THE VILLAS Caesars Palace
Review
Character and identity
THE VILLAS sits hidden inside Caesars Palace's Octavius Tower: six private residences ranging from the 9,420-square-foot Marcus Aurelius to the 11,850-square-foot Hadrian, each entered via a chauffeured limousine, red carpet, and private elevator that bypasses the casino entirely. Five villas play the Roman theme straight, while Titus pivots to a British country house, complete with a hunt-scene mural and pink onyx bathroom. Expect vaulted ceilings, double-sided fireplaces, screening rooms, baby grands, plunge-pool terraces, eight-foot Emperor beds, and aquariums set into the walls. A personal ambassador and butler run the experience.
Who's it for
Best for:
High-rolling celebrants and large groups who want Vegas without the Vegas crowds. The villa programme is built for milestone birthdays, weddings, and multi-family getaways, especially given the option to connect rooms into a ten-bedroom super-villa with private film screenings and dinners for 12. Anyone craving celebrity-chef cooking (Ramsay, Flay, Nobu, Peter Luger) delivered by butler will be in their element.
Should look elsewhere:
Solo travellers and couples after intimacy or restraint will find this excessive and impersonal in scale: 10,000 square feet is a lot of room for two. Design purists who recoil from Roman maximalism, and anyone hoping for a quiet, contemporary resort feel, should book elsewhere on the Strip.
Bottom line
The draw here is privacy at a scale almost no other Vegas address can match: hidden porte-cochères, private elevators, and direct pool access mean you can stay days without crossing another guest. Book only if you're filling the villa with a group worth the square footage, and consider Titus if Roman opulence isn't your register or Hadrian if you're connecting suites for a true takeover.