Hotel in Las Vegas, United States
Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas
1,300ptsCasino-Free Strip Address

About Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas
On the southern stretch of the Las Vegas Strip, Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas occupies floors above Mandalay Bay and operates without a casino floor, slot machines, or the ambient noise that defines most Strip addresses. With 424 rooms, two full-service restaurants, and a La Liste Top Hotels score of 94 points for 2026, it positions itself as a deliberate counterpoint to the spectacle directly outside its doors.
The Anti-Casino Hotel on the Strip
Walk into most Las Vegas hotels and the first thing you encounter is a casino floor: the metallic clang of slot machines, flashing screens, and the low-frequency hum of a room engineered to keep you inside it. The Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas is arranged differently. The lobby sits on floors above Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, and it operates as a separate, casino-free property. There are no gaming tables between you and the check-in desk, no ambient noise designed to stimulate spending, and no ceiling lighting calibrated to obscure the passage of time. For a Strip address, that is a genuinely unusual starting point.
The hotel has held its position on the southern end of the four-mile Las Vegas Boulevard since 1999, earning a La Liste Leading Hotels score of 94 points for 2026. Its 424 rooms and suites occupy five stories, which makes it modest in scale by Las Vegas standards, where tower blocks of 3,000 rooms are routine. That restraint is part of the value proposition here: the property functions on a logic closer to a city hotel than a resort-casino complex, and it attracts guests who want Strip proximity without Strip immersion.
Among the luxury non-gaming options available on the Strip, the Four Seasons sits in a different competitive tier than the suite-only formats like ARIA Sky Suites or Crockfords Las Vegas, LXR Hotels & Resorts, both of which operate with tighter inventories and higher entry prices. The Four Seasons' 424 rooms give it greater availability and a broader price range, anchored from approximately $395 per night, while its brand infrastructure delivers the service consistency that the Four Seasons network has built over decades. If your comparison set includes properties like Bellagio Hotel & Casino, ARIA Resort & Casino, or Caesars Palace Las Vegas, the difference is structural: those properties integrate gambling into their core identity; this one is built around the deliberate absence of it.
How the Food and Drink Program Is Organised
The dining offer at the Four Seasons Las Vegas is structured around two distinct formats, and understanding that structure matters because it tells you something about the hotel's broader positioning. Veranda handles the full-service restaurant role with a modern Mediterranean menu, a format that positions it as an all-day dining anchor for guests who want a composed meal without leaving the property. Press operates on a different logic entirely: small plates, creative cocktails, and a social atmosphere that functions closer to a bar program with serious food backing than a conventional restaurant.
That split, between a kitchen-forward dining room and a bar-led small-plates venue, reflects how urban luxury hotels across the United States have restructured their food and beverage programs over the past decade. The destination restaurant with a full tasting menu has largely given way to formats that allow guests to eat and drink at their own pace and in their own sequence. The Four Seasons Las Vegas follows that pattern rather than resisting it.
Press is specifically worth considering as a destination in its own right. Its cocktail list operates with enough specificity to be interesting: the Leading in Show, built from WhistlePig rye, Maker's Mark bourbon, Carpano Antica vermouth, and Luxardo cherry, is a potent, well-sourced Old Fashioned variation. The bar occupies a see-and-be-seen social role within the property, which differentiates it from the quieter, more formal register of Veranda. For guests arriving from the Strip who want to step out of casino-bar noise into a more controlled drinking environment, Press provides a useful middle position.
The Pool, the Spa, and the Logic of Retreat
The pool at the Four Seasons Las Vegas has a particular reputation among Strip hotels for the things it does not have: no DJ, no amplified music programme, no beverage-minimum daybed packages sold as packages marketed by the decibel. The setup runs to chaise lounges, daybeds, and round covered daybed structures, and the management keeps the atmosphere oriented toward calm. On a Strip where pool clubs have become entertainment venues in their own right, that positioning is a deliberate choice.
The spa operates through Kalologie Medspa and offers a range of treatments. Its presence matters in context because the Las Vegas spa market has grown considerably as the city has expanded beyond pure gambling tourism, with properties across the Strip competing on wellness facilities. For guests whose interest in spa access is central to the trip rather than incidental, properties like Canyon Ranch Tucson offer a more comprehensive wellness infrastructure, but as a Strip hotel spa, the Four Seasons offering is substantive rather than decorative.
Rooms: Art Deco Register, Practical Amenities
424 rooms and suites follow an art deco design language: marble flooring, mahogany furnishings, cream tones with lime green accents in throw pillows and translucated lamp shades, and headboards finished in silver leaf with nail detailing. Floor-to-ceiling windows look out over the city lights, which means the Strip remains visible even from inside a property designed to insulate guests from its noise and pace.
