Las Vegas Hotels With Views

NEVADA, UNITED STATES

Las Vegas hotels with direct views of the fountains

The Las Vegas Strip is one of the few places where the view from a hotel suite is itself a landmark: the Bellagio fountains choreographing below a terrace, the Sphere running its nightly display against the desert horizon, the boulevard reading south to north like an inventory of extravagance.

The Views


Waldorf Astoria Las Vegas outdoor terrace at night overlooking the Strip with the Paris Las Vegas Eiffel Tower replica and neon signs below

Waldorf Astoria Las Vegas

The Hotel Bar and Tea Lounge claim the 23rd floor, facing the Strip through floor-to-ceiling windows lit by golden globe lighting. We’d stay in the One-Bedroom King Suite with Panoramic View — the suite that justifies the non-gaming, smoke-free positioning of this former Mandarin Oriental.

ARIA Resort & Casino Las Vegas bathroom soaking tub with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the neon-lit Strip at night

ARIA Resort & Casino

Floor-to-ceiling windows in every room, controlled by a one-touch system. For the unobstructed Strip view, the Sky Suites are the correct choice — the adults-only Liquid Pool Lounge handles the afternoon, and the 150,000 sq ft casino occupies the evening.

The Palazzo at The Venetian Las Vegas suite living room with floor-to-ceiling windows framing the illuminated Sphere and city lights at dusk

The Palazzo at The Venetian

Suites start at 720 square feet — among the largest standard suites on the Strip — and some of them frame the Sphere directly. We’d request one of those and watch the nightly LED display against the backdrop of Frenchman Mountain from a room that already has seven pools beneath it.

Bellagio Las Vegas suite window view of the fountains in full display at dusk with the Paris Las Vegas Eiffel Tower replica beyond

Bellagio

The fountains choreograph twice an hour after dark, and the suites that face them — the Executive Hospitality Suite, the Two-Bedroom Bellagio Suite — have a front-row position that no other hotel on the Strip replicates. The conservatory and botanical garden complete the picture inside.

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas suite living area with window view of the Bellagio fountains and Strip at golden hour

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas

The Terrace Suites are the room to ask for — private wrap-around balconies positioned directly across from the Bellagio fountains, at eye level with the choreography. No other hotel on the Strip replicates this angle. The 14th-floor pools add a Strip panorama without leaving the property.

Crockfords Las Vegas LXR Hotels high-floor bar with marble counter and brass telescope overlooking the Strip and mountains at night

Crockfords Las Vegas, LXR Hotels & Resorts

The upper floors of Resorts World’s tower deliver an unobstructed Strip panorama from north to south — Crockfords is the ultra-luxury tier of the complex, with private check-in, personal concierge, and the 1,600 sq ft Entertainment Suite for those who want the view without the compromise.

Wynn Las Vegas suite bedroom with four-poster king bed and window overlooking the city and mountains at sunset

Wynn Las Vegas

The copper facade faces the Strip; the east side reveals the Wynn Golf Club, 18 holes designed by Tom Fazio — a view most guests don’t expect. Tower Suites bring private check-in and a dedicated pool deck. Wing Lei, the first Chinese restaurant in the U.S. to earn a Michelin star, anchors the dining.

The Venetian Resort Las Vegas aerial exterior view at night showing the illuminated tower facade, pool complex, and Campanile replica

The Venetian Resort Las Vegas

The Venetian Luxury King Suite starts at 650 square feet with Egyptian cotton and a Roman tub — and the suites facing the Sphere catch its nightly display against Frenchman Mountain. The resort opened in 1999 and remains, combined with The Palazzo, one of the largest hotels in the world.

Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas wingback armchair before a floor-to-ceiling window overlooking the Strip with the Eiffel Tower replica and High Roller visible

Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas

Occupying the top floors of Mandalay Bay with its own entrance, the Four Seasons is one of the few Strip hotels without a casino. The Strip View One-Bedroom Suite covers 1,100 sq ft with the Eiffel Tower replica in frame. The Forbes Five-Star Spa is the quietest address on the boulevard.

Encore at Wynn Las Vegas suite living room with floor-to-ceiling windows and panoramic city lights at night

Encore at Wynn Las Vegas

The Encore Three-Bedroom Duplex earns its price: marble whirlpools, a billiard table, a dedicated butler, and sweeping Strip views as the in-room show. XS Nightclub and Encore Beach Club are the two most coveted nightlife addresses in Las Vegas — both steps from the door.

Trump International Hotel Las Vegas aerial view at dusk of the gold-glass tower rising above the Strip with the Paris Eiffel Tower replica and mountains beyond

Trump International Hotel Las Vegas

At 64 stories, the golden glass facade aligns perfectly with the Strip’s south axis — the south-facing suites, all with kitchen facilities, deliver some of the clearest Strip views available from a non-gaming property. The DJT restaurant and rooftop pool occupy the same building.

Las Vegas Hilton at Resorts World corner suite with curved floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the Strip at night, Encore and Venetian towers visible

Las Vegas Hilton at Resorts World

Part of Resorts World Las Vegas, which opened in June 2021 as the first new resort on the Strip in over a decade. The Deluxe Strip View rooms face the boulevard directly; seven pools extend the property outward. The ZOUK Nightclub and AYU Dayclub anchor the entertainment offer after dark.

