78 Best Restaurants in Nevada, USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in Nevada - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Scotch 80 Prime

$$$$ | West Side

This steakhouse, in an elegant room with an actual window, is named for the Old Las Vegas neighborhood occupied by the city's power elite. The atmosphere is contemporary but white-tablecloth restrained, and the menu's as beef-centric as you would expect, with steaks from a wood-fired grill on both a standard and sub-menu dedicated to wagyu options. The departures are in the Filipino touches given some dishes, such as the raw bar's tiradito, by chef Marty Red DeLeon Lopez. Showier highlights include a mesquite-fired crustacean tower in two sizes, traditional caviar service, and, of course, an extensive Scotch program. There's a "social hour" from 5 to 7 pm Mondays through Thursdays offering discounts on select entrees as well as cocktails and appetizers.

4321 W. Flamingo Rd., Las Vegas, NV, 89103, USA
702-942–7780
Known For
  • 42-ounce-plus tomahawk rib eye priced by the ounce
  • Window and patio facing the action on Flamingo Road
  • Caviar service and truffle wagyu bites if you're really out to impress
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Barry's Downtown Prime

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

Chef Barry Dakake made a name for himself in this town with his work at N9NE Steakhouse inside the Palms (back when the Palms was at the forefront of cool). This new eponymous restaurant, on the lowest level of Circa Las Vegas, is a mix of old and new, blending classics from N9NE with modern dishes and a variety of fish and shellfish. Big parties love the bone marrow appetizer, which includes the opportunity to drink a shot of vodka through a hallowed-out bone. Another crowd favorite: seafood towers, which come in a variety of sizes. Cocktails here are strong and creative; some are made tableside by scantily clad mixologists working different cocktail carts. The dining room at Barry's is swanky and sophisticated, with plenty of hidden alcoves. Perhaps the only demerit: sometimes the music can be deafening. 

Bazaar Meat by José Andrés

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

This restaurant, which has relocated from the Sahara to the Venetian, is clearly all about meat. There are "little snacks" such as famed Chef José Andrés's signature cotton-candy foie gras, and Ferran Adria "olives," the latter a nod to the legend's molecular gastronomy. Japanese beef is sold by the ounce, including certified wagyu. The "Big Guys" are bone-in ribeyes from four sources, priced by the pound. There's also skirt steak, Chateaubriand, chicken, lamb, sausages, and pork (including whole and quarter suckling pigs, the latter of which must be ordered in advance. "Meats from the Sea" include Maine lobster Thermidor, and there's a raw bar, meat bar (tartares and carpaccios) and "The Jamon Experience," featuring Jamon Iberico de Bellota. Two tasting menus and celiac, vegetarian, and pescatarian menus are tailored to various wants and needs.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Brezza

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

This sleek restaurant may be decorated primarily in neutrals, but the food by James Beard–nominated chef Nicole Brisson brings plenty of color. Her updated Italian classics include Tuscan carne cruda with lemon, capers, and shallots; herb tagliatelle with rabbit ragu; a whole branzino; and a 120-day dry-aged 42-ounce tomahawk. At lunch, choices include a sausage and fontina tart, and charred octopus. Ciccetti Hour is from 3:30 to 5 pm daily. When the weather’s grand, dine on the lovely expansive patio, which is surrounded by olive trees saved from the old Stardust.

3000 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-676–6014
Known For
  • Rising chef Nicole Brisson
  • Classic dishes with original takes
  • Expansive patio with olive trees

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Craftsteak Las Vegas

$$$$ | South Strip Fodor's Choice

Top Chef star and James Beard Award–winning chef Tom Colicchio presides over this streamlined spot tucked into a corner of the MGM Grand’s Restaurant Row. The menu is as sophisticated as the surroundings, with an emphasis on top-shelf beef, including Japanese Certified A5 Wagyu as a rib eye or New York strip, plus domestic Wagyu, dry-aged and prime beef, and seafood, including lobster, diver scallops, and a tower. 

