at On The Record the standard midweek industry gathering. The social composition of a Wednesday night differs meaningfully from a Saturday night at Hakkasan or OMNIA: the room contains people whose relationship to Las Vegas nightlife is professional and daily rather than tourist and occasional. Music industry visitors attending conventions, showcases, or residency programming at Dolby Live find the Wednesday format at On The Record the insider-facing version of Las Vegas nightlife that a first-time tourist visit to a mega-club cannot replicate.

The guest bartender rotation extends the music culture identity beyond the DJ program into the beverage component. On peak nights, bartenders rotate alongside DJs — their presence at the bar announced and their preparation style presented as performance rather than service. The craft cocktail menu reflects this philosophy: spirit-forward preparations that require genuine decision-making rather than selection from a standard rail-and-mixer template. For music industry visitors, creative professionals, and the local nightlife community whose cultural frame is music appreciation rather than spectacle consumption, On The Record's bar program functions as evidence that the venue's identity extends to every operational layer rather than existing as surface-level set dressing.

The private karaoke rooms create the specific programming opportunity that has made On The Record a default birthday and celebration destination for entertainment industry adjacent groups. Karaoke carries different connotations in music industry culture than in general nightlife: for people whose professional lives involve song, performance, or music production, a private karaoke room is an extension of the same musical enthusiasm that defines their working hours. The On The Record karaoke rooms are not a novelty format appended to a standard club floor — they are the third spoke of the venue's three-room philosophy, each environment representing a different relationship between music and the people inside it. The Rolls-Royce main room celebrates the DJ-as-artist; the outdoor bus stage inverts the performer-to-crowd geography; the karaoke room eliminates the performer-audience distinction entirely and makes the guests the act. This three-part music culture progression across a single evening is what On The Record delivers that no other Las Vegas venue within the same capacity tier attempts.

How It Compares

On The Record vs Other Las Vegas Nightclubs

On The Record vs Hakkasan

On The Record at Park MGM and Hakkasan at MGM Grand represent opposite ends of the Las Vegas nightclub scale spectrum — both within the same MGM Resorts property portfolio, but serving entirely different guest intents. Hakkasan operates at 80,000 square feet across five floors with a 7,500-person capacity, programming EDM and hip-hop headliners simultaneously in multiple rooms at the highest booking tier in Las Vegas. On The Record operates at 11,000 square feet and 800-person capacity as a deliberately intimate format where the venue's design is the attraction as much as the DJ. Guests who choose Hakkasan are optimizing for scale, headliner tier, and mega-club production density — the five-floor format, the laser show that reaches across 80,000 square feet, and the R&Bae Wednesday hip-hop programming that draws its own dedicated following. Guests who choose On The Record are optimizing for creative distinctiveness, group cohesion at 800-person capacity where a party of 8 remains a social unit across the full evening, and the specific design elements — record store entrance, Rolls-Royce booth, outdoor bus stage — that make the venue experience memorable independent of who is performing. The comparison is not a quality gradient; it is a format preference: scale and mega-club production versus intimate music culture design.

On The Record vs OMNIA

On The Record and OMNIA at Caesars Palace both operate within the same mid-Strip geographic zone and both program Friday and Saturday as peak nightclub nights — but the format difference is the largest gap between any two comparable nightclubs on the Strip. OMNIA is the kinetic chandelier and the 3,500-person main room: the 22-motor hydraulic chandelier that physically descends toward the crowd, the three-environment layout including rooftop terrace, and the EDM residency calendar built from Calvin Harris through Tiësto and Martin Garrix. On The Record is the opposite of that production philosophy: 800 people in 11,000 square feet, with a multi-genre format, no resident headliner residency structure, and three completely unique room environments that have no architectural equivalent anywhere on the Strip. A music industry visitor in Las Vegas for a Dolby Live concert or a Grammy circuit event would choose On The Record over OMNIA for the same reason that music professionals sometimes prefer small venues over arena shows: the scale creates proximity, the design creates identity, and the 800-person room permits a social experience that 3,500 people in front of a descending chandelier cannot.

Daytime Party

Las Vegas Pool Parties

Complete your Vegas trip with a pool party. Las Vegas dayclubs offer DJ sets, cabanas, and VIP tables from noon through sunset — the perfect complement to a night at On The Record.

Browse all Las Vegas pool parties & dayclubs

On The Record — FAQ

What kind of music does On The Record play?

