House Music at On The Record
On The Record does not run a dedicated House night on its weekly calendar, but it's one of the most popular nightclubs on the Strip. This page covers what House sounds like in Vegas, which clubs program it as a recurring night, and how to get on the free guest list at the right room.
Genre Note
On The Record does not currently run a dedicated House night. Its regular programming is centred on Hip Hop, Top 40, Open Format, and any House you'll hear there is likely to come from open-format sets or guest DJs rather than a recurring House event.
If a House-first night is what you're after, scroll to Other Nightclubs with House Music below — those venues program House on a recurring basis. For On The Record specifically, use this page as a primer on the room and the sound, then book the guest list when a House-friendly event lands on their calendar.
The Sound
What House Sounds Like at On The Record
House music nights in Vegas range from deep house to tech house, featuring the genre's signature four-on-the-floor beat, melodic basslines, and hypnotic builds that keep the dance floor moving all night.
At On The Record, the 11,000 square foot venue is built for an incredible sound experience. Located at Park MGM, the club features a world-class sound system that brings House tracks to life with crystal-clear highs and deep, chest-thumping bass.
The Venue Experience
How On The Record Elevates House Music
Spanning 11,000 square feet, On The Record is purpose-built to handle House music at its full potential. Located at Park MGM, the venue's sound architecture is designed around the sound system excels at reproducing the deep, rolling basslines and intricate hi-hat patterns that define house music. The four-on-the-floor kick drum is felt more than heard, creating a physical pulse that drives the dance floor for hours. Mid-frequency warmth carries the melodic elements — piano chords, vocal samples, and synth stabs — with analog richness.
With a capacity for a crowd of up to 800 guests, On The Record is known for 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.. On House nights specifically, the club's design creates an intimate-feeling space even at scale, which is exactly what house music thrives on. The dance floor is the focal point, with lighting that evolves slowly alongside the music rather than flashing aggressively. This creates a hypnotic, immersive environment where you lose track of time and get absorbed in the groove.
Headliners & Residents
DJs Who Play House at On The Record
House is not a recurring billing at On The Record, but the DJs below represent the artists most associated with House in Las Vegas right now. Any House-heavy guest night at On The Record would realistically pull from this tier of talent, and the same names can be caught more reliably at the venues listed in Other Nightclubs with House Music below.
* Lineups rotate weekly. Follow On The Record for the latest announcements.
When to Go
Best Nights for House at On The Record
Friday and Saturday are the busiest nights. Wednesday is a great low-key option.
For House specifically, the biggest nights are typically Friday and Saturday when headliner DJs take the stage. If you want a less crowded experience with the same great music, Thursday nights often feature House sets with shorter lines and a more relaxed atmosphere.
Doors usually open at 10:30 PM, but the dance floor does not really fill up until midnight. For guest list entry, plan to arrive before 12:30 AM — especially on peak nights.
Quick Info
The Crowd
Who Goes to House Nights at On The Record?
House music nights attract a slightly older, more musically sophisticated crowd that appreciates the genre. The vibe is less flashy than EDM nights but the dance floor stays packed with dedicated music fans.
The Scene
House Music in Las Vegas: The Connoisseur's Choice
House music occupies a specific cultural position in Las Vegas nightlife: it is the genre for people who care about the music as much as the social experience. EDM is spectacle. Hip-hop is status. Top 40 is accessibility. House is craft. The house crowd in Las Vegas tends to be more musically informed than other genre crowds, more likely to recognize the DJ's track selections, and more likely to stay on the dance floor for four-plus hours without a break.
Tech house and deep house have grown significantly in Las Vegas over the past five years, driven by a generation of artists — Fisher, Chris Lake, John Summit, Dom Dolla — who have crossover appeal without sacrificing the genre's authenticity. This has created a house music audience in Las Vegas that includes both longtime fans and newcomers who discovered the genre through pop-adjacent tracks before going deeper. The result is a more heterogeneous house crowd than existed five years ago, which has made house nights more commercially viable for major venues.
