Titanic in Las Vegas sounds odd, until you walk in. The Luxor exhibition turns the ship’s story into a walk-through of 250+ recovered artifacts and real-feeling rooms at the center of it all.
I especially like the way the displays mix wreck-site objects with full-scale reconstructions, so you see both evidence and atmosphere in one visit. One caution: cameras aren’t allowed, so plan to experience it fully with your eyes, not through a photo dump.
In This Review
- Quick hits
- Titanic at the Luxor: Why This Exhibit Works in Las Vegas
- Price and Value: Is $45 a Good Deal for This Titanic Experience?
- What You’ll See: Recovered Artifacts Plus Life-Size Ship Rooms
- The Grand Staircase Recreation and Cabin Walkthrough
- The Passenger ID Card and the QR Fate Moment
- Time Your Visit: Opening Hours and Final Admission at 5:00 PM
- Getting In Fast: Ticket Use at the Main Entrance
- Rules That Change Your Day: No Cameras, No Food, No Large Bags
- Lighting, Crowds, and Reading Signs: How to Get the Most From the Displays
- Who This Works Best For (And Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book the Titanic Artifact Exhibition at the Luxor?
- FAQ
- How much is the Titanic Artifact Exhibition at the Luxor Hotel?
- Where do I present my ticket?
- What are the opening hours and last admission time?
- What’s included with the ticket?
- Can I bring a camera or take photos?
- Are food, drinks, or large bags allowed?
- Are children allowed, and do they need a ticket?
Quick hits

- 250+ Titanic artifacts recovered from the North Atlantic tell the story with real objects, not just replicas
- Full-scale room recreations, including the Grand Staircase, bring the ship’s layout to life
- First- and third-class cabin scenes help you understand daily life across different passenger experiences
- A random passenger ID card gives you a personal thread to follow as the story unfolds
- QR fate check at the end lets you see what happened to the passenger you’re assigned
Titanic at the Luxor: Why This Exhibit Works in Las Vegas

Las Vegas doesn’t usually do quiet and heavy. The Titanic Artifact Exhibition at the Luxor Hotel somehow finds that mood anyway, using a simple formula: show you real recovered artifacts, then place you inside recreated spaces that match the ship’s famous look.
What makes it work is the combination of evidence and storytelling. You’re not just reading panels. You’re walking through rooms like you’re moving along the ship’s path, and you’re seeing objects that were actually recovered from the wreck site. That blend helps the tragedy feel personal instead of abstract.
I also like that the exhibition has a clear emotional arc. It’s not only about the ship’s fame; it’s about the short journey—from construction to disaster—then the night the ship sank, with space to reflect on those lost.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Las Vegas
Price and Value: Is $45 a Good Deal for This Titanic Experience?
Tickets run about $45 per person, and the “value” question is fair. This isn’t a day-long guided tour of multiple stops. It’s a focused exhibition experience. So if you’re expecting a long, roam-all-day itinerary, you might leave wishing you had more time.
But if you want something more specific—250+ artifacts plus full-scale room recreations—this price starts to make sense. You’re paying for access to:
- Admission to the exhibition
- A high-detail walkthrough experience that’s designed to be more than a quick photo stop
- Interactive elements like the passenger ID card and the end QR scan
The best way to think about it: this is a ticketed museum-style experience with time limits built into the venue schedule, and the cost is your entry fee into a story-world built from real artifacts. If you’re a Titanic fan, or you like exhibits that feel carefully staged, the $45 can feel like a reasonable splurge.
What You’ll See: Recovered Artifacts Plus Life-Size Ship Rooms

