Reality TV sites, in real life. This half-day tour is a fun way to connect the names on the screen to actual storefronts and garages around Las Vegas. I like how it combines Pawn Stars, Counting Cars, and other collectible stops into one tight route, so you’re not bouncing around for parking and directions.
Two things that really work for you: the air-conditioned mini-coach (Vegas heat is real) and the way the guide ties each location to what makes the show tick. One thing to think about: the optional upgrade can change what you get at the Pawn Stars stop, and not every cast member is guaranteed to show up.
In This Review
- The Four-Hour Plan, From Treasure Island to Collectibles
- Your Must-See Route: 6 Stops That Cover 3 TV Worlds
- Stop 1: Gold & Silver Pawn Shop and Pawn Plaza Time
- The 20-Minute Allegiant Stadium Stop (Outside Viewing)
- Stop 3: Count’s Kustoms and the Cars-First Vibe
- Shelby American Collection: Counting Cars’ Muscle Meets Real Heritage
- Ultimate Sports Cards & Memorabilia: The Jeremy Brown-Owned Stop
- The Toy Shack: Where Pawn Stars Fans Find Nostalgia
- Meet-and-Greet Upgrade: What You’re Paying For
- Comfort, Timing, and the Group Size That Makes It Work
- Value Check: Is $55 a Good Deal for This Kind of Day?
- Who This Tour Is Best For (And Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book It or DIY Your Own Day?
- FAQ
- How long is the Las Vegas Pawn Stars and Reality TV Shows tour?
- Where is the pickup location?
- What time does the tour start?
- Does the tour include admission fees?
- Is there a meet-and-greet option?
- What language is the tour in?
- How many people are on the tour at once?
The Four-Hour Plan, From Treasure Island to Collectibles

This tour starts at 12:00 pm with pickup at Treasure Island Las Vegas. Your meeting spot is on Sirens Cove Blvd, on a bench area furthest from Las Vegas Blvd, so it’s worth arriving a few minutes early and not wandering the casino looking confused.
Once everyone is aboard, you’ll ride in comfort to a sequence of places tied to Las Vegas fame in TV land. The whole thing runs about 4 hours, and the group size is capped at 20 travelers, which helps keep the stops from turning into a huge, slow mob.
If you’re coming from off-Strip, this is also a decent “get your bearings fast” day. You see several well-known landmarks without needing to line up ride shares and hunt for street parking.
Your Must-See Route: 6 Stops That Cover 3 TV Worlds
Here’s what the tour is built around: cars, memorabilia, and collectibles. You’ll hit Pawn Stars, Counting Cars, and a few additional specialist shops that match the same collector vibe. Even if you’re not a die-hard superfan, the physical objects are the point. Las Vegas makes these brands feel loud and larger than life, and this tour gives you the real-world versions.
Key stops include the Gold & Silver Pawn Shop, Allegiant Stadium (outside only), Count’s Kustoms, Shelby American, a sports memorabilia shop, and a toy collectibles store. It’s a smart mix: one car stop right after another, then collectibles that feel like they belong to the same universe.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas.
Stop 1: Gold & Silver Pawn Shop and Pawn Plaza Time

Your first stop is the Gold & Silver Pawn Shop, where admission is included and you’ll have about 30 minutes. This is the location most people picture when they think of Pawn Stars: sports memorabilia, coins, and the kind of items that make you understand why people collect and trade instead of just buy.
Right next door, you’ll also find Rick Harrison’s Pawn Plaza. That’s where the tour gives you a chance to extend the experience without adding extra transportation. Roll’n Smoke BBQ & Tavern and Chumlee’s Candy are on the same area, so you can browse what’s there with time to spare.
Practical note: this is the stop that’s most likely to feel “busy” just because it’s the main draw. Plan to take your photos quickly, then slow down for a second pass if you want to read details on displays.
The 20-Minute Allegiant Stadium Stop (Outside Viewing)