The physical experience of house music in a large Las Vegas nightclub is distinct from any other genre. The four-on-the-floor kick drum creates a hypnotic pulse that carries through the floor at high volume — you feel it in your chest and legs before your ears register it consciously. The sustained energy of a house DJ set, which typically runs two to four hours without the dramatic peak-and-valley structure of EDM, creates a different kind of dance floor experience: immersive, meditative, and physically demanding in a way that keeps the floor active long after other genre crowds have thinned out.
The social atmosphere at house nights skews later and more committed than other genre nights. The house crowd does not arrive at 11 PM and leave at 1 AM. House regulars arrive around midnight and stay until close, which means the peak hours of a house night — 2 AM to 4 AM — have a different energy than the crowd you find at most Vegas nightclubs during those hours. If you want to experience what Las Vegas nightlife looks like when it is entirely inhabited by people who are genuinely there for the music, a late-night house night is the clearest example.
What to Wear
Dress Code for House Nights at On The Record
The official dress code at On The Record is: Upscale casual to nightclub attire. No athletic wear or sandals. This applies to every event regardless of genre, and door staff enforce it strictly — especially on peak nights. Getting turned away at the door after waiting in line is the worst way to start your night, so plan your outfit in advance.
House music nights attract a fashion-conscious crowd. All-black outfits are always a safe bet. Men should go with slim-fit pants, a minimal designer tee or button-down, and clean shoes. Women often wear sleek, understated outfits — think monochrome looks, simple elegant dresses, or designer jeans with a chic top. The house crowd values subtle style over flashy logos.
Quick Dress Code Checklist
Allowed
- Collared shirts & button-downs
- Dress shoes or clean sneakers
- Dark jeans or tailored pants
- Cocktail dresses & heels
- Blazers & sport coats
Not Allowed
- Athletic wear or jerseys
- Sandals or flip-flops
- Baggy or ripped jeans
- Hats or baseball caps
- Shorts or cargo pants
Insider Tips
House Night Survival Guide for On The Record
These tips are specific to House nights at On The Record — from timing your arrival to finding the best spot on the dance floor.
Timing Your Arrival
House music sets at On The Record are marathon sessions, so there is no rush to arrive at opening. That said, arriving by 11:00 PM gets you through the guest list line quickly and lets you settle into the vibe as the DJ builds the set. The dance floor for house nights tends to be committed — people arrive and stay. Peak energy hits around 11:30 PM – 2:00 AM and sustains through close.
Group Strategy
House music crowds at On The Record tend toward smaller, tighter groups of 2-4. If you are coming with a larger crew, be aware that the dance floor on house nights is more about individual expression and less about group dancing. Find a spot near the DJ booth where your group can spread out without blocking flow. Bottle service sections on house nights are more relaxed and conversational — a good option if part of your group wants to dance while others chill.
Dance Floor Positioning
House music dance floors at On The Record operate on a different wavelength. The energy is sustained and hypnotic rather than peaking and crashing. The center of the floor is where the most dedicated dancers lock in for extended periods. Near the DJ booth you will find people who are deep in the music and appreciate being close to the source. The perimeter of the dance floor on house nights is surprisingly active — people groove at their own pace and drift in and out. Find the area where the bass resonance feels best to you and settle in.
Getting Close to the DJ Booth
House music DJs at On The Record appreciate a knowledgeable crowd near the booth. The area directly in front of the booth on house nights tends to be occupied by regulars and serious music fans who show up early and stay all night. Join them by arriving early and showing genuine appreciation for the music — nodding, dancing, making eye contact with the DJ. House DJs feed off the energy of the front row more than any other genre. Bottle service tables nearest to the booth are the most coveted on house nights.
Why On The Record
What Sets On The Record Apart for House
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.