The exhibition centers on the Titanic in two complementary ways: recovered objects and room recreations.
On the artifacts side, you’ll see 250+ items recovered from the wreck site. The exhibit specifically includes things like luggage and ship equipment, plus items such as champagne. You’ll also encounter the kind of “wait, that’s real?” moments you get when an object has traveled from the seafloor to a display case. One standout detail is that it includes the largest piece of Titanic’s hull ever recovered. Even without extra explanation, that size alone gives you a physical sense of scale.
On the room-recreation side, the exhibition recreates familiar ship spaces at full scale. The goal is to make the Titanic feel navigable. You can walk through deck and cabin scenes and get a sense of how people moved through the ship—what it looked like up close, and how different passenger experiences were arranged.
This approach matters because it changes how you process the tragedy. Objects teach you “this happened.” Rooms teach you “this is what it might have felt like.”
The Grand Staircase Recreation and Cabin Walkthrough
The exhibition’s most famous visual hook is the Grand Staircase recreation—the one many people recognize from pop culture. It’s more than a marketing anchor here; it’s a useful way to orient yourself visually before you start thinking about cabins, classes, and daily life.
From there, the walkthrough focuses on first- and third-class cabins and the life inside them. You’ll see full-scale scenes that aim to reflect cabins furnished with actual belongings from Titanic manufacturers. That’s a meaningful detail because it connects the “famous ship look” with the design and material reality of what people used.
You also get a sense of movement across the ship. The exhibition describes you walking the decks and peering into cabins, plus meeting passengers and crew as part of the experience. Even if you don’t need every narrative beat, the layout helps you connect the ship’s grandeur with the human scale of the story.
One practical note: parts of the display lighting can be dim enough that you may struggle to read descriptions if you’re far from the signage. If you care about the text, plan to reposition yourself rather than assuming you’ll read everything while standing still.
The Passenger ID Card and the QR Fate Moment
One of the cleverest parts is the personal thread: you’re given a card with a random passenger ID as you move through the exhibition. That turns the experience from “general Titanic history” into “my story inside the story.”
At the end, you scan a QR code to find out what happened to the passenger on your card. The outcome can land you somewhere on the timeline—survived or didn’t—which makes the final moment feel more immediate than a standard museum sign.
This is also where many people get emotionally hooked, including folks who are fans of historical exhibits but want more than facts. The QR moment gives you closure and a sense of connection, even if the card’s passenger was only assigned randomly.
It’s also worth knowing what you’re trading off. Since the exhibition is structured, you’ll likely follow a path rather than wandering freely. If you like loose, independent museum wandering, you may need to slow down and let the exhibit’s flow lead you.
Time Your Visit: Opening Hours and Final Admission at 5:00 PM
The exhibition is open from 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM, with final admission at 5:00 PM. That final admission time matters because it limits how late you can show up and still be certain you’ll get in.
Here’s how I’d plan your timing in real-world Vegas terms:
- If you want less pressure and better chances to linger, aim for an earlier entry within the open window.
- If you’re doing other Luxor or Strip plans that day, treat 5:00 PM as your hard stop for deciding to go in.
Also remember: the exhibition is inside a hotel complex. Vegas days can run on time you didn’t expect. If you’re the kind of person who likes to take photos and read every sign, give yourself more slack than you think. This isn’t the type of experience you’ll want to rush.
Getting In Fast: Ticket Use at the Main Entrance
Your ticket use is straightforward. You present your ticket at the main entrance of Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition, and the activity ends back at the meeting point.
The good news: the experience includes skipping the ticket line, which saves time if you’re coordinating with a packed day. Even with a skip option, I’d still treat it as a “show up with purpose” situation. The venue has rules about what you can bring, so you don’t want to arrive late and then spend extra time handling bag restrictions.
Rules That Change Your Day: No Cameras, No Food, No Large Bags
This exhibit has firm rules, and knowing them up front can help you avoid a frustrating last-minute scramble.
Not allowed:
- Cameras (this includes the urge to stop and document everything)
- Smoking
- Food and drinks
- Luggage or large bags
- Unaccompanied minors
And for kids:
- Guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult
- Children three (3) and under are free when accompanied by an adult (no ticket required)
If you’re traveling with kids, this is a family-friendly “history-with-emotion” concept, but the adult accompaniment rule is key. Also, if you’re the type who carries a day bag full of snacks and gear, you’ll want to plan for what you can and can’t bring inside.
One more thing to note from how people describe the experience: if you’re hoping to get great views of staircases and displays, expect some visitors to pause right in front of exhibits. To get your best viewing angles, don’t assume you’ll find open space instantly—move when others settle.
Lighting, Crowds, and Reading Signs: How to Get the Most From the Displays
A great exhibit can still be hard to enjoy if you can’t see or read. The lighting in some areas can be dim, so if you care about the written explanations, position yourself closer and take a moment to scan descriptions before you move on.
Crowding is another reality in a popular Las Vegas attraction. If someone blocks your view, don’t fight it—just shift to the side or let the flow bring you around again. The exhibition’s design is meant for people to keep moving, so you’ll usually get another chance at a clearer look.
Also, since cameras aren’t allowed, your “photo strategy” should become a “memory strategy.” Let the visuals land. That’s the point here: you’re in a walk-through shaped by real objects and carefully built rooms.
Who This Works Best For (And Who Might Skip It)
I think this experience is a strong match for you if:
- You like museums that show artifacts with meaningful context
- You’re interested in the Titanic story beyond blockbuster references
- You enjoy interactive touches like the passenger ID card and QR fate reveal
- You want a structured, emotional narrative you can follow in one visit
You might want to skip or consider another Titanic-focused option if:
- You need lots of time to linger with photos and don’t want to go without a camera
- You’re on a tight schedule and want a long, wandering day rather than a focused walkthrough
- You prefer very large, multi-hall exhibits and worry this will feel short for the price
Should You Book the Titanic Artifact Exhibition at the Luxor?
For most people, I’d say yes—especially if Titanic is a meaningful interest for you. The combination of 250+ recovered artifacts, full-scale room recreations, and a personal touch through the random passenger card + QR scan makes it more than a generic exhibit stop.
If you’re booking for the lowest-effort option, it also helps that the ticket lets you skip the ticket line and entry is clearly scheduled with 11:00 AM–6:00 PM hours and final admission at 5:00 PM.
My only real “think twice” is the rule set: no cameras, no food, and no large bags. If you can work with that and you want an emotionally guided walkthrough, you’ll likely feel like your time and money were put to good use.
FAQ
How much is the Titanic Artifact Exhibition at the Luxor Hotel?
Admission is priced at about $45 per person.
Where do I present my ticket?
Present your ticket at the main entrance of Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition.
What are the opening hours and last admission time?
The exhibition is open from 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM, with final admission granted at 5:00 PM.
What’s included with the ticket?
Your ticket includes admission to Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition.
Can I bring a camera or take photos?
No. Cameras are not allowed inside the exhibition.
Are food, drinks, or large bags allowed?
No. Food and drinks are not allowed, and luggage or large bags are not allowed.
Are children allowed, and do they need a ticket?
Guests under 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Children three (3) and under are free when accompanied by an adult (no ticket required).


