On The Record programs hip-hop, Top 40, and open format across its three spaces — the main room Rolls-Royce DJ booth floor, the outdoor patio with the double-decker bus stage, and the private karaoke rooms. The main room DJ calendar runs open-format sets that move between hip-hop, pop, and dance music within a single night rather than committing to a single genre. The outdoor bus stage operates as a separate DJ environment on peak nights, often programming a parallel set to the main room. Wednesday is the strongest music-focused night — the industry and local crowd that gathers midweek skews toward guests whose music appreciation is genuine and daily rather than tourist-oriented. No genre-exclusive programming here: On The Record is explicitly multi-genre by design, which distinguishes it from the EDM-specialist venues (Hakkasan, OMNIA, XS) that anchor the rest of the Strip's nightclub calendar.

What are the different rooms and spaces at On The Record?

On The Record contains three entirely distinct environments under one entry. The main room centers on a Rolls-Royce DJ booth — a salvaged automobile body built into the performance structure, elevated behind the DJ position, which serves as the room's single visual anchor. The outdoor patio hosts a vintage double-decker bus whose upper deck operates as an elevated DJ stage, putting the DJ above the open-air crowd rather than at eye level — a different spatial relationship between performer and audience than any indoor club format. Private karaoke rooms, bookable in hourly windows for 8 to 15 guests, function as a third environment where the group controls its own sound and pace entirely. All three spaces are accessible under a single entry and operate simultaneously on peak nights — guests can move between the main room, the outdoor bus stage, and a private room within the same evening without re-entering from outside.

Is On The Record good for birthday parties or group celebrations?

On The Record is one of the strongest birthday and celebration venues in Las Vegas for groups of 6 to 20 who want variety beyond a single dance floor. The three-space format naturally structures an evening into distinct acts: the record store speakeasy entrance as the opening discovery moment, time on the main Rolls-Royce DJ floor, a private karaoke room for the dedicated celebration window, and an optional transition to the outdoor bus stage. The private karaoke rooms seat 8 to 15 guests and can be booked in advance through NoCoverVegas — they provide a fully private segment of the evening where the group controls the music rather than the DJ. For bachelorette parties and birthday groups, this three-part arc is a more memorable evening structure than a single VIP table at a standard nightclub, with the speakeasy entrance moment alone generating a shared story before the night officially begins.

What is the cover charge at On The Record Las Vegas?

On The Record typically charges $20–40 for general admission without a guest list, depending on the night and DJ. Friday and Saturday run the higher end of that range; Wednesday charges less or waives the cover entirely for the industry crowd that gathers midweek. The NoCoverVegas guest list eliminates the cover charge: women receive free entry all night on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, and men enter free before 12:30 AM on Fridays and Saturdays with an equal or better female-to-male ratio. Wednesday has the most relaxed guest list rules — men can often enter free into the early morning hours without strict ratio enforcement. Guest list sign-up closes at 10:00 PM on event nights — register in advance rather than attempting same-day sign-up. For a group of 8, the NoCoverVegas guest list saves $160–320 in cover charges before anyone orders a drink.

How does On The Record compare to other Park MGM nightlife options?

On The Record is Park MGM's primary late-night nightclub venue, operating Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday from 10 PM to 4 AM. Park MGM's entertainment campus also includes Dolby Live at Park MGM — the 5,200-seat concert hall that hosts major residencies — which creates a natural pairing for visitors attending a show earlier in the evening. T-Mobile Arena is adjacent to Park MGM via a covered interior footbridge, making On The Record the default post-event nightclub for groups coming from arena concerts, UFC events, or NBA games next door. Within Park MGM itself, On The Record operates as the only dedicated nightclub — the property's restaurant and bar program at NoMad and Eataly provides pre-club dining options that lead directly to On The Record for the late-night segment. The combination of a major concert venue, arena adjacency, and dedicated nightclub in a single property makes Park MGM the most complete entertainment campus on the south Strip for groups who want a full evening arc without changing properties.

Where is On The Record located?

On The Record is located at 3770 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109, inside Park MGM. Park MGM. The venue is accessible by rideshare, taxi, or personal vehicle. If you're staying on the Las Vegas Strip, most rideshare services will drop you off directly at the entrance. Parking is available at Park MGM for guests who prefer to drive.

What are On The Record hours of operation?

On The Record is open Wed, Fri–Sat, 10 PM – 4 AM. Hours may vary on holidays and during special events like EDC Week, New Year's Eve, or major conventions. It's always a good idea to check the current schedule before heading out, especially on weeknights when some venues may close earlier than usual. Guest list check-in typically begins when doors open.