3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-891–7318
Known For
  • Impeccable service
  • Beef, including certified A5 Wagyu
  • Tom Colicchio's Top-Chef cuisine
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Edgewood Tahoe

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The three restaurants at Stateline's classy resort, all in spaces that make the most of the lakeside setting, deliver some of the area's best dining, if on the pricey side. Head to the Bistro for casual-fancy breakfast, lunch, and dinner; Brooks Bar & Grill for inventive lunch and dinner comfort food; and the Edgewood Restaurant for evening fine dining with views across the lake to Mt. Tallac.

estiatorio Milos

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

The rare Greek restaurant on the Las Vegas Strip certainly doesn't disappoint, although you'll pay exceedingly well for the experience. Chef Costas Spiliadis flies in fresh fish from the Mediterranean; you pick out the piece of fish at market price and select how you'd like it prepared. Starters such as Greek bottarga are a nice complement to the main courses. Also worth sampling: the Milos Special, lightly fried zucchini with eggplant, tzatziki, and saganaki cheese. And the aesthetic experience matches the cuisine, the architecture echoing ancient Greece with stone, wood, and marble. The Greek gods would approve.

3355 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-414–1270
Known For
  • Fish from the Mediterranean
  • Updated Greek classics
  • Evocative Greek atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Reservations essential

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The Golden Steer Steakhouse

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

In a town where restaurants come and go almost as quickly as visitors' cash, the longevity of this steak house, which opened in 1958, is itself a recommendation. Both locals and visitors adore the classic atmosphere with red-leather seating, polished dark wood, and stained-glass windows for the huge slabs of well-prepared meat. Steak, prime rib, lamb chops, king crab legs, and Italian classics such as eggplant parmigiana and chicken of the angels are particularly popular, as are tableside preparations of Caesar salad, bananas foster, and cherries jubilee. Some of the booths are reputed to be the same ones where Elvis, Frank Sinatra, and other members of the Rat Pack—not to mention some infamous mobsters—used to sit.

308 W. Sahara Ave., Las Vegas, NV, 89102, USA
702-384–4470
Known For
  • Rat Pack–era vibe
  • Dark, opulent atmosphere
  • Table-side preparations
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Hugo's Cellar

$$$$ | Downtown Fodor's Choice

This venerable restaurant dates to the Rat Pack era. The "cellar" aspect (it's about a half-flight below ground) gives it a cozy feel, as do Old Vegas touches like table-side salad preparation with every dinner (you choose what you want from the cart), a red rose for each woman, and formal, impeccable service. The menu presents a 1960s vibe, with dishes like Duck Anise Flambé, chateaubriand and lobster for two, and table-side cherries jubilee and bananas Foster. But entrées are prepared with modern sensibilities and are joined by new-era choices like a grilled stuffed portobello mushroom and other vegetarian entrées.

202 Fremont St., Las Vegas, NV, 89101, USA
702-385–4011
Known For
  • Cozy, semi-underground location
  • Lots of table-side service
  • Menu of old Las Vegas classics
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential

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Lakeside

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

The Lake of Dreams is the crown jewel of Wynn Las Vegas, and Lakeside is the setting. If the weather’s pleasant, opt for a waterside table with a view of the outdoor water show and the resort’s pine forest. You’ll find lots of classics on this menu, such as bouillabaisse, roasted lobsters, and king crab, as well as an array of steaks. Caviar is served with warm blini and toast points for that authentic experience.

3131 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-770–3310
Known For
  • Dishes such as bouillabaisse, roasted lobsters
  • Outdoor tables line resort's lake
  • Polished, elegant service
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Le Bistro

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Incline Village's hidden gem—this restaurant is hard to find, so ask for directions when you book—serves French-country cuisine in a romantic dining room with single-stem roses adorning linen-dressed tables. The menu, offered prix fixe (a good deal) or à la carte, might include starters like flame-broiled eggplant with ratatouille or escargots, several salads (try the Caesar with white anchovies), and rack of lamb with lentils and tamarind jus or coquille St.-Jacques (scallops in cream sauce).

