| T-Mobile Arena Quick Guide | Details |
|---|---|
| Home Team(s) | Vegas Golden Knights (NHL), Las Vegas Aces (WNBA), plus UFC, boxing, concerts |
| Opened | April 6, 2016; built by MGM/AEG, designed by Populous on the Las Vegas Strip |
| Capacity | Hockey: 17,500; Basketball: 18,000; Boxing/MMA: 20,000; Concerts: 12,000–20,000 |
| Best Value Seats | Upper-level corners & loge areas—strong sightlines at wallet-friendly prices |
| Premium Seating | 50 luxury suites, multiple loge boxes & terrace tables; Bud Light, Ghost & Skyy lounges |
| Top Arena Foods | Capriottis, BruHaus Freed’s, Pizza Forte |
| Nearby Bars/Eats | The Park district access: Eataly, Beerhaus, Sake Rok, Nusr-Et Steakhouse, Nine Fine Irishmen |
| Closest Hotels | Walkable from New York‑New York, Park MGM, MGM Grand, Aria, Cosmopolitan, Vdara |
| Transit Access | RTC bus routes (Deuce, SDX), Monorail via MGM Grand, MGM Trams, rideshare zones, gameday express |
| Unique Highlights | LEED Gold design, 2‑acre Toshiba Plaza, dubbed “The Fortress,” 650k sq ft venue |
🔍 Need a custom plan for your Golden Knights game, UFC night, or concert?
Use our Gameday Guides Chat Tool for tailored tips on seating, food, transit, parking, and nearby attractions at T‑Mobile Arena.
Best Seats At T-Mobile Arena
T-Mobile Arena’s asymmetrical design means the “best seat” shifts depending on the event — hockey, concerts, and fights each have their own optimal viewing zones. Here’s the breakdown of where to sit based on what you’re seeing.
Golden Knights Games
Center Ice Club Seats: Sections 5, 6, 15, and 16 on the lower level sit directly across from center ice with unobstructed sightlines. These premium seats include access to the Bud Light Lounge on the west side and the Ghost Lounge on the east side — both massive 5,000 sq ft clubs with center bars and private restrooms. Secondary market prices run $500–$600, which is steep, but you’re getting the best hockey view in the building.
Glass Seats — Know What You’re Buying: Only Rows GS1 and GS2 are true “Glass Seats.” Those two rows put you right on the glass and include all-inclusive food and drinks through the exclusive Event Level lounges. Here’s the insider move though: don’t overpay for Rows A through H (roughly rows 3–10). You don’t get the free food, and you’re stuck looking through glass distortion and safety netting. For standard lower bowl seats, aim for Row J or higher — you’ll get a clean sightline over the glass without paying glass-seat prices.
Lower Bowl: Anywhere in Sections 1 to 20 works well for hockey. The sightlines throughout the arena are genuinely good, though corner seats will limit your view of both ends of the rink if that matters to you.
Dream Seats: Four seats located directly between the Golden Knights and visitor benches at Sections 5/6. These include all-inclusive food and drinks plus two VIP parking passes, and you’re essentially sitting shoulder-to-shoulder with the players — you’ll be on the broadcast all night. These aren’t sold through standard channels; they move through premium brokers like Koobit and Suite Experience, typically starting around $1,500–$3,000 per seat.
Upper Level: Sections 201 through 227 are your budget option. The upper deck is unusually steep given the horseshoe shape of the arena, which actually works in your favor for hockey — corner seats up here give you a genuinely excellent bird’s-eye tactical view of the full ice. Cheapest tickets in the building and more functional than people expect.
Concerts, UFC, and Boxing
Floor Sections: The floor is completely flat. If you’re in the first 10 rows of floor sections A, B, and C, you’re fine — dead center to the stage. Beyond row 10, you’re looking at the back of someone’s head the entire night. Skip the back floor entirely and buy lower bowl side seats instead.