How much does it cost to get into On The Record?

Normally $20-40 cover — FREE with NoCoverVegas guest list. Cover charges at Las Vegas nightclubs can fluctuate significantly depending on the night of the week, whether a special event or celebrity DJ is performing, and the time of year. Holiday weekends and major convention weeks often see higher door prices. The most reliable way to avoid cover charges entirely is to sign up for the free NoCoverVegas guest list before you arrive.

What is the dress code at On The Record?

Upscale casual to nightclub attire. No athletic wear or sandals.. Las Vegas nightclubs enforce dress codes strictly at the door, and being turned away after waiting in line is a common experience for underprepared guests. For men, collared shirts, dress shoes, and well-fitted jeans or slacks are the safest bet. Women have more flexibility but should aim for upscale nightlife attire. Avoid athletic wear, flip-flops, excessively baggy clothing, and visible logos or sports jerseys.

Can I get free entry to On The Record?

Yes — the easiest way to get free entry to On The Record is through the NoCoverVegas guest list. Sign up using the form on this page with your name, date, and group size. You'll receive a text confirmation with check-in details. Arrive before the guest list cutoff time, check in at the guest list entrance, and walk in without paying cover. There are no hidden fees, no minimum spend requirements, and no obligation to purchase anything once inside.

How do I get on the On The Record guest list?

Getting on the On The Record guest list through NoCoverVegas takes about 30 seconds. Fill out the guest list form on this page with your first name, last name, phone number, the date you want to go, and your group size. You'll receive a text confirmation with your reservation details and the guest list cutoff time. On the night of your visit, arrive at On The Record before the cutoff, give your name at the guest list entrance, and enjoy free entry for your entire group.

What are the guest list rules at On The Record?

To enter On The Record at Park MGM, navigate to the working vinyl record store on the Park MGM casino floor — a staffed retail shop, not a themed prop — and walk through the hidden speakeasy entrance concealed behind the back wall of the store. No visible nightclub signage exists from the casino floor; the record store itself is the only landmark. Women receive complimentary entry all night with the NoCoverVegas guest list on Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. Men enter free before 12:30 AM on Fridays and Saturdays with an equal or better female-to-male ratio; Wednesday has significantly more relaxed ratio enforcement and a lower walk-in cover, making it the most accessible night for groups that skew male-heavy or for visitors on a midweek Las Vegas trip. Guest list sign-up closes at 10:00 PM on event nights — register in advance via NoCoverVegas, not at the door. Dress code: upscale casual nightclub attire required; no athletic wear, sandals, or sports jerseys on any night. The guest list covers all three rooms under one entry: the main Rolls-Royce DJ booth dance floor, the outdoor double-decker bus DJ patio, and the private karaoke rooms — though private karaoke rooms are bookable separately by reservation if the group wants a dedicated window of the evening entirely under their own control. Park MGM is directly adjacent to T-Mobile Arena via a covered interior footbridge, making On The Record the most practical post-concert destination for groups leaving UFC events, NBA games, or arena shows next door. Open Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, 10 PM – 4 AM. 21+ with valid government-issued photo ID.. These rules are standard across most Las Vegas nightclubs and are designed to manage capacity and maintain the venue's atmosphere. Following the guest list guidelines ensures a smooth check-in experience. If your group composition changes after signing up, you can submit a new guest list entry with updated details through NoCoverVegas at no cost.

How much is bottle service at On The Record?

Starting at $500. Bottle service pricing at On The Record varies depending on the table location, night of the week, and performing artist. Prime tables near the DJ booth or dance floor command higher minimums than those in quieter sections. Your bottle service package includes a dedicated table, a VIP host, mixers, and expedited entry. Contact NoCoverVegas for a personalized quote based on your group size and preferred date.

What kind of music does On The Record play?

On The Record features Hip Hop, Top 40, Open Format. The music style can vary depending on the night of the week and the performing artist. Headliner DJ nights tend to lean heavily into the DJ's signature genre, while open-format nights feature a broader mix of music styles. Check the events calendar for specific DJ lineups and theme nights to find the sound that matches your taste.

What are the best nights to go to On The Record?

