Restaurant in Las Vegas, United States
Michael Mina
525ptsSerious seafood menu, vegetarian tasting option included.

About Michael Mina
Michael Mina at Bellagio is a Forbes Four-Star Modern American restaurant with a seafood-forward California menu, rare vegetarian tasting menu option, and a 890-selection wine program run by a stable senior team. At the $$$ price tier, the service and kitchen execution justify the spend — but book three to four weeks ahead and note the Wednesday closure.
Should You Book Michael Mina at Bellagio?
If you're weighing Michael Mina against other high-end Strip restaurants, here's the honest comparison: it does more things well than most of its neighbors, and its service approach is calibrated to justify the price. Against Bardot Brasserie at the same Bellagio property, Michael Mina is the higher-ambition choice — broader in format, with a wine program that's meaningfully deeper. The question isn't whether it's good; it is. The question is whether it's the right fit for how you want to spend a high-budget evening in Las Vegas.
The Portrait
Michael Mina sits behind Bellagio's Conservatory, which gives it an interesting positioning problem: it has a famous neighbor pulling all the foot traffic, yet the restaurant operates with the composure of a room that doesn't need to compete for attention. The Forbes Travel Guide Four-Star rating signals that someone external agrees the execution is consistent. That credential matters in Las Vegas, where glitzy interiors and inconsistent kitchens are common enough to be a genuine risk.
The cuisine is contemporary California — seafood-forward, precise, and structured around dishes that have developed a following over time. The lobster pot pie, caviar parfait, and American Kobe ribeye are the fan anchors on the menu. The whole foie gras, carved tableside, is one of the few genuine tableside production moments on the Strip done with actual culinary intent rather than theater for its own sake. If seafood is what you're after, this is a stronger bet than most Strip steakhouses attempting a fish section as an afterthought.
What separates Michael Mina from the Strip average at this price tier is the vegetarian tasting menu , rare enough in Las Vegas fine dining that it's a genuine differentiator. If your group has mixed dietary commitments and you need a single restaurant that handles both a serious omnivore and a vegetable-focused diner at the same table, the options narrow considerably. This is one of the few rooms where that's solved at the outset rather than negotiated awkwardly with a server.
The wine program is run by sommelier Eric Davison and sits at 890 selections with an inventory of around 3,650 bottles. The depth is in California, Burgundy, and Bordeaux , sensible given the cuisine style and the guest profile. Expect $100+ bottles to anchor the list; this is a $$$ wine program by design. The corkage fee is $50, which is competitive for a Bellagio property if you want to bring something specific from outside. Chef Raj Dix runs the kitchen, and General Manager Justin Wolf oversees operations , a stable senior team, which tends to correlate with service consistency at this tier.
Service philosophy here leans toward attentive formality without tipping into stiffness. The dress code is business casual, enforced. No shorts, no athletic wear, no sandals , and that expectation sets the register for the room. Guests who arrive dressed appropriately tend to find the service reciprocates with genuine engagement rather than rote delivery. That's not always the case at casino-hotel fine dining, where the volume can flatten the experience. At Michael Mina, the service appears designed to hold up to the price rather than coast on the Bellagio address.
One practical note that affects planning: the restaurant is closed on Wednesdays. Dinner runs from 5:30 p.m. to a 10 p.m. last reservation, seven nights minus Wednesday. Groups of nine or more need to call the dedicated group reservation line rather than booking through standard channels. This is a hard-to-book room , plan three to four weeks ahead for a weekend date, longer if you're targeting a specific time slot.
How It Compares
See the comparison table below for a direct read on how Michael Mina sits against key Las Vegas alternatives.
Quick reference: Dinner for two at $$$, open Tuesday, Thursday–Sunday from 5:30 p.m.; closed Wednesdays; business casual dress required; groups of 9+ call separately.
Compare Michael Mina
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Michael Mina | Hard | — | |
| Aburiya Raku | Unknown | — | |
| Bacchanal Buffet | Unknown | — | |
| Bardot Brasserie | Unknown | — | |
| Bazaar Meat by Jose Andres | Unknown | — | |
| Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar & Grill | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Michael Mina and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Michael Mina?
Book at least one to two weeks in advance, longer for weekends or parties of four or more. Groups of nine or more must call the group reservation line rather than booking online. The restaurant is closed Wednesdays, so factor that into your planning. Walk-in availability at a Forbes Four-Star Strip restaurant is not reliable.
What should I wear to Michael Mina?
Business casual is the stated dress code. That means no shorts, jeans, athletic wear, tank tops, or sandals. Think collared shirts, trousers, or a dress. If you're coming straight from the casino floor, plan a wardrobe change before your 5:30 p.m. reservation.
What should I order at Michael Mina?
The lobster pot pie, caviar parfait, and American Kobe ribeye are documented fan favorites. If foie gras is your priority, the whole foie gras carved tableside is a set-piece worth ordering. Vegetarians have a dedicated tasting menu, which is rare on the Strip and makes Michael Mina a stronger call for mixed groups than most comparable restaurants at this price point ($$$).
What is Michael Mina known for?
Michael Mina is primarily known for Modern American in Las Vegas.
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