Las Vegas is still the only American city where the sportsbook is the main event, not a side bet. The state legalized sports gambling decades before the rest of the country, and the result is a small set of rooms that are bigger, louder, and more screen-saturated than anything you'll find at a regional casino. The best Las Vegas sportsbooks aren't all the same — what works for a relaxed Tuesday MLB afternoon is the wrong call for Super Bowl Sunday or NCAA opening weekend.
Here's the practical 2026 ranking of the best sportsbooks in Las Vegas, sorted by what you're actually trying to do.
Quick Pick by Use Case
Biggest, loudest, most "Vegas": Circa Sportsbook — the largest sportsbook in the world.Most screens, longest history: Westgate SuperBook — the legacy giant near the Convention Center.Best Strip-side option: Caesars Palace Sportsbook — the recently re-renovated flagship.Best for a quiet bet + dinner: Wynn Race & Sports Book.Best for college football fans: South Point (off-Strip locals) or Westgate SuperBook.Best NFL Sunday party: Circa Stadium Swim or Caesars Palace.Best newer / modern room: Resorts World or Fontainebleau.Circa Sportsbook — The Largest in the World
Circa Resort & Casino opened in October 2020 with the explicit pitch of being the biggest sportsbook in the world: a three-story, 1,000-seat, 78-million-pixel-screen room overlooking Fremont Street. It is, without exaggeration, the most spectacular sportsbook ever built.
Screen: ~78 million pixels across the main video wall — the largest in any casino in the world.Seating: ~1,000 stadium seats over three tiers, plus VIP boxes on the upper level.Adults-only (21+): Circa is one of the only Strip-area resorts that's strictly 21+, so the sportsbook crowd is purely the over-21 sports demo.Stadium Swim sportsbook bar: Circa's pool deck — the Stadium Swim — is essentially an outdoor sportsbook with six pools and a 143-foot screen. Open year-round, heated in winter. The most photographed sports-viewing setup in town.Best for: big-event days (NFL playoffs, Super Bowl, March Madness, F1 race week). You want a seat — book early.Reservations: lower-tier seats are first-come on most days but require advance booking on big game days. The "Owner's Box" upper-tier seats can be reserved year-round through the Circa One app.
This is the new sportsbook benchmark in Vegas and the answer to the question "which Las Vegas sportsbook is the biggest" in 2026.
Westgate SuperBook — The Legacy Giant
Westgate Las Vegas (formerly the Las Vegas Hilton, formerly the International) sits near the Convention Center, two minutes from the Sahara Avenue Monorail station. The SuperBook opened in 1986, was the gold-standard sportsbook in Vegas for over three decades, and remains the largest by floor area of any traditional indoor sportsbook.
Floor area: 30,000 square feet — still the largest indoor sportsbook in Nevada.Screen: 4,488-square-foot main video wall (220-foot LED wall, 4K).Seating: ~350 individual seats with personal screens at most stations.Atmosphere: older crowd, more serious bettors. The SuperContest (annual NFL handicapping contest with $1.5M+ prize pools) runs out of this room.Food: the SuperBook Deli is a Vegas institution — the breakfast brisket sandwich has its own following.Best for: bettors who care more about lines and limits than the spectacle. The SuperBook books the largest individual wagers in the city and posts lines the rest of the industry follows.
Caesars Palace Sportsbook — The Strip Flagship
The Caesars Palace Sportsbook is the central-Strip flagship of the Caesars Sportsbook brand and was fully renovated in 2021 with a 138-foot LED video wall — the largest indoor sportsbook screen on the Strip.
Screen: 138-foot main video wall, plus dozens of secondary screens.Seating: ~250 seats including comfortable lounge tables and bar-height counter seating.Caesars Rewards: points earn on every bet — the strongest cross-property loyalty program for travelers staying at any Caesars Entertainment hotel (Paris, Horseshoe, Flamingo, Harrah's, The LINQ).Atmosphere: noticeably busier on weekends than weekdays. The room runs over capacity during NFL playoffs and Super Bowl weekend — book a Caesars Palace stay or arrive early.Food: Caesars Palace's restaurant lineup (Bobby Flay's Amalfi, Nobu, Restaurant Guy Savoy) means dinner-and-bet is uniquely good here.Best for: travelers staying anywhere in the Caesars Entertainment portfolio, or visitors who want the most "Strip-flagship" sportsbook experience without going Downtown.
Wynn Race & Sports Book — Quiet Premium
The Wynn Race & Sports Book is the antithesis of Circa — smaller, quieter, more comfortable. It runs the betting line with a noticeably premium clientele.
Screen: 18-foot main video wall plus 24 large secondary screens.Seating: ~80 leather-recliner seats with personal monitors and food/cocktail service.Atmosphere: business-casual, lower volume, the room you go to when you want to actually hear the broadcast.Wynn Rewards: points earn on every bet; tier benefits include free parking, room discounts, and dining credit.Food: in-room cocktail service from the adjacent Lakeside bar.Best for: betting a meaningful sum without the chaos. Pair with dinner at one of Wynn's restaurants for the platonic ideal of a Vegas sports-bet date night.
Resorts World Sportsbook — The Modern Room
Resorts World Las Vegas opened in 2021 with one of the cleanest, most modern sportsbook builds in the city. Operated under the Caesars Sportsbook brand (Caesars Rewards apply) since 2024 after the property's earlier exclusive deal with another operator wound down.
Screen: 12-foot LED main wall with a wraparound configuration.Seating: ~150 seats including modern bar-height tables and a small VIP area.Atmosphere: newer, brighter, less of a sports-bar feel — closer to a modern lounge with screens.Caesars Rewards apply (post-2024 transition). This makes Resorts World a strong play for Caesars-loyal bettors who want a more modern room than Caesars Palace.Best for: travelers staying at Resorts World, or central-Strip visitors who want a less crowded alternative to Caesars Palace on big game days.