120 Country Club Dr., Incline Village, NV, 89451, USA
775-831–0800
Known For
  • Romantic setting
  • Wine pairings
  • Gracious service
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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Morimoto Las Vegas

$$$$ | South Strip Fodor's Choice

When "Iron Chef" Masaharu Morimoto opened his restaurant in what he proudly called "the most famous city in the world," it marked his first foray into teppanyaki, sure to be popular with conventioneers. There's also sushi and sashimi, of course, and some of his standards: braised black cod with a ginger-soy reduction, and tuna pizza with anchovy aioli, olives, and jalapeños. The menu includes oysters with foie gras and uni, as well as ishi yaki chashu bop and ishi yaki buri boppork or yellowtail-rich dishes cooked at your table in a hot stone bowlplus a selection of steaks. It's all served in an expansive, streamlined spot on MGM Resort's restaurant row. 

3799 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-891–3001
Known For
  • Food by the original Iron Chef
  • Sushi, teppanyaki, and conventional dining
  • Dramatic black-and-white interior
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Mott 32

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

Hong Kong street food comes to life at this lively and architecturally stunning restaurant inside The Palazzo at The Venetian Resort Las Vegas. The first U.S. outpost of the Hong Kong original, it features specialties such as applewood-smoked 42-day Peking duck, as well as dim sum, lobster prepared like mapo tofu, and imported wagyu beef. Brunch 32 offers dishes such as crab roe siu mai from 10:30 am to 3:30 pm weekends, and The Dim Sum Social goes from 1 to 3:30 pm Fridays. The restaurant’s design is notable; put together by Joyce Wang in collaboration with Maximal Concepts, the vibe blends urban industrial with Chinese Imperial elements. Be on the lookout for the circular table with a roulette wheel in the center.  The famous Peking duck has to be ordered at least 24 hours in advance, but the numbers are limited, so order it as far in advance as possible.

NoMad Library Restaurant

$$$$ | South Strip Fodor's Choice

Grandiose, spectacular, and heart-stopping are three words to describe NoMad Library Restaurant, tucked away at NoMad Las Vegas, which itself is tucked away at Park MGM. Set up to look like a private library, the restaurant has 40-foot ceilings and is ringed with shelves of books—a backdrop that creates an intimate and sophisticated vibe. The food is worthy of this setting. Many dishes are communal, meaning they're designed to share. A signature dish is an American wagyu prime rib (rubbed with porcini and black garlic) or a roasted chicken with foie gras and truffle stuffing (both for two). A seafood platter or caviar service is a nice way to start, and tuna tartare is prepared tableside. Next door, in the NoMad Bar, a more casual menu is available for dinner and late-night bites.

3772 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-730–6788
Known For
  • Breathtaking atmosphere
  • Delicious communal dishes like prime rib, stuffed chicken, or seafood platter
  • Dishes to serve one, two or more
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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Peacock Alley

$$$$ | Center Strip Fodor's Choice

The Waldorf Astoria has extended its Peacock Alley brand with an outlet on the 23rd floor of the Las Vegas resort in the space formerly called the Tea Lounge. Lounge seating and floor-to-ceiling windows make for a comfortably elegant vibe, and a bar adorned with feather motifs and a blue-and-gray palette to carry out the theme. Afternoon tea is served at three seatings Wednesdays through Sundays, with a menu of tea sandwiches and scones and two exclusive tea blends. 

