No city on earth turned bottle service into a spectator sport quite like Las Vegas. On the Strip, a VIP table isn't just a place to sit down between DJ sets, it's the ticket that vaults you past the general-admission line, over the velvet rope, and into a private pocket of real estate inside a room that might hold four thousand people. From the mega-club chandeliers of Omnia to the dance-floor bottle parades at XS, the table is the unit of currency. You reserve a section, commit to a minimum spend, and everything else, the entrance, the seating, the sightline, and the personal server, flows from that single decision. It is the fastest, and often the only sane, way to actually experience a Vegas superclub on a busy weekend.
Table minimums are the number that matters, and they swing wildly with the night, the DJ, and where you sit. Entry-level side tables at the top rooms start around $1,000 to $1,500, mid-tier spots near the dance floor land in the $2,500 to $4,000 range, and prime real estate beside the DJ booth can run $5,000 to well past $10,000 when a superstar headliner is spinning. Value-focused rooms like Marquee, Tao, Zouk, and Drai's open closer to $600 to $800. Remember that the minimum is only the base: expect roughly 40 percent added on top for sales tax, a mandatory venue fee, and an automatic 18 to 20 percent gratuity, so budget accordingly before your card is run.
Then there is Vegas by daylight, where the party moves poolside and the table becomes a daybed, a lily pad, or a bungalow with its own plunge pool. Dayclubs like Encore Beach Club, Marquee Dayclub, and Tao Beach run the same bottle-service model under the sun, with cabana minimums stretching from around $800 on a quiet Friday to $3,000-plus for a premium bungalow on a peak Saturday. Whether it is a midnight booth or a noon cabana, the logic is identical: a table buys you space, service, and status that no general-admission wristband can touch. Book ahead through a host, lock your minimum, and let the bottles come to you.
XS at Encore is the benchmark every other Strip club measures itself against, and its bottle program is the reason. Tables start around $1,000 to $1,500 on a standard weekend and climb to $5,000 to $20,000 for marquee DJ nights, with dance-floor and poolside sections that put you inside the action. Every table has a clean sightline to the booth, so the only question is how close you want to be.
Guestlist & details →Omnia at Caesars Palace is a three-room megaclub crowned by that famous kinetic chandelier, and a table is the best seat in the house. Entry-level side tables begin around $1,000 to $1,200, while dance-floor and mezzanine sections range up to $12,500 on peak nights. Prime tables under the chandelier put you eye-level with the headliner and the full light show.
Guestlist & details →Hakkasan at MGM Grand is a five-story temple to big-room EDM, and its tiered tables scale with your budget. Entry-level tables in the pavilion or upper level start at a $1,000 minimum, while main-room bottle service near the stage runs $2,000 and up. The closer you book to the massive main-floor DJ stage, the more the table feels like a front-row concert seat.
Guestlist & details →Marquee at The Cosmopolitan is consistently the best value-for-money bottle experience on the Strip, with tables typically opening around $600 to $800. That buys you a section across multiple rooms, from the Boombox main floor to the Library, plus the same dedicated server and skip-the-line entrance as the pricier rooms. It is the smart first table for groups who want the full VIP treatment without a five-figure minimum.
Guestlist & details →Tao at The Venetian is an Asian-inspired institution where bottle service is refreshingly accessible, starting around $700. Lower dance-floor sections climb toward a $3,000 minimum on busy nights, so you can dial the spend to the group. A table gets you the ornate rooms, the outdoor terrace over the Strip, and personal service all night.
Guestlist & details →Zouk at Resorts World is the newest-generation megaclub, wrapped in massive LED walls and ceiling lighting that a table lets you soak in from your own section. Bottle service opens around $600 to $800, dropping to $500 to $700 on weeknights, making it one of the better-value premium rooms in town. Dance-floor tables put you right under the light rig and the headliner.