Lower Bowl Center: Sections 5–6 and 15–16 position you centrally with solid sightlines to the stage. For boxing and UFC, these spots let you see the entire ring or octagon without craning your neck.
Mezzanine Sections: Sections 101–105 and 117–120 are the best value seats in the building for UFC and boxing. You’re elevated just enough to look down into the octagon or ring, which actually helps you avoid the cage links and ropes that obstruct views from lower rows. Underrated option.
Upper Level: Front rows of Sections 201–205 give you a workable view down to the stage. Side sections 208+ and 216+ are cheaper and still functional if you’re more about the atmosphere than proximity.
Things to Know
T-Mobile Arena has steep steps throughout, so factor that in if mobility is a concern. The good news is that sightlines are strong across the board — you’re not getting a bad view no matter where you sit, you’re just paying for proximity and what comes with it.
For hockey, aim for center ice. For concerts, target the first 10 rows of floor or lower bowl center — and avoid back floor entirely. For UFC and boxing, the mezzanine is your value sweet spot. Book early when you know what event you want — premium spots disappear fast for big fights and major shows.

Premium Seating Options
Skip the pretense — this is Vegas, so if you’re dropping serious money, you want to know exactly what you’re buying.
Center Ice Club (Sections 7–9, 11–13): The “I want premium but not suite-level” option. Rows AA–DD are the first four rows, but here’s the catch: from Row CC down to about Row H, the penalty boxes obstruct your view of one goal. You’re paying for club lounge access and in-seat service, so make sure you’re in Row J or higher to actually get full value out of what you’re spending.
Hyde Lounge (Tower Level): An 18,000 sq ft nightclub sitting above the 200 level with DJs, bottle service, and floor-to-ceiling windows looking out over the Strip. The vibe is more Vegas nightlife than sports venue, which is exactly the point. Access is strictly controlled — you must purchase a specific Hyde Lounge SRO ticket or book a VIP table. You cannot walk up there with a standard ticket. Worth noting: the SRO ticket gets you into the club, but you won’t have a sightline to the ice or stage unless you purchase a reserved seat against the glass.
Loge Boxes & Terrace Tables (Sections 9–12): Semi-private boxes for 4–8 people perched above the lower bowl. You get rolling chairs, a food ledge, and in-seat wait service, plus access to the Goose Island Lounge. Good option for a group that wants some separation without going full suite.
Tower Deck: Standing-room-only section above the Loge level, positioned right beneath the castle structure on the Knights’ attacking end. No actual seats, just ledges to post up with your drink. At $80–100, it’s a party atmosphere — great for groups who care more about the experience than the game details.
Bunker Suites (Event Level Suites): Eight suites tucked beneath the lower bowl — four on each side — right next to the player tunnels. Each one is 700 square feet with a private bar, premium TVs, and a private bathroom. You get 16 premium lower-level bowl seats plus 8 additional suite passes. The real selling point: a Bunker Suite ticket grants access to every premium lounge in the building — Bud Light, Ghost, Hyde, Stella Artois Loft, Goose Island, and more. If you’re splitting this 12+ ways for a big event, the all-inclusive food and drink access alone makes the math work.
Luxury Suites: A full suite includes 16 tickets with the option to add four more, VIP parking passes, exclusive arena entrances, and private lounge access. Catering isn’t included in the base price — expect $100–150 per person for full meals with drinks — but the suite comes with a bar setup and premium TV configuration. Golden Knights games run $4,000–$8,000; major concerts and fights can push $5,000–$15,000. Best value when you’re splitting it 12–16 ways for a corporate group or big occasion.
Pricing swings wildly based on the event. A Tuesday night Knights game is one thing — a title fight or a major artist is a completely different price point. Book early if you know what you want; premium spaces fill up fast. Contact T-Mobile Arena’s suites and premium team directly for current rates and packages.