3752 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89158, USA
702-590–8888
Known For
  • Variety of fresh fruit Bellinis
  • Wide selection of teas and tisanes
  • Reservations necessary most days
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Restaurant Guy Savoy

$$$$ | Center Strip Fodor's Choice

In an ultraswank dining room on the second floor of the Augustus Tower, Michelin three-star chef Guy Savoy introduces diners to his masterful creations, such as crispy branzino roulade with ceviche and fennel. The seven-course 5 Star Celebration Menu features signature dishes like the artichoke-and-black-truffle soup and binchotan-charred octopus with caviar. Prices are a little lower if you opt for the à la carte menu. The selections from Savoy's 15,000-bottle wine cellar only add to this restaurant's epicurean mystique.

3570 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-731–7286
Known For
  • One of Las Vegas's best
  • Caviar room
  • $1,000 Menu of Prestige with Louis XIII cognac
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues. No lunch

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Wing Lei

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

With all the panache of an Asian royal palace, this fine-dining restaurant serves some of the choicest Chinese food on the Strip. Chefs present contemporary French-inspired cuisine that blends the Cantonese, Shanghai, and Sichuan traditions. The decadent imperial Peking duck dinner, carved table-side, is a showstopper, but don't overlook options that could include fried prawns with candied walnuts and a kalamansi-honey sauce, garlic beef tenderloin with black-pepper sauce, or the amazing Three Cup Sea Bass with ginger-soy reduction. Vegan options are available.

3131 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-770-3388
Known For
  • Fine Chinese food
  • Peking duck
  • Elegant atmosphere
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch

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Aqua Seafood & Caviar Restaurant

$$$$ | North Strip

Caviar Bar has tweaked its name to clarify its broader mission, but Michelin-starred chef Shaun Hergatt is still at the helm, and this still is the place if caviar is your thing. Hergatt brings his A game with at least six types of the precious little fish eggs; caviar appears in such dishes as Tasmanian ocean trout with calamansi and trout roe, but there are plenty of (fish) egg-less dishes, too, including seared foie gras, Alaskan black cod, steaks, and fresh oysters. Needless to say, you can also order your caviar in portions of 50 or 125 grams, and the menu offers many other selections from the shellfish and raw bar.

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3000 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-676–7936
Known For
  • At least six types of caviar neat
  • Caviar used in some dishes
  • Shellfish and raw bar
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Bacchanal Buffet

$$$$ | Center Strip

Caesars Palace completely revamped its buffet experience with the Bacchanal Buffet. It's a culinary extravaganza of more than 250 menu items daily, plus nine chef-attended action stations and the support of 10 kitchens, with an emphasis on seasonality. Made-to-order sushi, baked-to-order soufflés, pizza made in a wood-burning oven, and individual portions of dishes that are served in steam tables elsewhere are consumed in three distinct dining areas with glass, wood, and steel decor themes. As at most buffets, brunch is served—Bacchanal's features snow crab—which is served from 1 to 3 pm Mondays and Thursdays and 9 am to 3 pm Friday through Sunday.

3580 Las Vegas Blvd., Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-731–7928
Known For
  • Many made-to-order specialties
  • Huge selection of more than 250 dishes
  • Dining-room atmosphere

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Bardot Brasserie

$$$$ | Center Strip

Michael Mina’s stunning Belle Époque dark-wood-and-glass wonder on the mezzanine level of ARIA has, as you might expect, a decidedly French accent, and old-world glory shines in dishes such as caviar deviled eggs, crêpe madame, and sea bass Provençal for two. At brunch, which runs from 9 am to 2 pm Friday through Sunday, you can indulge in French toast with vanilla mascarpone and almond brittle, or the pastry selection that includes canelés and kouign-amanns. Happy hour is from 5 to 7 pm daily, accompanied by cocktails like La Vie en Rose and Le Pêche Mode.

