Hotels With a Private Tub in Las Vegas — The Best Options by Budget

Las Vegas has more hotel rooms than almost any city on earth, which means you have real options when it comes to finding a suite with a private tub. We’ve stayed in or researched the best ones across the Strip and off it — here’s what’s actually worth booking.

1. The Venetian Resort

From ~$250/night

Every room at the Venetian is a suite — that’s the whole point of the place. Most come with a large soaking tub set right in the bedroom area, facing the floor-to-ceiling windows. The rooms are enormous (you’re looking at around 650 sq ft minimum), which means the tub doesn’t feel crammed in as an afterthought. Location is central Strip, walking distance from everything.

👉 Check availability at The Venetian →


2. Vdara Hotel & Spa

From ~$180/night

Vdara is the quieter cousin of the MGM properties — no casino, no cigarette smell, and genuinely peaceful. Their penthouse suites have deep soaking tubs with Strip views from high up. It’s tucked between ARIA and the Bellagio, so you’re close to everything without being in the middle of the noise. Good pick for couples who want the Vegas access without the Vegas chaos.

👉 Check availability at Vdara →


3. Palms Place Hotel & Spa

From ~$120/night

If you want a jetted tub without paying Strip prices, Palms Place is the answer. The suites are condo-style with private balconies, full kitchens, and soaking tubs — and you’re getting skyline views at a fraction of what the big Strip names charge. It’s a short Uber from the Strip, which most people are fine with.

👉 Check availability at Palms Place →


4. The Cosmopolitan — Wraparound Terrace Suite

From ~$220/night

This is the one people show off on Instagram. The Wraparound Terrace Suites have an outdoor hot tub on a private terrace that wraps around the corner of the building — directly facing the Bellagio fountains. You watch the fountain show from your own tub. It’s a genuinely impressive setup, and the Cosmopolitan’s design throughout is better than most Strip hotels.

👉 Check availability at The Cosmopolitan →


5. ARIA Resort & Casino — Sky Suites

From ~$200/night

ARIA’s Sky Suites are a step above the hotel’s standard rooms — floor-to-ceiling windows, smart room controls for everything, and deep soaking tubs with panoramic views of the Strip and the mountains beyond it. The whole property runs cleanly and the service is reliable. Good choice if you want a big-hotel experience done well.

👉 Check availability at ARIA →


6. Paris Las Vegas — Eiffel Tower Suite

From ~$130/night

Paris Las Vegas punches above its price point. The Eiffel Tower Suites come with two-person whirlpool tubs in the room, and depending on which floor you’re on, you get a view of the replica Eiffel Tower or across the Strip. It’s a bit campy but the rooms are solid and the location (mid-Strip, Bellagio across the street) is excellent.

👉 Check availability at Paris Las Vegas →

A few things worth knowing before you book

  • Jacuzzi rooms go fast on weekends. If you’re looking at a Friday or Saturday night, book at least 1–2 weeks ahead. Midweek nights are usually available with shorter notice.
  • Midweek is significantly cheaper. The same suite that costs $350 on Saturday can be $150 on Tuesday. If your schedule is flexible, it’s worth shifting your trip.
  • In-room vs shared tub. Some Vegas hotels advertise “jacuzzi access” but mean a communal hot tub somewhere on the property. Make sure the booking clearly says in-room or in-suite.
  • Call the hotel if you’re celebrating something. Mentioning an anniversary or honeymoon when you call to confirm often gets you a room upgrade or at least a better floor.

Common questions

Do all Vegas hotels have rooms with a tub?

No. Most standard rooms in Las Vegas just have a shower. Tub suites are a specific category — you have to search for them or ask the hotel directly. The options above all have verified in-room tubs.

What’s the difference between a jacuzzi and a soaking tub in a hotel?

A jacuzzi (or whirlpool tub) has jets. A soaking tub is deep and oversized but doesn’t have jets. Both are genuinely relaxing — the jet tubs are louder but more of the “spa” experience. Most of the hotels above have jetted tubs, but a few have deep soaking tubs. Check the specific room description on Booking.com.

Is a tub suite worth the extra cost in Vegas?

Usually yes, if you’re staying for a reason — anniversary, birthday, bachelorette, honeymoon. The price difference is often $50–$150/night compared to a standard room at the same hotel. For one or two nights, it’s not a lot for what you get.

👉 See all hotels with tubs in Las Vegas on Booking.com →

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