Las Vegas Restaurants

Las Vegas is one of America's hottest restaurant markets. Nearly every big Strip property has at least one and often two or more celebrity-chef restaurants. Away from the Strip, the unprecedented population growth in the city's suburbs has brought with it a separate and continuous wave of new eateries, both familiar chains and increasing numbers of legitimate destination restaurants.

Casino-resort dining basically falls into one of three categories. In the top echelon are the properties that have a half dozen or more bona fide star-status restaurants: Aria, Bellagio, Caesars, The Cosmopolitan, Mandalay Bay, MGM Grand, Venetian/Palazzo, and Wynn/Encore. At the next level are those resorts with one or two stellar restaurants and a smaller range of worthwhile but not quite top-of-the-line options. On the Strip, these include The Cromwell, Mandarin Oriental, Mirage, Monte Carlo, New York–New York, Paris, Planet Hollywood, SLS Las Vegas, and Treasure Island. Off the Strip, you can add the Lucky Dragon, Palms, the Hard Rock, M Resort, The Rio All-Suite Hotel, Green Valley Ranch, the JW Marriott, and Red Rock Resort. Then there's everybody else: casino-resorts with maybe a decent eatery or two but that simply aren't known for great food.

Downtown Las Vegas has seen a big revitalization in the past several years, and that extends to restaurants. Although Downtown still lacks a destination restaurant, notable spots are Carson Kitchen, Therapy, Turmeric, Le Thai, and La Comida in Fremont East; and Pizza Rock and the older Triple George Grill in the Downtown 3rd District. There also are a number of good restaurants in the Downtown Container Park.

Outside the tourism corridor, Las Vegas has a number of marquee restaurants with increasing cachet among foodies from out of town—places such as Todd’s Unique Dining, Marché Bacchus, Nora's Italian Cuisine, and Lotus of Siam. There's great food to be had off the beaten path in Las Vegas, and you'll pay a lot less in these areas, too.

If you haven't been to Vegas in a few years, you'll notice some major changes. Names like Wolfgang Puck, Michael Mina, and Emeril Lagasse still have plenty of pull in this town, but the Vegas chefs commanding the most attention are French imports such as Pierre Gagnaire, Joël Robuchon, and Guy Savoy, along with vaunted U.S. chefs like Giada De Laurentiis, Charlie Palmer, and Mario Batali.

There's also a trend toward high-minded restaurants with exclusive-nightclub vibes. Note the success of see-and-be-seen Pan-Asian hot spot Hakkasan and Tao Asian Bistro & Nightclub, the youthful late-night haunts LAVO and FIX, and bordello-chic establishments such as Strip House—to name just a few. Elsewhere in town, Las Vegas's growing international—and especially Asian—population has created a market for some of the best Chinese, Thai, Vietnamese, and Pan-Asian restaurants in the country.

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  • 1. Raku

    $$ | West Side

    Seating is at a premium in this softly lighted strip mall robata, a favorite of almost every chef in town. At 5 pm sharp every day but Sunday, doors open for small-plate offerings of creamy house-made tofu, fresh sashimi (no sushi), and savory grilled meats, fish, and veggies (cooked over charcoal imported from Japan) that reflect the culinary mastery of its Tokyo-born owner-chef. An efficient waitstaff will visit your table to describe the spendy chalkboard specials and also to suggest which seasonings—which include five soy sauces, three salts, and four sugars—will best accent a particular dish. An ample list of sake (including a monthly sampler of three) and à-la-carte menu items, such as the sashimi salad, Kobe beef liver sashimi, and steamed foie gras egg custard, is also provided. Raku also offers omakase, which showcases the chef's choice of the best dishes each day. Raku Sweets, in the same shopping plaza, offers a few elaborate desserts and some savory dishes.

    5030 W. Spring Mountain Rd., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89146, USA
    702-367–3511

    Known For

    • Agedashi tofu, robata foods
    • Daily specials
    • Cozy atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. No lunch
  • 2. Ichiza

    $ | West Side

    Modest little Ichiza has developed a cult following for serving sublimely delicious, authentic Japanese food and drink in a casual social environment that borders on controlled chaos. Located on the second floor of a shopping center in the city's Chinatown section, this boisterous Izakaya-style pub is crammed with tourists, students, and local hipsters who love a good value and the chance to chow down on a variety of tasty small-plate offerings (aka "Japa tapas") until the wee hours. Forget the menu and study the walls instead, where dozens of haphazardly taped signs list the daily specials, or ask your server for suggestions, which might include black cod with grated white radish; stir-fried calamari with ginger butter; a seaweed or salmon-skin salad; and deep-fried, breaded quail eggs. From dinner to dessert, it's best to order with a sense of adventure. A second location offering private dining rooms is a little further West ( 5300 W. Spring Mountain Rd.).