Friday and Saturday are the busiest nights. Wednesday is a great low-key option.. Friday and Saturday are the busiest and most energetic nights at nearly every Las Vegas nightclub, with the biggest DJ talent and highest cover charges. Weeknight events often feature strong lineups at lower prices with shorter lines. If you're on a budget or prefer a less crowded experience, Thursday and Sunday nights offer excellent value. Sign up for the guest list regardless of which night you choose to guarantee free entry.

How much are drinks at On The Record?

Mixed drinks $16–25, Beers $12, Bottles from $500. Drink prices at Las Vegas nightclubs are notably higher than typical bars, which is standard across the industry. Cocktails and mixed drinks tend to be the most expensive, while beer offers a relatively more affordable option. There is no drink minimum when entering on the guest list. If you want to manage your budget, consider pre-gaming responsibly at your hotel before heading out and pacing yourself throughout the night.

What is the age requirement at On The Record?

All guests must be 21 years of age or older to enter On The Record. A valid government-issued photo ID is required at the door — acceptable forms include a driver's license, state ID, passport, or military ID. Expired IDs are not accepted. International visitors should bring their passport as the primary form of identification, since foreign driver's licenses may not be accepted at all venues. There are no exceptions to the age policy, even for guests on the guest list.

What should I expect at On The Record?

On The Record at Park MGM is the most creatively designed nightlife venue in Las Vegas — a 11,000-square-foot speakeasy concept where entry is hidden behind a working record store storefront off the Park MGM casino floor. Once inside, three distinct rooms offer completely different atmospheres: a main room dance floor with a DJ booth built into a salvaged Rolls-Royce, an outdoor patio anchored by a double-decker bus that serves as a second DJ stage, and private karaoke rooms for groups who want their own sound. Opened in 2018 by Two Bit Circus creators with a vinyl and music memorabilia aesthetic throughout, On The Record celebrates music culture in a way no other Vegas club does — framed platinum records, vintage gear, and curated sound define every room. The craft cocktail program is one of the most considered in Vegas nightlife, with bartenders who rotate in as guest artists alongside the DJs. The venue programs hip-hop, Top 40, and open format across its intimate 800-person capacity, making it the go-to for groups who want energy without the overwhelming scale of the Strip mega-clubs. Wednesday night has become a local industry staple, drawing off-duty service industry workers from across the Strip. Enter through a working record store. DJ booth built into a Rolls-Royce. Double-decker bus outdoor DJ stage. Once inside, you'll find a high-energy atmosphere with professional sound and lighting systems, multiple bars, and a large dance floor. The DJ booth is the focal point, with resident and guest DJs performing sets that typically run from 10:30 PM until close. Plan to arrive early if you want to secure a good spot near the action.

What time should I arrive at On The Record?

For guest list entry, plan to arrive at On The Record before the guest list cutoff time, which is typically around 12:00-12:30 AM for most Las Vegas nightclubs. Arriving between 10:30 and 11:30 PM gives you the best experience — you'll skip the longest lines, have your pick of spots inside the venue, and enjoy the full night. If you arrive after the cutoff, you'll need to pay the general admission cover charge at the door. On busy nights like Fridays, Saturdays, and holiday weekends, arriving earlier is strongly recommended.

Is On The Record good for a group or celebration?

On The Record is one of the most popular Las Vegas venues for group celebrations including birthdays, bachelor and bachelorette parties, corporate outings, and milestone events. The NoCoverVegas guest list accommodates groups of all sizes — simply enter your total group count when you sign up. For larger groups or special occasions, bottle service provides a reserved table with dedicated VIP service. Groups should coordinate arrival times to ensure everyone checks in together before the guest list cutoff.

How much should I budget for a night at On The Record?

With the free NoCoverVegas guest list, your biggest expense is drinks once inside. Mixed drinks $16–25, Beers $12, Bottles from $500. Budget roughly $50-100 per person for a comfortable night including drinks and rideshare transportation. You can reduce costs by using the guest list for free entry (saving $20-40 per person), pre-gaming at your hotel, and splitting a rideshare with your group. Bottle service starts at a higher price point but includes drinks and a reserved table for your group.

What is the atmosphere like at On The Record?