T-Mobile Arena Seating Chart
The capacity of T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas is 17,500 for hockey & basketball games and over 20,000 for concerts & boxing events. Specifically, the arena has:
- 16,800 permanent seats
- 225 luxury suites
- 7 event level suites
- Exceptional sightlines with the furthest seat only 155 feet from the playing surface/stage
For high profile concerts or championship fights, the venue can be configured with extra floor seating and capacity boosted to over 20,000 people. Here is the Seating Map for T-Mobile Arena
Upcoming Events at T-Mobile Arena
T-Mobile Arena stays booked for a good portion of the year, this is Vegas after all. Here is a list of upcoming events at the arena.
T-Mobile Arena Tickets
T-Mobile Arena stays busy with events all year round. From the NHL, to the NBA in-season tournament, to every show touring this great country. If you’re visiting Vegas, there is probably something going on here. Lets explore some ways to get tickets:
- Get T-Mobile Arena tickets here! If you’re looking for Golden Knights Tickets, Boxing, UFC or any great show at the T-Mobile Arena, our partners at Vivid Seats have you covered.
- Official Website: The official T-Mobile Arena website is often the primary source for purchasing tickets to events hosted at the venue. Visit their website and navigate to the “Events” or “Tickets” section to browse upcoming events and purchase tickets directly.
- Presale Opportunities: Take advantage of presale opportunities offered by event promoters, sponsors, credit card companies, or fan clubs. Presale codes are often distributed to subscribers or members, providing early access to tickets before they go on sale to the general public.
- Box Office: Visit the T-Mobile Arena box office in person to purchase tickets directly. Box office hours may vary depending on event schedules, so it’s advisable to check in advance.

Dolby Live Theater
Dolby Live at Park MGM in Las Vegas is a premier indoor amphitheater that hosts live concerts and events. With a seating capacity of 5,200, it offers a fully integrated Dolby Atmos music experience, making it a unique venue for transformative music experiences.
The theater, formerly known as Park Theater, and right next to T-Mobile Arena, opened in December 2016 and is renowned for hosting various concerts, residencies, and performances by top artists like Maroon 5, Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, Mariah Carey and more. The venue’s state-of-the-art sound system and immersive technology provide guests with an unparalleled audiovisual experience in the heart of Las Vegas. Here is a list of all the Upcoming Shows at Dolby Live.

T-Mobile Arena Bag Policy
The bag policy at T-Mobile Arena in Vegas is strict. Only small clutches with a maximum size of 9” x 5” x 2” are allowed into the venue. Traditional backpacks are not permitted. If a bag exceeds the specified size or contains prohibited items, it will not be allowed inside the arena. Guests can rent lockers at Toshiba Plaza if their bags are too large. The bag check area opens about two hours before the event and closes 45 minutes post-event
Additional Policies
- Cashless Venue: T-Mobile Arena operates on a cashless system and exclusively accepts debit/credit cards and mobile payments such as Apple Pay or Google Pay. Cash transactions are not supported at the venue.
- Gambling: T-Mobile Arena strictly prohibits gambling on its premises (i mean you can on your phones). The venue is dedicated to hosting entertainment events.
- Doors: Opening Time: Typically, doors open approximately two hours prior to the commencement of an event at T-Mobile Arena. Guests are encouraged to arrive early to accommodate security screenings and bag checks.
- No Re-Entry Policy: T-Mobile Arena enforces a strict “No Re-Entry” policy for all events, and bags will not be accessible during the event.
- Prohibited Items: The venue prohibits various items including backpacks, cameras with interchangeable lenses, selfie sticks, outside food and beverages, weapons, drones, and more. A detailed list of prohibited items can be found on the T-Mobile Arena website
- Alcohol: You cannot bring Alcohol into the arena, but alcoholic beverages are available for purchase inside the arena. There is a responsible alcohol service policy in place, limiting the size of alcohol containers to 25 ounces and restricting the sale to a maximum of two drinks per guest per transaction. Guests are expected to consume alcohol responsibly, and it is illegal for anyone under 21 to consume alcoholic beverages

Getting To T-Mobile Arena
T-Mobile Arena is tucked just off the Strip between New York-New York and the Park MGM, which means you’re already surrounded by your best transportation options the moment you step outside your hotel. Driving here is genuinely a last resort — between the free trams, the monorail, and the fact that half the Strip can just walk over, there’s almost always a better way.
