MGM Grand Hotel & Casino
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
MGM Grand is a 5,034-room Strip behemoth wrapped around a casino, big-ticket restaurants, nightclubs and a six-acre pool complex, but the property worth knowing about sits hidden on its top floors: Skylofts, 51 two-storey suites reached by private elevator from a 29th-floor Sky Lobby. The lofts run residential rather than hotel, with double-height living-room windows over the Strip, sculptural art, environment remotes for lights and curtains, and infinity-edged tubs with embedded TVs. Service pivots on a butler-and-concierge team, with an exclusive Sky Lounge reserved for loft guests.
Who's it for
Best for:
Couples marking a milestone, honeymooners, and design-minded travellers who want Vegas at arm's length. The Skylofts experience suits guests who value privacy, a private bath drawn on arrival, Bulgari amenities, a 15-pillow menu, and a butler who can stock the kitchen or arrange in-suite dining from MGM's restaurants.
Should look elsewhere:
Anyone wanting an intimate, boutique property should skip this entirely; the wider resort is enormous and busy. Skylofts has no dedicated pool or gym, so guests who want those steps from the door will be riding elevators down through casino territory to reach them.
Bottom line
The real proposition is the Skylofts product, not the MGM Grand at large: a private, residential-feeling tower-within-a-tower with genuine butler service and views worth choosing carefully. Book a one-bedroom loft for an anniversary or honeymoon, ask the concierge about Strip-facing orientation, and watch the rate calendar, off-peak nights can drop close to $1,000.