3730 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89158, USA
877-230--2742
Known For
  • Foie gras parfait
  • Bardot Wellington for two
  • Black truffle cavatelli
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.–Tues. No lunch

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Bavette's Steakhouse & Bar

$$$$ | South Strip

With tufted leather banquettes, subdued lighting, and dark decor accents, Bavette's, inside Park MGM, offers a much stronger dose of Gallic flair than the typical Las Vegas steak house. The restaurant offers a full complement of popular steak cuts ranging from a 32-ounce wagyu Porterhouse to a 6-ounce filet mignon, as well as seafood, steakhouse sides and a few vegan selections. Following in the tradition of its Chicago progenitor, the bar pours classic cocktails and curates an international wine list. If you feel like getting cozy, the speakeasy-style lounge has an air of intimacy.

3770 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-730–6500
Known For
  • French flair
  • Old-school cocktails and lively bar scene
  • Classic steak-and-seafood preparations
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Bazaar Mar

$$$$ | Center Strip

Legendary chef Jose Andres has built on the success of his longtime Bazaar Meats on the North Strip with his newest entry on the Center Strip, at the Shops at Crystals. Here, as you might guess, the emphasis is on seafood, presented in a theatrical atmosphere. There’s an extensive raw bar and whole fish grilled, fried, baked in sea salt, or as sashimi. Guests are invited to “sea what else” as in rossejat, a traditional paella of toasted pasta with spider crab gratin, or Alaskan king crab chawanmushi, with umami egg custard. “Little sandwiches” include the Po Boy Jose (with fried squid) and Not So Po Boy Jose (with fried oysters and caviar), but carnivores aren’t forgotten.

3720 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-803--1100
Known For
  • Culinary lion Jose Andres at the helm
  • Seafood counterpart to Bazaar Meat
  • Whole fish prepared several ways
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Beaujolais Bistro

$$$$

Across from the Truckee River, this Reno favorite serves earthy, country-style French food—escargots, cassoulet, steak frites with red wine sauce, sweetbreads with Madeira, and fish and vegetarian selections—with zero pretension. Wooden floors, large windows, and brick walls with a fireplace create a welcoming and intimate atmosphere.

753 Riverside Dr., Reno, NV, 89503, USA
775-323–2227
Known For
  • Inventive cocktails
  • Intimate atmosphere
  • More casual experience at the bar
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch

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The Bedford by Martha Stewart

$$$$ | Center Strip

The doyenne of domesticity and queen of all things culinary opened her first restaurant in late 2022 at Paris Las Vegas, and the raves just keep on coming. It’s named for her beloved New York farmhouse and designed to evoke a farmhouse-to-table ethos, with clean-lined rustic furniture and a plethora of plants along the boulevard that winds through the resort. Some carp about the high price of the roasted chicken for two (a half-chicken for one also is available), but in the next breath proclaim it the best extant. Big Martha’s Pierogis are here among many of Martha’s favorites, and in an only-in-Vegas touch, you can get them topped with golden osetra caviar. There’s also a four-course prix-fixe menu of the classics, and a selection of specialty cocktails (along with beers and wines) that include the Martha-tini and two Martha-ritas. Brunch is served Friday through Sunday.

3655 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-946–4361
Known For
  • Expensive (albeit delicious) roast chicken for two
  • Pierogis with caviar on top
  • Good cocktails
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Bourbon Steak

$$$$ | South Strip

Renowned chef Michael Mina has added to his stable of Las Vegas restaurants with this intimate spot at the Four Seasons. Some of the dishes that made Mina famous are here—the lobster pot pie, his caviar "Twinkiee"—but as you’d expect the stars are the steaks. The list of offerings includes a filet mignon, wagyu rib cap, bone-in or boneless ribeye, as well as a hay-smoked and salt-baked bourbon-flamed tomahawk ribeye, if you’re feeling especially flush. Non-beef options include chicken, duck, and seafood.