If you’re staying on the Las Vegas Strip
Free Trams: If you’re staying at the right property, free trams are your best friend. The Bellagio–CityCenter/Aria–Park MGM tram runs daily from 8am to 4am and drops you at Park MGM, which is a short walk straight to the arena — this is the most convenient no-cost option on the Strip. Coming from the south end? The Mandalay Bay–Luxor–Excalibur tram runs daily 9am to 10:30pm and gets you to Excalibur, from where you can make the walk up to the arena. Neither costs a dime, and neither surges in price after the game.
Las Vegas Monorail: The Monorail is a solid option, though it puts you a little further out than the trams. The MGM Grand Station is the stop you want — from there it’s about a 0.2-mile walk over a pedestrian bridge to the arena, so figure 5 minutes on foot. Single rides are $5 and day passes run $14. The monorail runs until midnight on Mondays, 2am Tuesday through Thursday, and 3am on weekends, so it’ll cover you for most events. Keep in mind this runs on the east side of the Strip, so depending on where you’re staying, you may need to cross over.
Walking: Honestly, for a lot of Strip visitors this is the move. T-Mobile Arena is easily walkable from New York-New York, Park MGM, Aria, Excalibur, Monte Carlo, and the Bellagio if you don’t mind a 10–15 minute stroll. The arena sits right along Park Avenue off the Strip, and the pedestrian infrastructure around here is solid. If your hotel is within a few blocks, skip everything else and just walk.
The Deuce & SDX (RTC Bus): These are the two RTC bus routes running along the Strip, and between them they cover pretty much every hotel on Las Vegas Boulevard. The Deuce is the iconic double-decker that runs 24/7 from Mandalay Bay all the way to Downtown, stopping at every major property along the way — slow but thorough. The SDX runs the same corridor with far fewer stops, so it moves faster if you’re coming from further up the Strip and don’t need every hotel stop. Both drop you near Park Avenue and Frank Sinatra Drive, right outside the arena. Fares start at $6 for a two-hour pass or $8 for a 24-hour pass, and you can plan your route through the rideRTC app on iOS or Android.
If you live in the Las Vegas Metro
T-Mobile Arena Parking: T-Mobile Arena doesn’t have its own dedicated garage — it relies on the surrounding MGM resort properties. The New York-New York garage is the closest and connects to the arena via a covered bridge, making it the most convenient but typically the priciest. The Aria garage is just across Park Avenue, about a 2-minute walk, and Park MGM’s garage is right there too at around 3 minutes on foot. If you want to save a few bucks and don’t mind a longer walk, Excalibur’s garage is about 8–10 minutes out. Prices generally range from $25 to $40 depending on the event and how close the garage is to the arena. You can and should reserve in advance through the ParkMobile app — reserved parking only opens up to 7 hours before the event, so don’t wait until day-of. MGM Resorts has also moved to a cashless system, so bring a card or pre-paid pass and skip the cash line.
Rideshare: Uber and Lyft drop-off comes through the ground level of the New York-New York parking garage. Getting here by rideshare before the event is easy — getting picked up after is where it gets painful. Expect surge pricing and long wait times right after events let out. The arena itself recommends using nearest casino properties like NYNY or Park MGM for pickup. T-Mobile Arena Your best bet is to grab a drink, wait about 45–90 minutes for traffic to settle, then call your ride from there. You’ll save money and skip the chaos.
RTC Transit Buses: This is a great option if you’re coming from further out in the valley. For just $2 each way (or $4 roundtrip), direct buses run from six park-and-ride locations — Red Rock Casino, Green Valley Ranch, Santa Fe Station, Sam’s Town, Aliante Casino, and M Resort — straight to T-Mobile Arena for Golden Knights home games. All routes drop off at the Excalibur oversize lot on the corner of Frank Sinatra and Excalibur Way, just a short walk to the arena. Buses start running two hours before puck drop and depart the arena about 20 minutes after the final buzzer. You can pay cash on board (exact change only) or grab a Game Day Pass through the rideRTC app up to seven days in advance.

