Las Vegas Bachelorette Nightlife Guide
Published
A Las Vegas bachelorette is a logistics problem disguised as a party. The fun is the easy part — the hard part is making sure the bride doesn’t spend her own weekend booking, paying, and herding. This guide is built to take the booking decisions off her plate so the maid of honor and the rest of the crew can plan a weekend that works.
We’ll cover where to go, what to book, how to budget, and which mistakes to avoid. For live programming, browse upcoming events; for table prices by venue and date, jump to the VIP table pricing tool.
Before You Book Anything: Three Questions
- What’s the vibe the bride wants? Mega-club EDC energy, hip-hop and open-format, or chill pool day with brunch?
- How many people are going? A group of 4 plays a totally different game than a group of 10.
- What’s the per-person budget? Tables, brunch, day passes, and ride-shares add up fast. Set a number and back into venues from there.
Send those three answers to the group chat before you start putting deposits on anything.
The Right-Sized Itinerary
A bachelorette weekend almost always works best on a Friday-to-Sunday schedule with a clear arc:
- Friday night: A nightclub. High-energy, dressed up, the “we’re here” night.
- Saturday day: A dayclub or pool party. The peak experience.
- Saturday night: A second nightclub or a low-key cocktail bar — depends on how Saturday day went.
- Sunday day: Brunch and recovery. Optional pool day.
Don’t try to stack three nightclubs back-to-back. The crew will burn out, the bride will be exhausted by Saturday brunch, and the photos will reflect it.
Best Nightclubs for a Bachelorette
Not every Vegas mega-club is bachelorette-friendly. Some doors are notoriously tough on groups of women without a table; some rooms are so dense that a group of 6 can’t actually stay together. Our top picks:
- Tao Nightclub — the strongest open-format and hip-hop programming on the Strip, an approachable door, and a venue that consistently treats bachelorette groups well. Bonus: same building as Tao restaurant, which is a strong dinner reservation for groups of 8+.
- Marquee Nightclub — three rooms (main, Library, Boombox) means everyone in the group can find a vibe they like, even if half the crew wants electronic and half wants hip-hop.
- Omnia Nightclub — best for groups that want a “this is a Vegas mega-club” photo and an outdoor terrace to escape to when the main room gets too loud.
- Jewel Nightclub — smaller and easier on the door than the mega-clubs, with strong programming. Great pick for a group of 4–6 that wants something less overwhelming.
- XS Nightclub — the iconic pick. Save it for Friday or Saturday night when the lineup is strongest, and book a table.
For a deeper ranking by music and vibe, see our best Las Vegas nightclubs guide.
Best Dayclubs for a Bachelorette
Daylife is where bachelorette weekends become memorable photos. The crew gets matching swimsuits, the cabana becomes home base, and the music is loud enough to feel like a club without the late-night exhaustion.
- Encore Beach Club — the iconic pool party. Big, loud, A-list electronic lineups. Book a daybed or cabana — GA on a Saturday is rough.
- LIV Beach — the newest serious dayclub. Strong booking, brand-new property, and pairs cleanly with LIV Las Vegas at night for a same-property day-to-night.
- Marquee Dayclub — multiple pools, ample shade options, and one of the best-laid-out dayclubs for a group that wants to spread out.
- Tao Beach Dayclub — smaller and more intimate. Great for groups of 6–10 that want a dayclub without the EBC density.
- Liquid Pool Lounge — the chill pick for a group that wants poolside drinks without being deep in the dayclub experience.
Full breakdown in our best Las Vegas pool parties guide.
To Table or Not to Table
For a bachelorette of 6 or more people, a table is almost always the right call. The math:
- A $3,000 weekend table split 6 ways is $500/person — and that includes drinks, guaranteed entry, and a home base for photos and breaks.
- A $1,500 weeknight table split 6 ways is $250/person.
- General admission cover ranges from $40–$100 per person on its own, before you’ve bought a single drink at $20 a pop.
You’re paying roughly the same total either way, but a table fundamentally changes the experience: dedicated server, line-skip, no fighting through the crowd to the bar, and a place for the bride to sit and breathe between sets.
For tier-by-tier pricing breakdowns, see the bottle service guide; for live minimums by venue and date, use the table pricing comparison.
What If the Group Doesn’t Want a Table?
Smaller groups (3–5 people) can do well on the guest list. Cutoffs are typically 12:00 to 12:30 a.m. for nightclubs and 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. for dayclubs, and most venues require a balanced gender ratio — which is usually a non-issue for a bachelorette group.
The trade-offs: no guaranteed entry on busy nights, no line-skip beyond the guest list lane, no dedicated table, and the dress code is still strictly enforced.
Dress Code for the Crew
Vegas dress codes are stricter than most groups expect. Read the full dress code guide, but the bachelorette-specific notes:
- Sashes, veils, and bachelorette gear are usually fine, but check with the venue if you’re going somewhere with a strict luxury aesthetic.
- Shoes matter. No flip-flops at any nightclub. Heels are standard but not required — clean dressy sneakers work at most non-luxury venues.
- The bride should pack two outfits per night. Things spill, things ride up, things stretch out.
Day-by-Day Sample Itinerary
Thursday (early arrivals):
- Dinner and a low-key cocktail bar; no club.
Friday:
- Late brunch, pool deck at the hotel, light shopping
- Dinner reservation at 7:30 p.m. for the full group
- 10:30 p.m. — pre-game in a suite or hotel bar
- 11:30 p.m. — table arrival at Tao Nightclub or Marquee Nightclub
- 2:30 a.m. — late-night food
Saturday:
- 11:00 a.m. brunch
- 12:30 p.m. — dayclub arrival at Encore Beach Club or LIV Beach with a cabana booked
- 5:00 p.m. — back to the hotel for shower, nap, reset
- 8:00 p.m. — dinner
- 11:00 p.m. — second nightclub or a quieter cocktail night, depending on energy
Sunday:
- Brunch with mimosas
- Optional Liquid Pool Lounge for a quieter pool day
- Departure flights
What to Book in Advance
- Dinner reservations — 6+ weeks out for Saturday night, especially for groups of 8+
- Tables — 4+ weeks out for Saturday night, 6+ weeks for major holiday weekends
- Cabana — 4+ weeks out for Saturday daylife, sooner for EDC week and Memorial Day
- Hotel suite — book early to avoid getting split across multiple rooms or buildings
- Ride-share alternative — pre-arrange a Sprinter van for the group on the busiest night
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Stacking three nightclubs back-to-back. Pool day Saturday is non-negotiable.
- Going GA on a Saturday with a major DJ. You will not get in.
- Skipping dinner reservations. Walk-up at a major Strip restaurant on a Saturday night is a 90-minute wait.
- Letting the bride book her own weekend. Pick a logistics lead before the trip.
- Letting one venue type dominate. Mix nightclubs with daylife, and build in a real recovery window.
Bottom Line
The strongest bachelorette weekends combine one iconic nightclub with one big dayclub and a real recovery window in between. Book the table early, lock the dinner reservations even earlier, and use the table pricing comparison and upcoming events feed to match the weekend to the headliner program your group actually wants to see.
For deeper venue rankings, see our best Las Vegas nightclubs guide and best Las Vegas pool parties guide; for VIP table tactics, the bottle service guide; for entry mechanics, the guest list guide.