Wynn Las Vegas
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Review
Character and identity
Wynn sets itself apart from the Strip by feeling like a self-contained alternate universe: floral mosaic floors, moving flower sculptures, koi ponds, indoor waterfalls, and the only golf course on the Strip tucked behind the towers. Across roughly 4,750 rooms in Wynn and Encore, the design language reads sumptuous-meets-residential, lately refreshed in a $200 million renovation with Cubist commissions, faux bois wallpaper, and alabaster pendants in the baths. Dining is the deepest bench in town (Delilah, SW Steakhouse, Mizumi, Lakeside), nightlife runs through XS, and the spa anchors a slower-paced wellness register. Service is drilled, polished, and consistent.
Who's it for
Best for:
Fashion- and status-conscious couples and design-literate travellers who want Vegas opulence without the dishevelled chaos of the central Strip. If you plan to barely leave the property, the shopping (two Chanels, a Hermes temple, the only US Gucci Garden), the restaurants over water, and the calm-by-Vegas-standards pools justify the premium.
Should look elsewhere:
Families travelling with pets (service animals only), budget-minded guests who bristle at a non-optional $45 daily resort fee and $69 room-service breakfasts, and anyone wanting a pool-party scene or a walkable position among the south Strip's mega-resorts.
Bottom line
What you're paying for here is a sealed-off, design-driven world that genuinely rewards staying put: the rooms are roughly twice the size of standard Vegas product, the restaurant roster is the city's strongest, and the public spaces feel theatrical without tipping into kitsch. Splurge on a renovated Tower Suite, book Delilah and Lake of Dreams well in advance, and time a visit outside major convention weeks.
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Location
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