Las Vegas Bottle Service Cost by Club: 2026 Table Minimums
Everyone wants the same thing before they book a table: a straight answer on what each Las Vegas club actually costs. The trouble is that table minimums move constantly with the night, the DJ and where the table sits, so a single number is never the whole story. What we can give you is honest 2026 ranges for every major room, an explanation of what pushes the price up or down, and the specific moves that keep you from overpaying. This is the breakdown we wish more people had before they walked up to a door.
How to read a table minimum
Before the numbers, the one concept that trips everyone up: a table minimum is a spend minimum, not a cover charge. If a club quotes you 2,000, you are committing to spend at least 2,000 on bottles and mixers, and those bottles are yours. You are not paying 2,000 to walk in and then buying drinks separately on top. The minimum is the floor of your bar tab.
On top of every minimum, the club adds tax and a service charge that together run roughly 20 to 30 percent. So a 2,000 minimum realistically checks out around 2,500 to 2,600 before any extra tip you choose to leave. Every range below is the minimum only, so add that 20 to 30 percent to picture your real all-in number. Our deeper bottle service pricing guide walks through the mechanics in full.
Nightclub table minimums by club
These ranges hold true most weekends in 2026. The low end reflects a slower night or a perimeter table; the high end reflects a marquee night or a prime dance-floor location. A major headliner pushes every number up.
- XS at Encore: roughly 1,500 to 2,500 on a weeknight, 3,000 and up on weekends, far higher for dance floor and DJ booth tables on a sold-out night. One of the most in-demand rooms in the world, so it sits at the top of the price range.
- OMNIA at Caesars Palace: roughly 2,000 to 3,000 to start on a weekend, climbing for tables under the chandelier or near the floor. A megaclub with megaclub pricing.
- Marquee at The Cosmopolitan: roughly 1,500 to 2,500 to start, with multiple rooms (main, Library, Boombox) that give you options at different price points.
- TAO at The Venetian: roughly 1,200 to 2,000 to start, a touch friendlier than the EDM giants and a strong value for an open-format room.
- Drai's at The Cromwell: roughly 1,500 to 3,000 to start, with marquee rapper performance nights pushing the high end well up. The rooftop and live performances drive the premium.
- LIV at Fontainebleau: roughly 2,000 to 3,000 and up to start. One of the newest and most impressive rooms on the Strip, priced accordingly.
- Other top rooms (Hakkasan, Zouk, JEWEL): generally roughly 1,200 to 2,500 to start depending on the night and the headliner.
Dayclub table minimums
Pool party minimums work the same way, with daybeds at the lower end and cabanas higher because they include shade, more seating and sometimes a private plunge pool.
- Encore Beach Club: daybeds roughly 1,000 to 2,000 to start, cabanas and bungalows 2,500 to 5,000 and well up on a big Saturday. The biggest pool on the Strip, top of the range.
- Wet Republic: daybeds roughly 1,000 to 2,000, cabanas 2,500 and up. Similar tier to Encore Beach Club.
- Marquee Dayclub: daybeds roughly 750 to 1,500, cabanas higher. Strong views, slightly more upscale crowd.
- Other pools (TAO Beach, Ayu, Drai's Beach Club): daybeds commonly start around 750 to 1,500, cabanas from roughly 1,500 up.
See every pool ranked and explained on our dayclubs page, and the full night side on our nightclubs page.
What actually drives the price
Two tables in the same club on the same night can cost wildly different amounts. Here is what moves the number, in order of impact:
- Table location. The single biggest lever. A booth against the dance floor or beside the DJ booth costs several times what a perimeter or upper-level table costs in the same room. You are paying for real estate, not the bottles.
- The night of the week. Saturday is the peak and the most expensive. Friday and Sunday follow. Thursday and weeknights can run dramatically cheaper for the same table.
- The headliner. A major residency DJ or a touring artist pushes every minimum up. The same room with a resident DJ versus a world-famous one is a different price entirely.
- The season and the date. Holiday weekends, big fight weekends, festival weekends and New Year's Eve carry the highest minimums of the year. A quiet week in the off-season carries the lowest.
- Group size and demand. A bigger group needs a bigger table, and high-demand dates simply cost more because the room can charge it.
How many bottles your minimum buys
Bottles inside a club carry a steep markup. A standard bottle of vodka or tequila commonly runs 600 to 1,000 dollars, with champagne and premium labels climbing from there. So a 2,000 minimum is usually two or three bottles, which serves a group of six to ten comfortably with the included mixers. Your bottles count fully toward the minimum, so you are not spending the minimum and then buying bottles, the bottles are the minimum.
How to not overpay
This is the part that saves you real money. Six moves that consistently lower what you pay:
- Book through a host, not the door. Walk-up table pricing is almost always higher, and you lose any leverage on location. A host quotes the real number and places you well.
- Be flexible on the night. A Thursday or Sunday table can cost a fraction of the same table on Saturday. If your trip allows it, shift the big table night off the peak.
- Right-size the table. Do not pay for prime dance-floor real estate you do not need. A host places you where your group actually fits.
- Confirm the all-in number in writing. Get the minimum, the tax and the service charge spelled out before you commit, so the check never surprises you.
- Compare rooms before committing. The vibe you want often exists at two or three clubs at different prices. A host can hold tables at more than one while you decide.
- Avoid sites that add booking fees. Some third parties mark up the venue price or tack on their own service fee. A host charges no booking fee, so the price you pay is the venue price.
Table or guest list?
If a table minimum is more than your group wants to spend, the free guest list still gets you into most of these rooms for reduced or no cover, as long as you arrive before the cutoff. You give up the reserved seat and the fast door, but you keep your money for drinks at the bar. Our guest list vs bottle service guide helps you decide, and our bottle service page and VIP packages show what a table includes when you do want one.
Want the real all-in price for a specific club and date, with no booking fee and no markup? Message a host and we will quote your table honestly, place it in the right part of the room, and tell you straight if the free guest list is the better call for your group.
Common questions
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