Each room is serviced twice daily, which is less common at this price point than it once was, and includes a down duvet, a 55-inch television, and a properly configured desk with an ergonomic task chair. Suites come with two televisions. Those details are not remarkable in isolation, but they signal a service level that the Four Seasons group applies consistently across its portfolio, from Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside to properties in major city centres.
The room count of 424 puts the Four Seasons in an unusual category on the Strip: large enough to maintain availability most of the year, small enough to feel operationally tight compared to the resort complexes that dominate the Boulevard. Guests booking well outside peak periods, particularly outside major convention weeks and New Year, will generally find availability without significant advance planning. During high-demand windows, the hotel's relatively modest inventory means rates move faster than at larger properties.
Getting There and Moving Around
The hotel sits at 3960 South Las Vegas Boulevard, at the southern end of the Strip, approximately 15 minutes by car from Harry Reid International Airport (formerly McCarran), a distance of roughly three miles. A house car service covers transportation within a three-mile radius, which encompasses most of the central Strip corridor. For guests who want to reach properties further north, such as Conrad Las Vegas at Resorts World, the house car's radius will not reach, and rideshare or taxi remains the practical option.
Access to the Mandalay Bay casino and its wider entertainment complex is provided through internal corridors, which gives guests the option to engage with the Strip's entertainment infrastructure on their own terms, without committing to a hotel whose primary identity is built around that infrastructure. That corridor arrangement is structurally central to what the Four Seasons Las Vegas offers: a toggle between the controlled quiet of a Four Seasons property and the noise and spectacle of one of the larger casino complexes on the Strip, accessible without stepping outside.
For travellers whose reference points for luxury hotel stays are properties like Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles, Aman New York, or The Fifth Avenue Hotel in New York City, the Four Seasons Las Vegas operates in a recognisable register: calm lobbies, attentive service, restrained room design, and a food and beverage programme oriented toward quality rather than spectacle. The difference is the address, and in Las Vegas, the address changes the calculation considerably.
Frequently Asked Questions
What room should I choose at Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas?
The 424 rooms follow a consistent art deco design brief with marble floors, mahogany detailing, and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the city. The primary distinction between room categories is size and suite-level amenities such as a second television and expanded living areas. Guests prioritising Strip views should confirm the room tier at booking, as the property's position on the southern end of the Boulevard shapes sightlines. The La Liste 94-point score and the property's longstanding Four Seasons affiliation (in place since 1999) speak to the consistency of the standard across categories.
What should I know about Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas before I go?
The hotel is casino-free but connects directly to Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino through internal corridors, giving guests immediate access to gambling, shows, and dining without the noise carrying back into the Four Seasons spaces. Rates from approximately $395 per night position it at the upper end of the Strip market, though below the entry points of smaller suite-only formats. The southern Strip location means it is closer to the airport than mid- or north-Strip properties, which is a practical consideration for short stays.
How far ahead should I plan for Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas?
With 424 rooms, the Four Seasons Las Vegas carries enough inventory to be bookable with reasonable lead times outside of high-demand periods. Convention weeks, major fight weekends, New Year's Eve, and peak summer dates compress availability and push rates significantly. For those windows, booking two to three months ahead is a sensible baseline. Outside peak periods, shorter lead times are generally workable, though the hotel's consistent La Liste recognition and brand loyalty base mean it rarely sits with significant unsold inventory.
What's Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas a strong choice for?
If the goal is Strip access without the sensory intensity of a casino-integrated resort, the Four Seasons is a structured answer to that specific requirement. The house car service, the twice-daily room service, and the Kalologie Medspa spa programme are oriented toward guests who want to use Las Vegas as a backdrop for a high-service stay rather than a gambling trip. It works particularly well for travellers combining leisure with business, for short breaks where the Strip's entertainment is interesting but not the primary motivation, and for those whose usual reference points are quieter luxury properties like Amangiri in Canyon Point or Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur.
Does Four Seasons Hotel Las Vegas have its own casino?
No. The Four Seasons Las Vegas operates without a casino on its floors, which is an unusual arrangement for a Strip address. Gambling access is available immediately through the internal corridors connecting to Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino downstairs, but the Four Seasons property itself is quiet, casino-free, and designed to function as a separate environment. This has been a defining feature of the property since it opened in 1999, and it remains the characteristic that most clearly distinguishes it from the integrated resort model that dominates the Las Vegas Boulevard. For our full guide to dining and hotels across the city, see our full Las Vegas restaurants guide.
Recognized By
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