    4355 Spring Mountain Rd., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89102, USA
    702-367–3151-original location

    Known For

    • Pub-style Japanese food
    • Daily specials
    • Service into the wee hours

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 3. Kusa Nori

    $$$$

    At the heavily Asian Resorts World, Kusa Nori stands out for its fine presentations of modern Japanese cuisine. In addition to a teppanyaki grill area that serves meals featuring Jidori chicken and live Maine lobster for a higher, all-inclusive price, the menu also includes a large selection of nigiri, sashimi, and rolls (both classic and specialty); robata-grilled meats and seafood; entrees like glazed black cod and steaks; and Japanese and domestic Wagyu beef. Delicious desserts include Kusa Nori maple toast with brown-butter ice cream. During happy hour, from 4 to 5:30 daily in the lounge, sake bombs, specialty cocktails, and a lengthy menu of food are offered at reduced prices.

    3000 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-676–6965

    Known For

    • Various types of Japanese cuisine
    • Japanese and domestic Wagyu beef
    • Maple toast with brown-butter ice cream

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch
  • 4. Nobu

    $$$$ | South Strip

    Executive chef Nobu Matsuhisa helped fuel the popularity of the original Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas, so it would have just seemed wrong for the restaurant not to carry over when the hotel transitioned into Virgin Hotels Las Vegas. Although there's now an entire Nobu sub-hotel within Caesars Palace—and a newer one at Paris Las Vegas—this restaurant reflects the decor and menu of the Manhattan Nobu original, with bamboo and wood accents. But those who feel it's somehow a little different now are correct: the decor was spruced up during the hotel's remodeling, and there's a new outdoor space overlooking the pool. The menu comprises small- or moderate-size plates, making Nobu perfect for sharing but an easy place to drop a wad of cash (as all those artful food presentations add up). Entrées might include black cod with miso, yellowtail tartare with caviar, rock shrimp tempura, and Maine lobster with wasabi-pepper sauce. If you're feeling brave (and flush), opt for the omakase multicourse tasting menu, and let the chef make the decisions for you.

    4455 Paradise Rd., Las Vegas, Nevada, 89169, USA
    702-693–5090

    Known For

    • Nobu classics such as black cod miso
    • Plenty of sushi and sashimi
    • Quiet, efficient service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch, Reservations essential
  • 5. Ra Sushi Bar Restaurant

    $$$

    Take a break from shopping and step into this dimly lighted restaurant and lounge that's part of a growing chain with a menu of both sushi and cooked entrées. Delicious sushi rolls might include the Gojira (with shrimp tempura, crab mix, cream cheese, and cucumber) or the Crazy Monkey (stuffed with smoked salmon, mango, and cream cheese and topped with avocado, red tempura bits, cashews, and sweet eel sauce). Heartier fare includes chicken, shrimp or steak yakisoba or black pepper New York strip. The happy hour specials here are popular with the locals. Late-night noshers appreciate that it's open until midnight, 1 am on Friday and Saturday.

    3200 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-696–0008

    Known For

    • Plenty of classic sushi
    • Far-from-classic rolls
    • Contemporary decor
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. Sushi Roku

    $$$$

    On the top floor of the towering atrium at the Strip entrance to The Forum Shops, Roku occupies an airy dining room lined with bamboo stalks and tall windows facing the Strip. Sushi is the main draw, but there's much more. You can't go wrong with the kanpachi grapefruit with orange pepper, or the White Lotus roll with popcorn shrimp tempura, avocado, and asparagus. But greater rewards come to those who venture deeper into the extensive menu. Feel like indulging? Go for the Roku Izakaya Feast for two.

    3500 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89109, USA
    702-733–7373

    Known For

    • Huge selection of sushi
    • Many seasonal dishes
    • View of the Strip

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Mon.–Thurs.

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