Next up is Allegiant Stadium Way, with a 20-minute stop. Admission is free, and the tour focuses on the outside view rather than an in-depth stadium visit.
This part is useful because it anchors the day in real Las Vegas scale. The stadium is next to the Strip, so you get a quick sense of the modern sports-and-entertainment machine that runs alongside the reality TV storefronts.
If you’re expecting a full stadium experience, adjust your mental plan. This is more of a show-and-photo moment than a guided walk through every corner.
Stop 3: Count’s Kustoms and the Cars-First Vibe

Then the tour pivots back into cars with Count’s Kustoms, including about 25 minutes on site. Admission is included here too. This stop is where you’ll see the kind of vehicles that make the show famous, and the tour’s narration connects what you see to the culture of custom builds and the storytelling style of the series.
You’ll have time to snap photos, and it’s also one of the better places for people who prefer tangible objects over shopping shelves. The cars look better in person than they do on a screen, mainly because you can walk around them and see proportions and finishes directly.
Also, be prepared for the reality-TV logistics of small windows. You’re not in a museum. You’re in a working shop vibe with a time box, so go in with a short “must photo” checklist.
Shelby American Collection: Counting Cars’ Muscle Meets Real Heritage

The tour then sends you to Shelby American, Inc., another 25-minute stop with admission included. This one is for car enthusiasts, but even non-car people usually find it satisfying because the cars are so specific and iconic.
At Shelby American, you’ll be checking out the Shelby collection and the types of vehicles linked to the show’s car world. The museum-style approach is different from Count’s Kustoms. Here, the emphasis feels more like preserved engineering and brand identity than active customization.
If you love classic muscle cars, this stop is often the “wow” segment of the day. If you’re less into cars, it can still be a fun contrast—after a shop stop, this feels more like a curated collection.
Ultimate Sports Cards & Memorabilia: The Jeremy Brown-Owned Stop

After the car-heavy portion, you shift into sports collectibles at Ultimate Sports Cards and Memorabilia, with about 15 minutes and admission included. This is a specialist store, and it shows.
The tour includes context about how sports memorabilia is valued and traded, and it’s tied to the show world because the shop is owned by Jeremy Brown, who appears on Pawn Stars. That connection matters, because it turns this from generic souvenir shopping into a stop that matches the show’s theme of expertise and appraisal.
In this type of store, time matters. You won’t see everything in 15 minutes, so focus on what you actually want to buy or photograph: autographed items, cards, or anything with clear provenance signs.
The Toy Shack: Where Pawn Stars Fans Find Nostalgia

Your final shop stop is The Toy Shack, also around 15 minutes with admission included. This one leans into vintage and collectible toys, from Hot Wheels and Transformers to older classic toys and recognizable childhood brands.
The tour ties it back to reality TV too: the shop is owned by Johnny Jiminez, who appears on Pawn Stars. That’s a big reason the store feels like a natural ending to the day rather than a random add-on.
This stop is ideal if you want something smaller to carry home. It’s also a nice palate change after cars and sports cards—different kind of collecting, same underlying appeal: people love the stories attached to items.
Meet-and-Greet Upgrade: What You’re Paying For

