Searching for Las Vegas hotels without resort fees makes sense. Resort fees can turn a good-looking room rate into a much less exciting total. The tricky part is that true no-fee options are limited, policies change, and third-party booking pages do not always make the final price obvious until late in checkout.
This guide is less about promising a perfect list and more about helping you compare the real cost before you book.

Quick Answer
If you want to avoid or reduce resort fees:
For the broader fee picture, read Las Vegas resort fees explained.
Where to Look
True no-fee hotels on or near the Strip are rare, but you may find better fee situations at some non-gaming hotels, limited-service hotels, or off-Strip properties. Compare Vdara, Four Seasons Las Vegas, Waldorf Astoria, The Carriage House, and other suite-style properties by total checkout price.
Do not rely on memory here. Hotel policies can change, and even a no-fee claim needs a current booking-page check.
The Total-Price Test
Open two or three hotel options and compare:
A no-fee hotel that requires daily rideshares may not beat a better-located resort with a fee. Annoying, but true.
Who Should Prioritize No-Fee Hotels
No-fee or lower-fee options matter most for budget travelers, longer stays, families booking multiple rooms, and visitors who will not use pools, gyms, Wi-Fi bundles, or other fee-justifying amenities.
If you care more about location and pools, use where to stay on the Strip and best pools in Las Vegas instead.
Mistakes to Avoid
Do not book from a search result that only shows the nightly rate. Do not assume downtown or off-Strip automatically means no fee. Do not ignore parking. And do not let a resort fee ruin a good hotel if the total price still wins.
Vegas hotel math is annoying, but a few minutes of comparison can save real money.