T-Mobile Arena Insider Tips
T-Mobile Arena is equal parts sports venue and Vegas spectacle — the pregame show, the food, and the Strip energy are half the reason people buy tickets in the first place, and navigating all of it takes a game plan.
Access & Gate Strategy
Skip the Uber drop-off at T-Mobile Arena entirely on event nights. The Tropicana Avenue approach turns into gridlock fast. Instead, get dropped at Park MGM, walk straight through the casino floor, out the back doors, and you’ll land directly in Toshiba Plaza at the main gates in under five minutes. If you’re on T-Mobile as your carrier, you get an even better option — there’s a dedicated T-Mobile Customer Entrance at the front gates. Just show your phone screen displaying the T-Mobile network and you skip the general admission lines entirely. It’s one of the better quiet perks at any arena in the country and most people don’t know it exists. Gates open roughly 90 minutes before most events — arriving then gets you in before the crowd surge and gives you time to explore the concourse without fighting through it.
For 2026, T-Mobile Arena became the first major sports venue to partner with Zoox, Amazon’s autonomous ride-hailing service. If you want to completely sidestep the rideshare chaos in Toshiba Plaza, you can summon a driverless robotaxi through the Zoox app to a dedicated private drop-off and pickup lane at the West VIP Entrance. It’s a genuinely different experience and the lane separation alone makes it worth trying.
Download the BeOn App Before You Arrive
The arena overhauled its mobile app in mid-2025. You’ll want it for seamless entry since it integrates directly with AXS tickets, but the more useful feature is the interactive wayfinding map that shows you the closest bathroom or specific food vendor based on your actual seat location. In a building with multiple concourse levels and a lot of ground to cover, this saves real time.
Arena Food & Drink Strategy
Hunt down the VGK Locals Menu before you do anything else. Nine stands around the concourse — including Mango Cart near Section 5 and Pure Gold near Section 17 — offer hot dogs, nachos, pretzels, popcorn, and bottled water for $5.50 each. In a building where a standard burger runs $18, this is the most important thing on this list. For premium bites worth the splurge, Fuku (David Chang’s spicy fried chicken concept) is on the upper concourse, and Freed’s Bakery — a Las Vegas institution voted best in the city for over 35 years — serves massive scratch-made cakes and cookies that actually justify the arena markup. The poke bar lets you build a full Hawaiian bowl with tuna, salmon, cucumber, mango, and sauces. BBQ Mexicana and Desert Smokehouse BBQ are your spots for actual barbecue.
New for the current season, Levy Restaurants has leaned hard into loaded comfort food. The Birria Baked Potato and the Smokehouse Burger — topped with chipotle BBQ, peppered bacon, and whiskey caramelized onions — are the two standouts worth tracking down.
For drinks, skip the main concourse rush and head to the Bud Light Lounge on the west side or the Ghost Lounge on the east — each has its own full menu and a fraction of the wait. Golden Road GastroPub is worth knowing about if you want somewhere that actually feels like a bar. The Atomic Fizz is the arena’s signature cocktail — magenta-colored, designed by the Bellagio’s craft cocktail creator — worth ordering once just to say you did.
But….Eat Before You Go In
This one deserves its own callout: Nacho Daddy, Bubba Gump, and a dozen other Strip restaurants are a five-minute walk from the arena. A full sit-down meal with drinks at any of them costs less than two beers and nachos inside. Post-game, wait about 20 minutes and grab a table at America — way better than fighting the exit rush on an empty stomach, and the crowds thin out fast once you let them.