The base tour is already structured: pickup, transport, and narration at each stop. The optional upgrade is centered on a Pawn Stars cast meet-and-greet photo. If you select that option, you’re guaranteed the chance to take a photo with a cast member from Pawn Stars.
Some people in the group experience report meeting Rick Harrison as part of the upgrade, but what you can rely on is the photo with a Pawn Stars cast member—not that every other cast member will show up at their shop. The tour includes Count’s Kustoms and other specialist locations, but the meet-and-greet is specifically tied to the Pawn Stars side.
Practical expectation-setting: if you’re paying extra mainly for a specific person from Counting Cars or for Danny Koker-like surprises, don’t assume it’s automatic. If meeting a Pawn Stars cast member is your top priority, that’s the upgrade lane built for you.
Also, confirm what the upgrade includes before you arrive. Some guests describe paid add-ons as messy or less guided than expected, so it’s smart to ask what changes at the Pawn Stars stop if you choose the upgrade.
Comfort, Timing, and the Group Size That Makes It Work
A big part of the value is simply not dealing with Las Vegas logistics. You’re carried around in an air-conditioned mini-coach, and that makes the day easier—especially when the heat hits between stops.
The day is also paced in a way that matches the places you’re visiting. Each location has a short, realistic window, so you’re not trapped too long in any one shop. You get enough time to look, take photos, and shop lightly without turning the tour into an all-day sprint.
Group size matters here. With a maximum of 20 travelers, you’re less likely to feel like you’re in a conveyor belt. You’ll still want to move with purpose, but it won’t feel completely chaotic.
Value Check: Is $55 a Good Deal for This Kind of Day?
At $55 per person (about 4 hours), you’re paying for two things: access to multiple filmed locations and a low-stress route built for you. If you were to do this on your own, you’d spend time coordinating rides, fighting parking, and figuring out which shops are worth your limited time.
Where the math gets interesting is the upgrade. The base tour already includes guided narration and scheduled time at the key locations. But if meeting a cast member is a must, you may want to budget extra for the meet-and-greet option so you’re not scrambling once you’re there.
In my view, this is a strong value if:
- You want a structured route through the most famous Las Vegas TV-adjacent stops.
- You like collectible stores and don’t need everything to be a deep museum experience.
- You prefer guided logistics over DIY.
It may be less of a fit if:
- You only care about one shop and would rather spend your time elsewhere.
- You want every stop to feel like a full guided tour with lots of behind-the-scenes access.
- You’re expecting a guaranteed cast appearance at every featured location.
Who This Tour Is Best For (And Who Might Skip It)
This works best for:
- Pawn Stars fans who want the Gold & Silver Pawn Shop and a realistic shot at the cast-photo upgrade.
- Counting Cars fans who want Count’s Kustoms plus the Shelby American museum stop.
- Collectors or gift shoppers who like sports cards, memorabilia, and vintage toys.
- First-time Las Vegas visitors who want a half-day with structure and minimal hassle.
It might not be ideal if you hate shopping at all, or if you don’t care about any of the car or collectibles themes. The tour is built for people who enjoy looking closely at items, not just walking past them.
Should You Book It or DIY Your Own Day?
If your goal is a guided, low-effort half-day that hits several real TV locations, I’d book it. For a first visit, it’s a smart shortcut. You get comfort, clear timing, and a set of stops that are all thematically connected.
My deciding tip: make your priorities clear before you go. If the meet-and-greet matters, choose the Pawn Stars upgrade. If you’re mainly there for cars and collectibles, focus on the base tour value and plan your shopping energy for the Pawn Stars pawn stop, Shelby American, and the specialist collectibles stores.
FAQ
How long is the Las Vegas Pawn Stars and Reality TV Shows tour?
The tour lasts about 4 hours.
Where is the pickup location?
Pickup starts at Treasure Island Las Vegas (TI Hotel & Casino, A Radisson Hotel), 3300 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109. The specific pickup guidance is on Sirens Cove Blvd.
What time does the tour start?
The start time is 12:00 pm.
Does the tour include admission fees?
Admission is included at the Gold & Silver Pawn Shop, Count’s Kustoms, Shelby American, Ultimate Sports Cards & Memorabilia, and The Toy Shack. Allegiant Stadium is listed as free.
Is there a meet-and-greet option?
Yes. There is an optional upgrade that adds a meet-and-greet with a Pawn Stars cast member, and you’re guaranteed a photo with the cast member when you book that option.
What language is the tour in?
The tour is offered in English.
How many people are on the tour at once?
The tour has a maximum of 20 travelers.
























