NoMad Las Vegas
Daily price line
Upcoming nightly rates
Review
Character and identity
NoMad Las Vegas occupies the top four floors of Park MGM, a discreet hotel-within-a-hotel that trades neon for old-world hush. You enter under a red awning into a tapestry-lined registration room, then ride up to 293 rooms across ten categories designed by Jacques Garcia, with cues from French classical theatre and dark, library-like interiors. The signature restaurant houses David Rockefeller's actual book collection; the third-floor Jemaa pool deck channels Marrakesh in Majorelle Blue. Service is graceful and quietly formal, with cocktails from Leo Robitschek's team and one of the better minibars on the Strip.
Who's it for
Best for:
Design-minded couples and grown-up Strip-goers who want a hushed, low-lit luxury base but still plan to spill out into Vegas proper: T-Mobile Arena across the street, Eataly and Roy Choi's Best Friend downstairs, and a walkable run to Aria, Cosmopolitan, and Crystals. NoMad loyalists from New York will feel immediately at home.
Should look elsewhere:
Families and travellers who want a self-contained resort with a big pool scene, kids' programming, or a casino-floor buzz. If you want the full Vegas spectacle from the moment you arrive, the discreet lobby and grown-up register will read as muted.
Bottom line
The defining proposition here is discretion: a genuinely quiet, design-driven hotel parked above one of the Strip's most walkable resorts, with cooking and cocktails that stand on their own. Book the Grande Suite if you want the freestanding tub and sitting room, and aim for shoulder-season rates when Jemaa is open but the Strip is calmer.