Guestlist & details →LIV at Fontainebleau brought David Grutman's Miami powerhouse to the Strip across two levels with 62 VIP tables and a 2,000-person capacity. Tables range from about $1,500 to $6,500 depending on location, each with a dedicated server, busser, and security detail. Book a dance-floor section and you get a private pocket in one of the most-hyped rooms in Vegas, glasses never empty.
Guestlist & details →Jewel at ARIA is the intimate megaclub option, smaller and more design-forward than the arena rooms, which makes its tables feel genuinely exclusive. Bottle minimums generally open in the $1,000 to $2,000 range and rise toward the dance floor and DJ booth on headliner nights. The tighter footprint means nearly every VIP table sits close to the action and the LED-clad main room.
Guestlist & details →Encore Beach Club is the daylight flagship, where bottle service means a daybed, lily pad, or a bungalow with a private plunge pool. Entry-level tables run a $1,000 to $1,500 minimum, lily-pad daybeds sit around $1,000 to $2,000, and pool-front bungalows start at $3,000 or more on peak days. A table here is prime tiered real estate facing the main pool and stage.
Guestlist & details →Drai's is the rooftop and hip-hop capital of the Strip, and the late-night Afterhours makes it a full-day destination. Bottle service typically starts around $600 to $800, with dance-floor and edge tables overlooking the Strip commanding more on big nights. A table secures your spot on the open-air rooftop plus that skyline view you cannot get from the floor.
Marquee Dayclub at The Cosmopolitan is the most accessible Tier-1 pool VIP, with starting cabana minimums as low as $800 and mid-range cabanas from $1,500. That buys shade, a private base of operations above the pool, and full bottle service in the sun. It is the ideal first daytime table for groups testing the dayclub scene without a bungalow-sized budget.
Guestlist & details →Tao Beach at The Venetian reopened as a slick, intimate dayclub where the cabanas feel like private retreats rather than a stadium pool. VIP plunge-pool cabanas start around $2,000 to $2,500, giving your group its own water, shade, and dedicated server steps from the DJ. The smaller scale means the whole venue feels like a VIP section, with a table anchoring your day.
Guestlist & details →Full directory — dress codes, hours and guestlists on every page.
Table minimums typically start around $1,000 to $1,500 at the top megaclubs and $600 to $800 at value rooms like Marquee, Tao, and Drai's. Dance-floor and DJ-booth tables run $2,500 to $10,000-plus, especially on superstar-DJ nights. Remember the minimum is the base spend only, add roughly 40 percent for tax, venue fees, and an automatic 18 to 20 percent gratuity.
Your minimum spend buys a reserved table or section, express entry past the general-admission line, and the bottles and mixers you order toward that minimum. It also comes with a dedicated cocktail server, a busser, and often security for your group, plus garnishes, ice, and glassware. On big nights, bottle deliveries arrive with sparklers and a full presentation. Tax, fees, and gratuity are added on top of the minimum.
Reserve ahead through a club host, a nightlife concierge, or an app like Discotech that lists events, minimums, and tables. You confirm your section, agree to the minimum spend, and put a card on file to hold it. Booking early gets you better table placement and pricing, since prime sections and lower minimums sell out fastest on weekends and headliner nights. Walk-up tables are possible but rarely the best deal.
The best tables sit closest to the DJ booth or along the dance floor, where you get the clearest sightline to the headliner and the energy of the crowd. These prime sections carry the highest minimums, often several times an entry-level side table. At rooms like XS the club says there is no bad table, only better ones, so weigh how close to the action you want to be against your budget.
Nightclub tables are indoor booths and dance-floor sections built around the DJ and light show, running from around $600 up to five figures. Dayclub tables are poolside daybeds, lily pads, and cabanas, some with private plunge pools, with minimums from roughly $800 to $3,000-plus. Fridays run 30 to 50 percent cheaper than Saturdays at the pools. Both use the same minimum-spend model, just sun versus strobe lights.
Rankings are Nightspotters editorial opinion, refreshed for 2026. Hours, policies and lineups change — confirm with the venue for your night.