Fontainebleau Sportsbook — The Newest
Fontainebleau Las Vegas opened in late 2023 and the sportsbook is the newest major room in the city.
Screen: modern LED main wall, secondary screens at every seat.Seating: ~120 luxury seats, all with cocktail service.Atmosphere: quietest of the major newer rooms — the Fontainebleau as a whole runs lower foot-traffic than its size suggests, and the sportsbook benefits.Best for: bettors who want a newly-built premium room without the volume of Caesars Palace or the chaos of Circa.Bellagio, Aria, Cosmopolitan, MGM Grand — The MGM Resorts Books
The MGM Resorts sportsbooks (managed under the BetMGM brand) cover most of the central Strip — Bellagio, Aria, Cosmopolitan, MGM Grand, Mandalay Bay, NY-NY, Park MGM, Excalibur, Luxor.
Best of the MGM books: Bellagio is the flagship — refurbished in 2022, ~150 seats, premium atmosphere, the Lily Bar adjacent.Aria: newer, quieter, more cocktail-lounge feel than sportsbook.Cosmopolitan: smallest of the central MGM books but with the best adjacent restaurant lineup (Scarpetta, Estiatorio Milos, China Poblano, Eggslut).MGM Grand: largest MGM book, busiest crowd.MGM Rewards apply at every MGM Resorts sportsbook — strong loyalty cross-utility if you're staying at any of the 12 MGM properties.
Locals' Favorites — Off-Strip Sportsbooks
The off-Strip "locals casino" sportsbooks consistently post slightly better lines, run lower minimums, and are dramatically less crowded than the Strip rooms on big game days.
South Point Race & Sports Book: ~30,000 sq ft, the highest-volume locals book in the city. The Las Vegas Sports Consultants (the longest-running line-making firm in Vegas) operate from this property. Free parking, free valet.Red Rock Resort: Station Casinos' flagship sportsbook, ~200 seats, modern build. Tied to the Red Rock loyalty program.Green Valley Ranch (Henderson): in Henderson, 25 minutes from the Strip. Smaller but excellent food adjacent.Westgate SuperBook (technically off-Strip near the Convention Center, listed above).The Orleans: old-school, large floor, the locals-bettor favorite for college football Saturdays.If you have a rental car and want to escape the Strip crowd on a big game day, South Point or Westgate is the answer.
Best Sportsbook for Specific Events
Super Bowl Sunday
Best big-spectacle option: Circa Stadium Swim (book months in advance, expect $300+ pool deck cover charges).Best traditional sportsbook viewing: Caesars Palace (sells out, requires reservation).Best off-Strip alternative: Westgate SuperBook (less likely to be at capacity, easier walk-up).Best room with food: Bellagio or Wynn (in-seat dining service).Super Bowl pricing on viewing parties at the major books ranges from $200 (basic admission with food/drinks) to $1,500+ (all-inclusive VIP boxes at Circa).
NCAA March Madness
Best: Westgate SuperBook (the room runs the bracket challenge that the rest of the industry copies).Most fun: Circa Sportsbook (open seating, easier walk-in than Super Bowl Sunday).Best for parlay-and-bracket day-drinking: Stadium Swim at Circa or pools at MGM Grand / Mandalay Bay.NFL Regular Season Sundays
Best: Caesars Palace or Wynn — fewer crowds than Circa, full menu access.Best with view of the Strip: Cosmopolitan Race & Sports Book.Best deep-dive bettor option: Westgate SuperBook on weekday-line-release days.NHL / NBA / Soccer
These books all carry NHL/NBA/major soccer lines, but the smaller sportsbooks (Wynn, Aria, Fontainebleau) are quieter and better for niche-sport viewing where you actually want to watch a game without 200 NFL fans drowning out the broadcast.
Practical Tips for Visiting
Book big-game seats in advance. Circa, Caesars Palace, and Westgate all run reservation systems for Super Bowl Sunday, NFL playoffs, March Madness, and Kentucky Derby weekend. Book 60+ days out for Super Bowl, 30+ days for other event weekends.Rewards cards: sign up for Caesars Rewards (free), MGM Rewards (free), Wynn Rewards (free), and Circa One (free) on arrival. Points earn on every bet, parking discounts, and free-play offers compound quickly across a multi-day trip.Minimums: Strip sportsbooks typically have a $5 minimum on most lines; off-Strip locals (South Point, Westgate, Orleans) often allow $2 minimums.Cashing tickets: every Las Vegas sportsbook still pays winning tickets in cash at the window, but the major books all support digital tickets via their respective apps (Caesars Sportsbook, BetMGM, Circa One) — handy for cashing out remotely.Mobile betting: legal in Nevada but requires in-person account setup at the casino's sportsbook window. Once set up, you can bet from anywhere in the state via the app.Parking and getting there: every off-Strip locals sportsbook has free parking. See our free parking on the Strip post for the central-Strip parking strategy.Quick Cheat Sheet
Want the biggest, loudest, "I came to Vegas" experience: Circa Sportsbook + Stadium Swim.Want the most professional, lines-focused room: Westgate SuperBook.Want a Strip-side flagship: Caesars Palace.Want quiet premium with food: Wynn Race & Sports Book.Want the most modern build: Fontainebleau or Resorts World.Want the locals' best lines: South Point or Westgate.Want to bet with a pool view: Circa Stadium Swim.Want the best Super Bowl viewing party: book Circa or Caesars Palace 60+ days out.For more on what to do around any of these properties, see our first-timers guide to Las Vegas, the where to stay on the Strip post if you're planning the trip around a big game, or the Caesars Palace vs MGM Grand comparison if you're picking between the two largest Strip casino floors.