3960 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89119, USA
702-405--1896
Known For
  • From award-winning chef Michael Mina
  • Top-quality steaks
  • Mina's whimsical creations
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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The Buffet at Bellagio

$$$$ | Center Strip

Step into the regal dining room, tricked out with opulent chandeliers and elegant artwork, and any doubt that a buffet could meet Bellagio's standards vanishes. Even the most discerning foodie should find something to like among the bone marrow, pork belly, crab legs, oysters, shrimp and grits, made-to-order crêpes, and elaborate pastries. Some call the buffet overrated and overcrowded, but don't be put off by the naysayers—if you skip items that you could easily get at any Vegas buffet (such as pizzas from the wood-fired oven), you'll do well here. The staff does a first-rate job tending to everybody's needs. Beverage packages—offering two hours of mimosas, beer, margaritas, and more—are available.

3600 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-693–8111
Known For
  • Selection includes eclectic dishes
  • Elegant atmosphere
  • Unique dining experience
Restaurant Details
No dinner weekdays

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The Buffet at Wynn Las Vegas

$$$$ | North Strip

The Wynn prides itself on doing everything bigger and better than others in town, so the fact that fans rave about this buffet is no surprise. The place boasts 16 "food kitchens" (or live-action cooking stations), with such specialties as eggs Benedict or Latin food. There are 90 choices in all, some of them made to order and including vegetarian and vegan selections. Dinner has an emphasis on seafood, including Dungeness crab, snow crab legs, sushi, oysters, clams, shrimp, and pan roasts, but meat selections may include prime rib, brisket, strip loin, steamship round, tri-tip, ham, and roasted duck. The dessert table, with highlights including crêpes and crème brûlée, never disappoints. Upgrade to the Ultimate Buffet Experience to get a 1.5-pound lobster served to your table, or indulge in the Unlimited Pour Package for unlimited wine, beer, or cocktails.

3131 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-770–3340
Known For
  • Lots of seafood
  • Bread pudding not to be missed
  • A pre-booking option is available to avoid lines
Restaurant Details
No cash accepted

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Bugsy & Meyer’s Steakhouse

$$$$ | Center Strip

This Flamingo restaurant honors the resort's founders, notorious mobsters Bugsy Siegel and Meyer Lansky, in a fun way, with a “hidden” entry that looks like a bakery. Inside, you’ll find decor that evokes the 1940s and a classic steakhouse menu: crab cakes, truffle beef carpaccio, lobster bisque, and onion soup are among the starters, and the menu of wet and dry-aged steaks is augmented by seafood, lamb chops, and short ribs. There also are seasonal three-course prix-fixe menus. As for cocktails, many of them are suitably mobster-themed. The tucked-away, speakeasy-style Count Room has its own menu of vintage cocktails.

Caramá

$$$$ | South Strip

Wolfgang Puck adds to his stable of Las Vegas restaurants with this Italian restaurant he has dedicated to his mother. With modern decor that utilizes some Renaissance styles, the restaurant celebrates the tradition of fine Italian cooking in such dishes such as grilled Spanish octopus with a tomato emulsion and purple potatoes, and grilled whole Branzino, not to mention a wide range of pastas and pizzas. Fresh black truffles are available on several dishes, and there’s a salumi bar, a selection of antipasti, as well as steaks and seafood. 

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3950 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89119, USA
702-740--5522
Known For
  • Classic and creative dishes
  • Salumi bar and wide range of antipasti
  • Black truffles as an option for many dishes
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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Carversteak

$$$$ | North Strip

Dine on the fairyland patio or inside, behind a wall of windows, in view of gardens in and out. The menu does, as you might expect, lean heavily to steaks, including domestic and imported wagyu, but there’s also a good variety of seafood, including a raw bar. Start with the "Everything Spiced" brioche or caviar poppers and move on to lobster en croute or black cod with oyster mushrooms. There are special themed headliner menus, a prix-fixe three-course pre-show menu, and a vegan menu. No guests younger than 18 are allowed on Fridays and Saturdays.

3000 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-550–2333
Known For
  • Broad range of beef cuts
  • Good variety of seafood
  • A number of special menus
Restaurant Details
No lunch

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