More House
Other Nightclubs with House Music
Marquee Nightclub & Dayclub
The Cosmopolitan
EDM, House, Hip Hop, Open Format
House nights at Marquee Nightclub & Dayclub →Drai's Nightclub
The Vanderpump Hotel — Basement (formerly The Cromwell)
Hip Hop, R&B, House, Electronic, Top 40
House nights at Drai's Nightclub →More at On The Record
Explore All Music Nights at On The Record
On The Record programs multiple genres throughout the week. Browse every music night and find the sound that fits your group.
Plan Your Visit
Las Vegas Guides
House Nightlife Guides
Pricing & Entry
House Night Costs at On The Record
Knowing what House nights at On The Record cost before you arrive eliminates surprises and helps you budget your night. The standard cover charge is Normally $20-40 cover. For drinks, expect to pay Mixed drinks $16–25, Beers $12, Bottles from $500. Tipping $1-2 per drink or 18-20% on a tab is standard at Vegas nightclubs. A typical night out for one person — cover, 4-5 drinks, and tips — runs roughly $120-180 at On The Record without guest list.
The NoCoverVegas guest list eliminates the cover charge entirely for House nights. For a group of 4, that is approximately $120 saved on cover alone. A group of 6 saves around $180. 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 savings can be redirected toward drinks, bottle service upgrades, or other entertainment during your Vegas trip.
Bottle service at On The Record starts at Starting at $500. For House nights specifically, bottle service is worth considering if your group has 4 or more people. It guarantees entry regardless of guest list ratio requirements, gives you a dedicated section with seating, and includes a dedicated server and mixers. When you factor in what your group would spend on individual drinks plus cover charges, bottle service often breaks even at around 6-8 people while providing a significantly better experience. Ask about House-night table locations when booking — positioning varies by event and some spots offer better sightlines to the DJ booth.
Cover Charge
Normally $20-40 cover
FREE with guest list
Drinks
Mixed drinks $16–25
per cocktail
Bottle Service
$500
minimum spend
House at On The Record — FAQ
Does On The Record play House music?
House is not the primary programming at On The Record. The venue's regular rotation leans toward Hip Hop, Top 40, Open Format, and the House tracks you'll hear are typically limited to open-format sets or guest DJ nights rather than a recurring House-only night. If a House-first experience is what you want, the other clubs listed below are the better fit.
What are the best nights for House at On The Record?
Friday and Saturday are the busiest nights. Wednesday is a great low-key option. House sets are typically featured during peak nights. Check the event calendar for specific DJ announcements.
Which DJs play House at On The Record?
On The Record hosts a rotating lineup of House DJs including names like Fisher, Chris Lake, John Summit, and more. Resident DJs and special guest performers are announced weekly.
How do I get free entry for House night at On The Record?
Sign up for the NoCoverVegas guest list to get free entry to 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.
What is the dress code for House nights at On The Record?
Upscale casual to nightclub attire. No athletic wear or sandals. On House nights specifically, the crowd tends to dress in line with the genre's style — but the venue's standard dress code is always enforced. No athletic wear, hats, or sandals are permitted regardless of the event.
How much does bottle service cost on House nights at On The Record?
Bottle service at On The Record starts at Starting at $500. Prices can vary depending on the night, the DJ performing, and table location. House nights with headliner DJs may have higher minimums. Bottle service includes your table, mixers, and a dedicated server — and it guarantees entry for your group.
What time should I arrive for House at On The Record?
Doors open at 10:30 PM and the dance floor usually fills up by midnight. For guest list entry, arrive before 12:30 AM — this is especially important on peak House nights. The headliner DJ typically starts their set between 12:30 AM and 1:00 AM. Peak hours at On The Record are 11:30 PM – 2:00 AM.
How do I get to On The Record for House night?
Rideshare dropoff at Park MGM main entrance on Las Vegas Blvd. Enter through the casino floor — look for the record store entrance. Self-parking at Park MGM garage ($15). Valet at Park MGM main entrance ($30+). Rideshare is the most popular option for nightclub guests since parking garages close before the club does. Plan your ride home in advance — surge pricing peaks around 2:00 AM to 3:00 AM.
Free Guest List
Skip the Line at On The Record
Free entry for House nights at On The Record. No cover charges.
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.