Hotel in Las Vegas, United States
Trump International Hotel Las Vegas
250ptsResidential Resort Format

About Trump International Hotel Las Vegas
Trump International Hotel Las Vegas sits just off the Strip on Fashion Show Drive, offering 1,282 rooms and suites with floor-to-ceiling windows, a full-service spa, and an all-day dining programme that runs from a lobby restaurant to a seventh-floor pool bar. It holds a Google rating of 4.3 across nearly 6,000 reviews, positioning it as a non-gaming alternative to the boulevard's larger casino resorts.
Off the Strip, Not Off the Map
Las Vegas luxury has long been organised around a single axis: the Strip. The biggest casino resorts command boulevard frontage, and for decades that address has functioned as a proxy for status. A quieter counter-argument has been building, though. Several properties in the city's premium tier now sit a short walk from the boulevard rather than on it, trading foot-traffic noise for something closer to a conventional hotel register. Trump International Hotel Las Vegas, on Fashion Show Drive just off Las Vegas Boulevard, is among the clearest examples of that model. With 1,282 rooms and suites, a Google rating of 4.3 across nearly 6,000 reviews, and no casino floor to navigate, it operates on a different set of priorities than properties like Bellagio Hotel & Casino or ARIA Resort & Casino.
The positioning is deliberate. Strip-adjacent hotels in this tier, including ARIA Sky Suites and Crockfords Las Vegas, LXR Hotels & Resorts, compete on service depth and room quality rather than gaming floor scale. Trump International enters that conversation with a residential-style room product and a dining programme designed to keep guests on-property without depending on spectacle.
The Rooms: Residential Logic in a Resort City
Floor-to-ceiling windows appear in all 1,282 rooms and suites, oriented to capture either mountain views or the Strip skyline. The room product skews residential: kitchenettes are fitted with Sub-Zero, Wolf, and Bosch appliances, and bathrooms carry marble countertops alongside large spa tubs. That domestic register separates this hotel from the grander theatrical interiors of casino-integrated properties like Caesars Palace Las Vegas, and places it closer to the longer-stay apartment-hotel category that has grown in several American cities.
Penthouse suites add a second layer: Strip views, a master bedroom with two walk-in closets, a powder room off the foyer, and a dining area separate from the living space. The suite configuration, with seating for four at the dining table and an overstuffed living room couch, suggests a product engineered for extended stays and multi-room group bookings as much as short leisure visits. For properties with comparable room architecture across the United States, see The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, Raffles Boston, and Aman New York in New York City.
The Dining Programme: Two Formats, One Register
Las Vegas dining has fractured into two broad tiers over the past two decades. The high-end casino properties anchor multi-restaurant programmes around imported celebrity chef concepts and prix-fixe formats at significant price points. The other tier, where Trump International sits, runs a more condensed all-day operation where the food serves the hotel rather than the hotel serving as a platform for the restaurant. Neither model is inherently superior; they answer different travel purposes.
DJT Restaurant and Bar, the all-day dining room off the lobby, anchors the programme. The menu runs modern American: eggs Benedict with smoked salmon at breakfast, black angus burgers through the afternoon, roasted chicken with spicy broccolini at dinner. The format is legible and consistent rather than ambitious, which suits the property's positioning. A separate lounge adjacent to the restaurant offers bespoke cocktails for guests travelling without children; the DJT kids menu, which covers items like PB&J with apple chips and grilled cheese with tomato soup, signals that the hotel reads its audience broadly rather than defaulting to a purely adult-luxury register.
The second dining outlet, H2(EAU), operates poolside on the seventh floor. The format here is casual: fruity cocktails, seafood salad, shrimp tacos. The seventh-floor location means the views from this space are meaningful — the sundeck and heated pool sit above the surrounding street-level noise, and the Strip is visible without being immediately adjacent. This kind of refined pool-bar format, where the F&B serves as a secondary reason to occupy an otherwise amenity-driven space, appears across the non-gaming hotel segment in Las Vegas and in comparable properties elsewhere. For properties where the outdoor setting plays a similarly central role in the dining experience, Auberge du Soleil in Napa and Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur offer instructive comparisons.