The most creatively designed nightclub in Las Vegas — 11,000 square feet hidden behind a working record store, with a Rolls-Royce DJ booth in the main room, a double-decker bus outdoor DJ stage on the patio, and private karaoke rooms bookable by groups. Three completely different environments under one roof: interior dance floor with the Rolls-Royce booth as the visual anchor, open-air patio with the bus stage above the crowd, and private rooms where the group controls its own sound and pace entirely. The craft cocktail program rotates guest bartenders alongside the DJs, making the bar a parallel performance stage rather than a service counter. At 800-person capacity, the venue operates at a social scale where groups maintain cohesion across the room — large enough for genuine energy, intimate enough that a group of 8 to 10 stays together rather than fragmenting across a massive floor. Best for groups who want creativity over spectacle, intimacy over scale, and a club entrance that becomes its own story the moment the group walks through the record store into the speakeasy.. The atmosphere at On The Record reflects the high-energy, premium nightlife experience that Las Vegas is famous for. The venue spans 11,000 square feet, providing space for up to 800 guests and a mix of intimate and open areas throughout the space. Whether you're there for the music, the social scene, or a special celebration, the energy builds as the night progresses and peaks around midnight through 2 AM.

How do I get to On The Record?

Rideshare: Rideshare dropoff at Park MGM main entrance on Las Vegas Blvd. Enter through the casino floor — look for the record store entrance. Parking: Self-parking at Park MGM garage ($15). Valet at Park MGM main entrance ($30+). If you're staying on the Strip, most nightclubs are within a 10-15 minute rideshare. Plan your return ride in advance, as surge pricing is common after 2 AM on weekends.

Complete Guide

Explore Everything at On The Record

Detailed guides for every aspect of your On The Record experience — from guest list signup to bottle service pricing, best nights, and upcoming events.

Guest Reviews

On The Record Reviews

What guests are saying about their experience at On The Record

4 out of 5 · 1 reviews

First Vegas trip and was overwhelmed with options. Texted NoCoverVegas and they helped me pick the best clubs for our group's vibe. Ended up at On The Record and it was the perfect speakeasy night out.

Emily D.

Pittsburgh, PA

Oct 2025
On The Record

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Park MGM Las Vegas

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On The RecordDuring Holidays & Special Events

On The Record hosts special events during major Las Vegas holidays and weekends. Plan ahead and get on the guest list early for these high-demand nights.

Free Guest List

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Next Major Holiday — Jul 3–5

July 4th Weekend — 4th of July Las Vegas 2026

On The Record at Park MGM programs July 4th weekend (July 3–5) with hip-hop, Top 40, and open format DJs. Park MGM connects directly to T-Mobile Arena via a covered footbridge — the most convenient nightclub for groups extending Independence Day after arena shows or the post-fireworks Strip walk. Three simultaneous environments: the Rolls-Royce DJ booth main room, the double-decker bus outdoor patio stage, and private karaoke rooms.

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Juneteenth Weekend Las Vegas 2026

On The Record at Park MGM programs Juneteenth weekend (June 19–21) with hip-hop and open format DJs — the most creatively designed nightclub on the Strip for a holiday weekend centered on Black music culture. Three environments run simultaneously: the Rolls-Royce DJ booth main room, double-decker bus outdoor patio stage, and private karaoke rooms. Park MGM connects directly to T-Mobile Arena — the natural Juneteenth destination after arena concerts or events.

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On the Record at Park MGM is the vinyl-bar-meets-nightclub format that delivers the most distinctively curated Black Hat USA 2026 nightlife experience during the Aug 1–6 convention run at Mandalay Bay. The record library aesthetic and genre-spanning programming — vinyl-era hip-hop, funk, and curated electronic — create an environment where the music selection is as technically considered as the conference itself. Park MGM is adjacent to MGM Grand, one tram stop from Mandalay Bay — the most transit-accessible mid-Strip venue from the convention hotel. Free guest list through NoCoverVegas.

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On The Record at Park MGM serves Cosmoprof North America 2026 attendees (Jul 13–15 at Mandalay Bay) with an intimate vinyl-bar format that offers a departure from the large-scale nightclub experience. The listening lounge and private karaoke suites appeal to beauty industry creative professionals looking for a social setting that supports conversation and networking alongside music. Free guest list through NoCoverVegas.

Three Environments, One Venue

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On The Record operates three completely distinct environments simultaneously: the main room with its DJ booth built into a salvaged Rolls-Royce, the outdoor patio where a vintage double-decker bus serves as an elevated DJ stage, and private karaoke rooms bookable by groups. No Las Vegas nightclub at 800-person capacity offers this range of experiences within a single venue — the speakeasy entrance through a working record store is only the beginning.

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Complete Guide

Explore Everything at On The Record

Detailed guides for every aspect of your On The Record experience — from guest list signup to bottle service pricing, best nights, and upcoming events.