Delano Las Vegas
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
Delano occupies its own tower at the south end of the Strip, connected to Mandalay Bay by a short walk through the lobby and parking garage. The design language is all-suite, white-on-white-on-gold, with breezy sheer curtains and natural desert stone, a deliberate counterpoint to the maximalism most of Vegas trades in. All 1,117 keys are suites. The Bathhouse spa, a holdover from the property's previous life as TheHotel, runs in moody black stone. Up on the 64th floor, Alain Ducasse's Rivea restaurant and Skyfall lounge deliver the best panoramic view on the Strip. Della's Kitchen handles the lobby dining and room service.
Who's it for
Best for:
Couples, bachelor and bachelorette groups, and girls' weekends who want the energy of Mandalay Bay on tap but a calmer, design-led base to retreat to. Suite-only layouts (the 725-square-foot Delano King has a separate bedroom and two TVs) make it a strong pick for in-room entertaining. Spa devotees should book confidently.
Should look elsewhere:
Travellers who want to step straight into the heart of the Strip will find the south-end location a hike. Lower-floor suites face uninspiring views, and the resort fee plus nickel-and-dime touches (a $4 coffee kit) grate. Convention-averse guests should check the calendar.
Bottom line
The draw here is space and calm: every room is a suite, the aesthetic is genuinely restful, and the Bathhouse and Ducasse's 64th-floor pairing punch well above the rate. Book on MGM's discount calendar in spring or fall, push for a Scenic Suite on a high corner, and treat the Mandalay Bay connection as a feature, not a compromise.