VIP Table Guide
On The Record Bottle Service — Rolls-Royce DJ Booth, Double-Decker Bus Stage & Karaoke Rooms
On The Record at Park MGM is the most distinctively designed nightclub in Las Vegas and the only one entered through a working vinyl record store whose back wall conceals the club entrance. Inside, three environments operate simultaneously: the main room where the DJ booth is built from the body of a salvaged Rolls-Royce automobile, the outdoor patio featuring a vintage double-decker bus as an elevated second DJ stage, and a bank of private karaoke rooms bookable by groups for controlled private sessions. Bottle service ranges from $500 for outdoor patio positions to $1,000for the Record Parlor — the main room VIP position directly adjacent to the Rolls-Royce booth. The karaoke rooms add a group format available nowhere else on the Strip: private singing rooms bookable alongside main room table service in the same venue.
Text (725) 999-9293 or use the form below to check table and karaoke room availability.
Venue Architecture
Three Environments in 11,000 Square Feet — Main Room, Patio & Karaoke
On The Record distributes its 11,000-square-foot footprint across three distinct environments that all operate simultaneously from opening through close. No other nightclub in Las Vegas offers this specific combination — main DJ room, outdoor stage patio, and private karaoke rooms as a unified venue under a single reservation system.
The Main Room — Rolls-Royce DJ Booth
The main dance floor surrounds the Rolls-Royce DJ booth: the salvaged automobile body mounted behind the DJ position forms the visual centerpiece of the room. The car body — a functional prop that positions the DJ literally inside the chassis of the car — is the most photographed DJ booth in Las Vegas and the defining visual identity of On The Record. The Record Parlor VIP table positions the group directly adjacent to this booth at a $1,000 minimum. The main room capacity of 800 persons creates an intimate scale where the Record Parlor table is genuinely close to the performance rather than at a social distance.
The Outdoor Patio — Double-Decker Bus Stage
The outdoor patio at On The Record features a vintage double-decker bus as an elevated DJ stage — DJ equipment is mounted on the upper level of the bus, with the audience surrounding it at ground level on the patio. Patio bottle service tables are positioned around the bus-stage area. Patio positions carry lower minimums than main room tables (starting around $500) and are the correct choice for groups that prefer open-air environments or want table service outside the enclosed main room on warm Las Vegas nights. The patio and main room run simultaneous DJ sets, so groups can move between environments freely.
Private Karaoke Rooms
On The Record's private karaoke rooms seat 8 to 15 guests with a dedicated private sound system and a dedicated server. Rooms are booked by the hour with optional bottle service. The karaoke rooms can be bundled with a Record Parlor or patio table reservation for groups that want to rotate between private singing and the main club floor across the same evening. For bachelorette parties, birthday groups, and corporate teams that want a mix of private activity and nightclub access, the karaoke-plus-table combination at On The Record is the most specific answer available on the Strip.
2026 Pricing
On The Record Bottle Service Tiers — Record Parlor vs. Patio vs. Karaoke
| Tier | Capacity | Minimum | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patio Table | 4–6 guests | $500 | Outdoor double-decker bus stage area |
| Record Parlor | Up to 6 guests | $1,000 | Main room, adjacent to Rolls-Royce DJ booth |
| Karaoke Room | 8–15 guests | Hourly rate | Private room, bottle service optional |
All-In Cost
Budget 38–42% on top of stated minimums for Nevada sales tax (8.375%), venue administrative fee (10–12%), and gratuity (18–20%). The $1,000 Record Parlor totals approximately $1,380–$1,420 all-in.
Group Planning
Which On The Record Configuration Fits Your Group?
Groups of 4–6 Wanting Nightclub Priority — Record Parlor ($1,000)
The Record Parlor seats up to 6 guests at $1,000 — $167 per person before fees. The position directly adjacent to the Rolls-Royce DJ booth is the most specific VIP experience at On The Record. For a group of 6 where the visual environment and DJ adjacency are the priorities, this is the correct configuration. The 800-person venue scale ensures the Record Parlor is genuinely close to the DJ performance in a way that "DJ-adjacent" means at 7,500-person venues.
Groups of 4–6 Wanting Outdoor Access — Patio Table ($500)
The outdoor patio near the double-decker bus stage starts at $500 — the value entry point for On The Record bottle service. The patio environment runs simultaneously with the main room but offers open-air Las Vegas atmosphere. On warm summer nights (May through September), the outdoor patio is frequently the more comfortable table service environment and the one with fewer competing venues offering the same experience.
Groups of 8–15 Wanting Private Activity — Karaoke Bundle
Private karaoke rooms seating 8 to 15 guests can be combined with either a Record Parlor or patio table. The combination creates a two-phase evening: private karaoke session for the first 1 to 2 hours (controlled group activity, conversation-capable volume), then transition to the main room or patio for the DJ program. The karaoke-plus-nightclub combination makes On The Record the most activity-varied single-venue option on the Las Vegas Strip for groups in the 8 to 15 headcount range.
