Love is All You Need: The Beatles Tribute Show at the Ahern Hotel

Traveller rating 5.0 (44)Price from$43.22Operated byTicket KiteBook viaViator

Beatles music, right up close in Vegas. This intimate live tribute, staged in a venue with a Cavern Club feel at the Ahern Luxury Boutique Hotel, turns classic songs into a tight, high-energy singalong moment. I love the up-close atmosphere and the fact that the performers sound like real Beatles fans, not just costume-and-pluck stand-ins.

What I like most is the mix: you get the early crowd favorites like I Want to Hold Your Hand and Twist and Shout, plus bigger later-era moments like Something, A Day in The Life, and Hey Jude. The only drawback to plan for is time: it’s about 1 hour 10 minutes, so you will not hear every single Beatles track you hope for.

Key things to know before you go

  • A Cavern Club-style vibe in a smaller room that keeps the music feeling personal
  • A setlist that spans eras, from early hits to later masterpieces
  • Multi-instrumentalist performers, which helps the sound stay full even in an intimate space
  • About 1 hour 10 minutes total, so it’s concentrated rather than a full discography tour
  • Mobile ticket and a selected section, making it straightforward to plan your arrival
  • Drinks are not included, but you can purchase beverages onsite

Where the show happens: Ahern Hotel and that Cavern Club feel

This show takes place at the Ahern Luxury Boutique Hotel in Las Vegas, and the room is designed to feel like one of those smaller Beatles-type stages where you can see details. The venue is described as reminiscent of the Cavern Club, which matters because the sound and the mood land differently when the audience is close rather than spread out.

You can also expect an easy night from a logistics point of view. The start time is 6:00 pm, the ticket is mobile, and the event is near public transportation, so you are not stuck figuring out a complicated plan just to get there.

If you tend to like shows where you can read the room and feel part of the energy, this setup helps. It also explains why the best comments tend to mention the venue itself as much as the music.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas

The setlist: early hits, big later songs, and solo favorites

The heart of the experience is the setlist, and it’s built to cover the parts of the Beatles story most people connect with. You’ll hear early classics like I Want to Hold Your Hand, Twist and Shout, and She Loves You. That start matters, because those songs have a punchy rhythm and instant familiarity that gets the crowd moving fast.

Then the show reaches for the songs many Beatles fans think of as deeper or more cinematic. Expect performances of Something, A Day in The Life, and Hey Jude. These tracks change the mood, because they bring in more dynamics than the early rockers—stronger build, more emotion, and a bigger feeling of lift.

A few Beatles solo hits are also included. That’s a nice touch if you like the full post-Beatles era, but it’s still a tribute focused on the group’s catalog. The key practical takeaway: you’re not buying a “complete Beatles greatest hits collection.” You’re buying a curated, time-limited show where the performers choose the moments that flow best.

What 1 hour 10 minutes really means for your night

At about 1 hour 10 minutes, this is a concentrated show. For many people, that’s a win: it gives you a high-quality music fix without eating up a huge chunk of a Vegas evening.

In practice, this length changes your expectations. If your ideal show is hearing every favorite track in whatever order you rank them, you may feel the limits. One downside called out is that the show feels short and can leave you wanting more, and that’s the most reasonable “consideration” going in.

Still, the shorter runtime can also make the whole experience feel sharper. You’re not waiting around for the next big moment—momentum stays high, and you move through familiar songs at a pace that keeps energy up.

My advice: treat it like your Beatles hit block. Pair it with dinner nearby, or use it as an anchor event that gives structure to a Vegas night.

The performers: passionate multi-instrumentalists, not just impersonators

This tribute stands out because the performers are described as multi-instrumentalists and true Beatles enthusiasts. That matters more than it sounds. When musicians can cover more than one part of a song, they can keep the sound closer to what you remember—especially for Beatles tracks where multiple musical ideas are packed into one recording.

In an intimate room, your ear notices details. You’ll hear the effort in getting the rhythm right, and you’ll also notice how the group handles the bigger, more layered songs in the later portion of the set. That’s likely why the highest praise leans heavily on great music and the feeling that you could keep listening.

As for technical hiccups: live shows can have them, and there was at least one comment mentioning a bug in the show. With a runtime of about 1 hour 10 minutes, any distraction can feel more noticeable simply because there’s less time to smooth things out. If you’re the type who gets thrown off by disruptions, plan to be flexible.

Seating and tickets: using your mobile pass and choosing your section

Your ticket includes the show admission, with section selected at the time of booking. That’s worth paying attention to when you’re booking, because a small venue plus reserved seating can make the difference between feeling right in the music and feeling slightly off to the side.

The ticket is mobile, which keeps things simple. You won’t need to print anything, and you can handle your entry without extra stops. I’d still make sure your phone battery is happy that evening—because in Vegas, one dead battery can turn a quick plan into a stressful one.

One more practical detail: buses and lines can be unpredictable around show time, so having your ticket ready early helps. If you can, arrive with enough buffer to get settled before the first big songs roll in.

Price and value: what $43.22 buys you in Vegas

The price is $43.22 per person, and the ticket includes the show plus all fees and taxes. No surprise add-ons is a genuine value point, because many Vegas entertainment prices creep upward at checkout.

How do I judge whether it’s good value? By the combination of (1) show quality signals, (2) setlist range, and (3) the fact that it’s intimate. The rating average is 4.8 out of 5 with 44 ratings, and 93% of people recommend it. That doesn’t guarantee perfection, but it does suggest this isn’t a bargain-bin tribute where you’re rolling the dice.

You do trade away something for the price: the show is not long, and it’s not trying to cover every track you could name. If you’re a casual fan, that’s fine because the biggest hits and fan-favorite later songs are included. If you’re a deep cut hunter, you’ll probably leave with a list of songs you wanted but didn’t hear.

Beverages are not included (you’ll buy them onsite). So if you like a drink with a show, factor in that extra cost.

Who should book this Beatles tribute

This show is a great fit if you:

  • want Beatles classics in an intimate room rather than a distant stage experience
  • like a setlist that covers both early energy and later emotional weight
  • want a 1 hour 10 minute plan that’s easy to build into a Vegas evening
  • appreciate musicians who can handle more than one instrument, which keeps the sound lively

It may be less ideal if:

  • you only love a very specific subset of Beatles music and are hoping for a near-complete track list
  • you need a longer show for your personal attention span or want zero chance of technical distractions feeling disruptive

My take: Should you book Love Is All You Need at the Ahern Hotel?

If you love The Beatles and you want that classic sound served up close, I’d book it. The strongest reasons are practical: the room setup feels like a club atmosphere, the setlist hits major fan favorites across multiple eras, and the overall approval rate is high.

I’d also book it if you’re traveling with someone who loves the band but doesn’t want to sit through something overly long. This show gives you a clear start time at 6:00 pm, a tight runtime, and a straightforward ticket format.

Just go in with the right mindset. It’s a tribute show, not a full discography marathon. If you’re okay leaving a little want-it-more energy behind, you’ll probably have one of the more memorable Beatles-style nights Vegas offers.

FAQ

How long is the Love Is All You Need tribute show?

It runs about 1 hour 10 minutes.

What time does the show start in Las Vegas?

The start time is 6:00 pm.

Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?

No, hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.

Are beverages included with the ticket?

No. Beverages are available to purchase.

Do I need a printed ticket?

No. This experience uses a mobile ticket.

What is the cancellation policy?

You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours in advance of the experience start time. If you cancel less than 24 hours before, the amount paid is not refunded.

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