Spa, Wellness, and the Non-Gaming Offer
The Spa at Trump Las Vegas covers 11,000 square feet and runs massages alongside clarifying and detoxing facial and body treatments. A state-of-the-art fitness centre sits within the same footprint. For a city where wellness programming has expanded considerably — Canyon Ranch Tucson represents one end of that spectrum, and dedicated spa-resort formats have grown across the American Southwest , this scale of spa provision is competent rather than exceptional, but it covers the functional range expected at this category of urban hotel.
Trump Pets programme adds a distinctive layer to the ancillary offer: canine concierge amenities include dog beds, water bowls, custom collars, and treats. Pet programmes of this kind have become a meaningful differentiator in the upper-middle hotel tier, particularly for drive-in leisure markets. Las Vegas draws a significant proportion of its visitors from Southern California by road, and that demographic skews higher on pet travel than the fly-in convention segment. For pet-friendly properties at the resort end of the spectrum, Amangiri in Canyon Point and Little Palm Island Resort & Spa in Little Torch Key sit in a different league of seclusion, but the underlying logic of personalised guest-and-pet service runs across all of them.
Location and the Non-Casino Trade-Off
Fashion Show Drive places the hotel within walking distance of the Strip's major casino resorts and the Fashion Show Mall without situating guests inside the permanent noise of the boulevard itself. That trade-off works in both directions. Guests who want immediate casino access or the full sensory immersion of properties like Conrad Las Vegas at Resorts World or Downtown Grand Hotel & Casino will find the short walk adds a layer of separation they may not want. Guests who prefer to access the Strip on their own terms and return to quieter surroundings will find that separation useful. The hotel does not operate a casino, which removes an entire category of on-property entertainment but also removes the ambient noise and foot traffic that casino floors generate in adjacent hotel areas.
For the full range of Las Vegas accommodation and dining options across the city's hotel tiers, see our full Las Vegas restaurants guide. Comparable non-gaming properties at the higher end of the luxury spectrum in Las Vegas include Durango Casino & Resort for a different footprint and Crockfords Las Vegas, LXR Hotels & Resorts for a boutique-leaning international brand comparison.
Planning Your Stay
The hotel sits at 2000 Fashion Show Drive, Las Vegas, NV 89109. Booking is handled directly through the hotel's reservations team; no online booking link or phone number is published in current EP Club data, so prospective guests should confirm availability through the hotel's official channels. Given the 1,282-room inventory, last-minute availability is more likely here than at smaller non-gaming properties such as Troutbeck in Amenia or SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, though peak convention and event weekends in Las Vegas compress availability across all tiers. Guests travelling with pets should confirm the Trump Pets programme inclusions at booking, as amenity specifics may vary by room type. For context on what other premium non-gaming or design-led properties deliver at a different price point and scale, Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles, Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside, Kona Village, A Rosewood Resort in Kailua Kona, Aman Venice, Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz, and Sage Lodge in Pray each illustrate what the upper tier of the non-casino hotel category looks like across different geographic contexts.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the signature room at Trump International Hotel Las Vegas?
- The penthouse suites represent the leading of the room hierarchy. They carry Strip views, a master bedroom with two walk-in closets, a powder room off the foyer, and a dining area separate from the living room. All suites include seating for four at the dining table and a full living room configuration. Room prices are not published in current EP Club data; confirm rates directly with the hotel.
- What is the main draw of Trump International Hotel Las Vegas?
- The hotel's position just off the Las Vegas Strip on Fashion Show Drive gives guests proximity to the boulevard's casinos and entertainment without the noise and foot traffic of being directly on it. The 1,282 all-suite-adjacent rooms with floor-to-ceiling windows, the 11,000-square-foot spa, and a non-gaming environment attract guests who want Las Vegas access on their own terms. It holds a Google rating of 4.3 across nearly 6,000 reviews.
- What is the leading way to book Trump International Hotel Las Vegas?
- No direct booking link or phone number is listed in current EP Club data. Contact the hotel through its official website or reservations team directly. Given the property's scale of 1,282 rooms, availability is generally more consistent than at smaller boutique properties, though Las Vegas peak periods , convention dates, major fight weekends, New Year's Eve , compress inventory across all categories. Book well in advance for those windows regardless of where you are staying on the Strip or adjacent to it.
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