The Speakeasy Difference
How the Speakeasy Theme Shapes the Bottle Service Experience
On The Record's speakeasy concept is not surface-level theming — it defines the bottle service experience before a drink is ordered. The approach to the venue through a working vinyl record store, the concealed entrance behind the back wall, and the transition from retail shop to nightclub creates a shared group moment that standard nightclub arrivals cannot replicate. For a bottle service group, the arrival sequence becomes the opening act of the evening: finding the record store, walking through the concealed entrance, and stepping into the main room where the Rolls-Royce DJ booth anchors the visual field.
The craft cocktail program reflects the same intentionality. On The Record rotates guest bartenders alongside the DJs — the bar is positioned as a parallel performance stage rather than a service counter. Bottle service packages include the standard setup (mixers, ice, garnishes, dedicated server), but the cocktail menu available to tables runs toward spirit-forward preparations with actual menu depth. For groups that want quality in the glass rather than volume alone, the bar program justifies the attention.
The intimate 800-person capacity means bottle service tables at On The Record deliver proximity that larger venues charge a premium tier to approximate. The Record Parlor at $1,000 places six guests directly adjacent to the Rolls-Royce DJ booth — a position that at Hakkasan or XS would require a $3,000–$5,000 minimum. The scale compression is the structural advantage On The Record offers over Strip mega-clubs for groups that want real DJ-adjacent positioning without the premium that 7,500-person venues charge for the same relative position.
Night-by-Night Guide
Matching Your Group to the Right On The Record Night
On The Record operates three nights per week — Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday — each with a distinct crowd composition and music emphasis. The right night depends on what the group is optimizing for.
Wednesday — Industry Night
Wednesday at On The Record draws off-duty hospitality workers, local Las Vegas residents, and a smaller tourist contingent than peak weekends. The crowd skews more knowledgeable about music, the DJ set runs more eclectic, and the atmosphere is genuinely relaxed in a way that Friday and Saturday cannot sustain. Lower minimums apply, ratio enforcement is less strict for male-heavy groups, and the karaoke rooms are easier to book same-week. Best for: groups visiting midweek, bachelor parties that want a more local atmosphere, industry workers on a night off.
Friday — Peak Night, Hip-Hop and R&B Emphasis
Friday is the busiest night and the highest-energy programming window. The DJ set typically emphasizes hip-hop and R&B with open format mixing — more consistent headliner bookings than Wednesday. The Record Parlor and outdoor patio tables book fastest for Friday. Reserve at least 48 hours out; same-week booking is possible but availability is limited by Thursday. Best for: bachelorette parties, birthday groups, groups that want peak-energy DJ performance.
Saturday — Full Production, Open Format
Saturday runs the full production program across all three environments: main room DJ, outdoor bus stage, and karaoke rooms at capacity. Open format DJs mix across hip-hop, electronic, and Top 40 depending on the night's headliner. The 800-person cap fills by midnight on most Saturdays — guest list and bottle service provide guaranteed entry. Walk-in access is unpredictable after 11:30 PM. Best for: groups that want the complete On The Record experience across all three environments.
First Visit
First-Timer Guide: Navigating On The Record's Unique Layout
On The Record has no visible nightclub signage from the Park MGM casino floor. The entrance is through the working vinyl record store — look for a retail storefront with actual album inventory and display racks. The store operates as a real shop; walk through it to the back wall where the hidden entrance is located. This is the defining moment of the On The Record arrival experience and the detail that no amount of description fully prepares a first-time visitor for until they are standing in the record store.
Once inside, the space splits immediately: the main room with the Rolls-Royce DJ booth is straight ahead, the outdoor patio is accessible through exits on the main room's far side, and the karaoke room corridor branches off to the side. Bottle service guests are met at the entrance by a host who walks them to their table. The venue's 11,000-square-foot layout across three environments is easy to navigate after a first pass — the main room Rolls-Royce booth and the outdoor bus stage are both visually distinctive enough to serve as navigation anchors from any position in the venue.
Park MGM is located at the south end of the Strip, adjacent to T-Mobile Arena via an interior footbridge. The casino floor between the Park MGM hotel entrance and the record store takes about 3–5 minutes to navigate on a first visit. Groups arriving from T-Mobile Arena (concerts, UFC events, NBA games) can use the covered footbridge — from the arena exit to the record store entrance runs under 10 minutes on foot. Self-parking at the Park MGM garage runs $15; valet at the hotel main entrance is $30+. Rideshare drop-off at the Park MGM main entrance on Las Vegas Blvd is the most efficient arrival for groups without a vehicle.
Park MGM Cross-Venue
Park MGM shares a property with the adjacent MGM Grand via the Park MGM resort corridor. The property hosts multiple dining options — On The Record guest list guests arriving from a dinner reservation at Eataly, NoMad Restaurant, or any other Park MGM dining outlet can transition directly from dinner to the record store entrance without leaving the property. For groups that want a complete evening at one resort, Park MGM's food and beverage options make the pre-club dinner practical without a rideshare between venues.