What Travelers Ask About Las Vegas

The clearest fountain views belong to two hotels facing the fountain lake directly from the opposite side of Las Vegas Boulevard. The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas has Terrace Suites with private wrap-around balconies positioned at eye level with the choreography — the closest private vantage point on the Strip. Bellagio itself offers the fountain view from the inside: the Executive Hospitality Suite and the Two-Bedroom Bellagio Suite face the lake directly, and guests can watch the display from their own living room window.

ARIA Resort & Casino, positioned in the CityCenter complex, offers angled Strip views from upper floors that include the fountain basin at a remove. For the most unobstructed perspective without a private balcony, a fountain-facing room at Bellagio is the practical choice.

Most hotels on this page offer Strip views from at least some rooms, but the alignment and clarity varies. Trump International Hotel Las Vegas stands directly north of the Strip’s main corridor at 64 stories — south-facing suites look straight down the boulevard, making it one of the cleanest axial views available. Waldorf Astoria Las Vegas delivers the Strip from the 23rd floor at the Hotel Bar and Tea Lounge, and the One-Bedroom King Suite with Panoramic View is among the most sought-after rooms in the building.

Crockfords Las Vegas, LXR Hotels & Resorts at Resorts World sits at the north end of the Strip and its upper floors offer a south-facing panorama from one end of the boulevard to the other — a vantage point that few properties match for width of view.

The Sphere opened in September 2023 on Sands Avenue, east of the Strip, and is visible from hotel rooms that face east or northeast from the central Strip corridor. The most direct views are from The Palazzo at The Venetian and The Venetian Resort Las Vegas, which sit immediately adjacent to the Sphere’s site. Suites on east-facing upper floors catch the LED display against the backdrop of Frenchman Mountain from roughly 400 metres.

The Palazzo suite image on this page shows the Sphere at dusk — the view is confirmed from the living room rather than a terrace, which is the norm for most Sphere-facing rooms on the Strip.

At the upper end of the Strip’s luxury tier, three hotels stand apart for the combination of room quality and view specificity. Bellagio remains the reference for fountain views — no other address puts that spectacle in a suite window. Wynn Las Vegas adds the dual orientation — Strip west, Golf Club east — with Tower Suites that bring private pool deck access and some of the strongest room service dining on the corridor.

Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas occupies Mandalay Bay’s upper floors with Strip and stadium views from the south end of the boulevard, a Forbes Five-Star spa, and no casino floor to navigate — the quietest luxury address on the Strip. Waldorf Astoria Las Vegas offers the same non-gaming, non-smoking environment from the 23rd floor of CityCenter, with the Tea Lounge as a quieter alternative to the bar.

On this list, the most accessible entry point for a confirmed Strip view is Las Vegas Hilton at Resorts World. The Deluxe Strip View guestrooms face the boulevard at a rate below the five-star properties further south, with access to seven pools and the full Resorts World amenity offer. The trade-off is a position at the north end of the Strip rather than at its centre.

ARIA Resort & Casino is a mid-strip option where standard rooms include floor-to-ceiling windows with Strip or mountain views at a price point that undercuts some of the more heritage-heavy five-star properties nearby. The Sky Suites represent the premium tier; standard Strip-facing rooms deliver the view at a more practical rate.

The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas has the most directly Strip-facing pool position: the Boulevard Pool on the 14th floor looks across Las Vegas Boulevard toward the Bellagio fountains. The Marquee Dayclub occupies the same level and is accessible to non-guests. The pool at Encore at Wynn Las Vegas — through the Encore Beach Club — is one of the most-booked pool experiences on the Strip, though access is generally ticketed rather than hotel-only.

Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas maintains a private adults-only pool reserved for hotel guests — the quietest pool option on the boulevard, with Strip views and without the dayclub programming that defines most Strip pool scenes.

Three hotels on this list operate without a casino floor. Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas is the clearest example — its own entrance off the Strip, no gaming floor, a Forbes Five-Star spa, and access to the Mandalay Bay amenities if wanted. Guests are inside a casino complex but the hotel itself is smoke-free and casino-free throughout.

Waldorf Astoria Las Vegas and Trump International Hotel Las Vegas are both non-gaming and non-smoking, positioned as residential-style towers rather than resort-casino properties. Both offer Strip views and all-suite configurations with kitchen facilities — the format preferred by longer-stay guests or those arriving specifically for the room rather than the casino.

Las Vegas views are year-round, but the quality shifts by season. Spring (March to May) and autumn (September to November) offer the clearest desert air and the most comfortable temperatures for any terrace or outdoor pool time. The mountain line beyond the Strip is sharpest after a winter rain; spring afternoons regularly deliver an unobstructed view of the Spring Mountains to the west that the summer haze reduces. The fountains at Bellagio and the Sphere display run nightly regardless of season.

Summer brings peak heat (regularly above 40°C / 104°F) but also peak Strip energy — the pool programs at Encore at Wynn Las Vegas and The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas operate at full capacity, and the evening Strip view after dark compensates for the daytime heat. Rates are typically lower in mid-summer than over New Year or the Formula 1 Grand Prix weekend in November.