Arrival & Gate Timing
For Golden Knights games, being in your seat 20 minutes before puck drop isn’t optional — it’s the whole point. The Knights run the most elaborate pregame production in the NHL: a full battle helmet descends from the rafters, a knight fights a dragon on the ice, and the entire arena goes into a full light show. If you’re in a beer line when this happens, you missed the thing that makes T-Mobile Arena different from every other hockey building. Show up early, grab your food during warm-ups when lines are short, and be seated before the lights go down. For concerts, get food before the opening act — the worst concession lines happen right as the headliner is about to go on.
Stadium Traditions & Culture
During the National Anthem at Golden Knights games, when the singer hits the line “gave proof through the night,” 18,000 people will scream “KNIGHT!” at the top of their lungs simultaneously. It will absolutely jump-scare you the first time if you don’t know it’s coming. Now you know. Lean into it.
Instagrammable Spots & Photo Ops
Get to Toshiba Plaza about 45 minutes before the event and face the arena. The entire triangular glass facade lights up in bright magenta against the Park promenade behind you — it’s the defining Vegas fight night/game night shot and you won’t get it from inside. This is also when the plaza energy peaks before the crowd funnels in, so take your time out there before heading through the gates.
Venue-Specific Quirks
If you’re attending a Golden Knights game and you’re from literally anywhere outside of Nevada, pack a jacket. Vegas in October looks like shorts weather outside, but the arena is kept at a firm 65 degrees and the lower bowl feels it. You will be cold. Bring a layer or plan on buying an overpriced hoodie at the Armory team store. Also worth knowing: T-Mobile Arena is loud — intentionally, theatrically loud. If you’re noise-sensitive, bring earplugs. The volume is part of the experience, but you can prepare for it. The steps throughout are genuinely steep too, so if you have mobility concerns or you’re in heels, scout your section’s entry point when you arrive — multiple access routes exist and some involve significantly less climbing than others.
If you only brought cash and realize everything is cashless once you’re inside, you’re not completely stuck. Reverse ATMs — cash-to-card kiosks — are located near Section 8 on the main concourse. Not ideal, but it beats standing at a concession stand with a $20 bill going nowhere.
Families & Accessibility
For nursing mothers, the arena has two dedicated UMC Lactation Suites — one on the Main Concourse across from Section 13, and one on the Upper Concourse across from Section 216. Both are private, clean, and ADA-accessible. For broader accessibility questions or accommodations, call the box office at 702-692-1616 before you arrive — they’re responsive and worth a quick call rather than assuming what’s available on the day.
The Arena Is Smaller Than You Think
T-Mobile holds about 18,000, which makes it feel more intimate than most major arenas. Sightlines are excellent from basically every seat — even upper level and corner sections hold up better than comparable spots elsewhere. The tradeoff is it fills up fast and feels genuinely packed for big events. Don’t assume distance from the action equals a bad view here; it usually doesn’t.
Exiting the Arena Hack
When the event ends, do not walk out through Toshiba Plaza with everyone else. The plaza bottlenecks immediately as 18,000 people funnel toward the Strip at once. Instead, exit through the northwest doors near Sections 10–11 and take the external stairs up to the pedestrian bridge that connects directly to the New York-New York parking garage. You bypass the plaza entirely, land right on the Strip, and can grab a post-game slice at Pizza Forte inside NY-NY while the crowd clears. It’s the fastest way out of the building that almost nobody uses.

Hotels Near T-Mobile Arena
When booking accommodations to see your favorite musician or sports team at T-Mobile Arena, staying at a nearby resort allows easy access without relying on transportation. The following hotels (including some Vegas icons) put you just steps or a short walk from the venue doors:
- New York-New York Hotel & Casino: Offers the sights of NYC with rollercoasters, diverse dining, and convenient proximity through a walkway into T-Mobile for events.
- Park MGM: Anchors an exciting dining/entertainment district which leads directly into T-Mobile Arena via a walkway from this modern hotel.
- MGM Grand: Luxury suites at this iconic hotel casino connect guests immediately to T-Mobile via a convenient tram that drops off right inside the arena entrance.