Reserve Your Table
Book On The Record Bottle Service
Record Parlor, patio table, or karaoke bundle — tell us your group size and date. We confirm availability within the hour.
FAQ
On The Record Bottle Service — Frequently Asked Questions
How much is bottle service at On The Record Las Vegas?
On The Record has two primary pricing tiers. The Record Parlor — the signature VIP position adjacent to the Rolls-Royce DJ booth in the main room — starts at a $1,000 minimum spend and accommodates up to 6 guests. Outdoor patio tables near the double-decker bus stage carry lower minimums starting around $500. Private karaoke rooms are a separate booking category, priced by the hour and seating 8 to 15 guests with optional bottle service. Budget approximately 38 to 42% on top of any minimum for Nevada sales tax (8.375%), venue fees, and gratuity.
What is the Record Parlor at On The Record?
The Record Parlor is On The Record's signature VIP table position, named for the salvaged Rolls-Royce automobile body that forms the DJ booth in the main room. The Record Parlor places your group directly adjacent to this booth, giving the most immediate proximity to the DJ within the 800-person venue. At $1,000 for up to 6 guests, the Record Parlor delivers both the visual centerpiece of the venue and the closest table position to the DJ performance.
Does On The Record really have a record store at the entrance?
Yes. On The Record's entrance is through a working vinyl record store — a storefront staffed with an actual vinyl selection that operates as a functional retail shop. The store's back wall conceals the entrance to the club. This is not a theatrical prop; the record shop is an operating retail business. No other Las Vegas nightclub has a hidden entry point functioning as a real business rather than a cosmetic design element.
What is the double-decker bus at On The Record?
On The Record's outdoor patio features a vintage double-decker bus serving as an elevated second DJ stage. The bus is positioned on the outdoor patio as a structural performance platform, with DJ equipment on the upper level and the audience surrounding it at ground level. Outdoor patio bottle service tables are positioned around the bus-stage area and carry lower minimums than the main room Record Parlor, making the patio the value-access tier at On The Record.
Can I book a private karaoke room at On The Record?
Yes. On The Record has private karaoke rooms seating 8 to 15 guests with a dedicated private sound system and dedicated server. Karaoke rooms can be bundled with main room bottle service (Record Parlor or patio table) or booked independently. The karaoke option is the defining group format at On The Record that no other Strip nightclub offers at the same property — the ability to rotate between a private karaoke session and the main club floor over the same evening without leaving the venue.
What music does On The Record play?
On The Record programs a range of music styles reflecting its eclectic record-shop aesthetic — open format DJs mixing hip-hop, R&B, electronic, and throwbacks depending on the night. The 800-person capacity creates an intimate atmosphere that supports a broader music range than the mega-scale EDM venues. Wednesday is On The Record's industry night, drawing a relaxed local crowd. Friday and Saturday are the highest-energy nights with the most consistent headliner bookings.
How does On The Record compare to other Park MGM nightlife options?
On The Record at Park MGM is the only nightclub option on the property and is one of the most creatively designed nightclub environments in Las Vegas regardless of size. The venue's 11,000-square-foot footprint across three distinct environments (main room, outdoor patio, karaoke rooms) makes it more versatile for groups than similarly-sized single-room clubs. The record-store hidden entry, Rolls-Royce DJ booth, and double-decker bus stage create an experience that justifies visiting On The Record specifically rather than treating it as an alternative when preferred venues are full.
More at On The Record
Explore On The Record at Park MGM
On The Record Guest List
Free entry — skip cover on Wednesday, Friday, Saturday.
Wednesday at On The Record
Industry night — relaxed crowd, lowest minimums of the week.
Friday at On The Record
Peak night — Record Parlor and patio tables fill fast.
Bachelorette Parties
Karaoke bundle + Record Parlor — the most versatile group night in Las Vegas.
Birthday Parties
Private karaoke rooms + main room bottle service.
Park MGM Guide
Hotel, dining, and parking details for On The Record visitors.
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Daytime Vegas
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Where to Stay
Las Vegas Hotel Guides
Park MGM
On The Record's home hotel — check in here for no commute to the club.
ARIA Resort & Casino
Neighbor to Park MGM — home to Jewel Nightclub.
The Cosmopolitan
Short walk to On The Record — home to Marquee Nightclub.
MGM Grand
Nearby south Strip anchor — home to Hakkasan and Wet Republic.
Bellagio
Center Strip luxury — close to On The Record and Cheri Rooftop.
Caesars Palace
Center Strip landmark — home to OMNIA Nightclub and OMNIA Dayclub.
Ready to Book?
Reserve Your On The Record Table
Record Parlor, patio, or karaoke bundle — tell us your group size and date and we confirm within the hour. No markup from us.
Or text (725) 999-9293 for a same-day quote.
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.