- Aria Resort & Casino: This posh high-end property features a 150,000-square-foot casino and popular nightclubs connected directly to T-Mobile Arena via an enclosed walkway.
- Vdara Hotel & Spa: This non-gaming, all-suite boutique hotel is located adjacent to T-Mobile Arena. It’s known for luxurious rooms with fully equipped kitchens and spa treatments.
- Bellagio: Famous for its dancing fountains and upscale amenities, the Bellagio is a short 10-15 minute walk to T-Mobile Arena along the Strip.
- Excalibur Hotel & Casino: A budget-friendly castle-themed hotel, featuring family-friendly midway games and restaurants. Connects easily to the arena through a covered pedestrian walkway.
With over 100,000 guest rooms on the Las Vegas Strip, visitors can find accommodation rates matching any budget. Arrive early allowing time to travel to events for properties not located within immediate short walking distances.

Bars/Restaurants Near T-Mobile Arena
T-Mobile Arena sits in one of the most walkable and entertaining sections of the Las Vegas Strip, making pre-game plans easy and exciting. The surrounding area offers everything from casual sports bars to upscale dining experiences, all within a short stroll of the arena. Whether you’re looking to grab quick bites and beers or settle in for a full meal before the puck drops, the blend of The Park’s outdoor dining district and nearby casino properties creates the perfect pre-game atmosphere.
The Park at T-Mobile Arena
The Park is a 20-acre outdoor dining and entertainment district directly adjacent to T-Mobile Arena, connecting New York-New York and Park MGM with tree-lined walkways and open gathering spaces. The pedestrian-friendly layout makes it the most convenient pre-game destination, with multiple restaurant patios and bars leading straight to the arena entrance.
Eataly: This sprawling Italian marketplace and restaurant complex at Park MGM features multiple dining concepts under one roof, from fresh pasta counters to wood-fired pizza stations. You can grab quick Italian street food or sit down for a full meal while browsing imported Italian products and wines.
Beerhaus: A massive indoor-outdoor beer hall featuring over 100 beers on tap, giant soft pretzels, German sausages, and communal seating. The lively atmosphere and quick service make it ideal for groups grabbing drinks before events.
Sake Rok: This trendy Japanese restaurant and bar overlooks The Park’s fountain stage, serving creative sushi rolls, Japanese small plates, and signature cocktails in a vibrant setting perfect for early evening gatherings.
Nusr-Et Steakhouse: Salt Bae’s luxury steakhouse offers an upscale dining experience with high-quality meats and theatrical presentation. While prices run high, the 3-course lunch menu provides a more accessible option for those wanting a memorable pre-game meal.
Bruxie: Known for inventive waffle sandwiches, loaded tater tots, and craft beers served on an outdoor patio. A solid choice for casual bites before heading into the arena.
Bars near New York New Casino
Just steps from The Park, New York-New York offers several lively bar options with unique themes and atmospheres.
- Nine Fine Irishmen: An authentic Irish pub featuring live music, an extensive beer selection, and traditional Irish dishes in a beautifully decorated space shipped from Ireland.
- Coyote Ugly Bar: The famous bar where bartenders dance on the bar top and lead crowd sing-alongs, offering a high-energy pre-game experience.
- Bar at Times Square: A casual piano bar overlooking the casino floor, perfect for cocktails and beers in a more relaxed setting.
- Tōm’s Watch Bar: A laid-back sports bar with dozens of TVs, pub food, and prime people-watching from its casino floor location.
If you’re looking for some more travel guides start with our guide through Allegiant Stadium. And here are some more spots for Vegas baseball fans as you wait for the A’s to get to town along with some other great guides. Thanks for Reading!
Angel Stadium, Dodger Stadium in LA and Petco Park in San Diego
Written by Brad Richards, Founder of Gameday Guides. This guide includes insights from personal visits as well as updated info from team sources, fan forums, and stadium policies. We aim to help you plan with confidence — enjoy your gameday.

