Vegas can be loud. This tour keeps it organized. You get VIP club entry without the usual hassle, plus an unlimited open bar on the limo bus between stops, so you can spend your energy on the night instead of logistics. The big drawback to plan for: it’s a lot of walking, and inside the clubs you’ll usually need bottle service to get true seating (not included).
What I like most is how the tour compresses a full Vegas nightlife crawl into one coordinated evening. You don’t have to figure out who’s where, how to get there, or what time to leave. Another win: the limo party bus helps the group stay in party mode, with a bartender on board and drinks flowing while you travel.
Still, think of this as a nightlife sampler, not a lazy sit-down dinner show. If you hate standing, tight club layouts, or you’re picky about music styles, Vegas nightlife can feel hit-or-miss.
In This Review
- Key Things To Know Before You Go
- The VIP Party-Bus Experience That Makes the Night Easy
- How the Three-Club Plan Plays Out on the Strip
- Stop 1 Through Stop 3: What the Nightclub Stops Feel Like
- Unlimited Drinks on the Bus: Big Perk, Mixed Details
- The Dress Code and ID Rules That Can Stop You at the Door
- Walking, Standing, and Bottle Service: The Hidden Trade-Off
- Music Style and Crowd Energy: Don’t Book Blind
- Price and Value: Is $99 a Good Deal for Your Night?
- Where the Tour Shines Most (And Where It Might Not)
- Practical Tips to Get the Most Out of the Evening
- Should You Book the Vegas Rock Star Nightclub Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Vegas Rock Star Nightclub Tour?
- What does the ticket price include?
- Are drinks included at the clubs?
- Do I need to worry about lines or cover charges?
- Where does the tour start and end?
- How old do you need to be?
- What is the dress code for club entry?
- Do international guests need a passport?
- Will I be sitting during the club stops?
- Is this tour refundable if my plans change?
- How big is the group?
Key Things To Know Before You Go
- Open bar on the limo bus keeps your pre-club time fun (not just transportation).
- Cover charges are handled and the aim is no long waits at the doors.
- First two stops are walkable in one hotel—then you ride the limo bus to the others.
- No bottle service included, so club seating is limited unless you buy it.
- Dress code is strict: no shorts/tennis shoes/swimwear; women need heels or wedges for entry.
- Passport is required for international guests; international citizenship IDs aren’t accepted.
The VIP Party-Bus Experience That Makes the Night Easy

The core idea is simple: you’re not hopping around Vegas like a confused tourist with a dead phone battery. You start on the Las Vegas Strip, meet your Rock Star VIP host, then ride between clubs on a deluxe limousine party bus with a bartender on board.
That bus time matters more than it sounds. In a city where everything opens late and changes fast, having one moving base cuts down on stress. You also get unlimited drinks on board, so the night doesn’t start with the awkward moment of, Okay, where do we find a drink?
The tour runs about 5 hours, and the group size tops out at 40. That’s big enough for a lively vibe, but usually small enough that the host can keep things moving if everyone shows up on time.
One thing I’d keep in mind: the bus portion is the easiest part of the experience. Some people report the club time is where the evening can feel less “tour-like,” especially if the night turns out to be more lounge-forward than high-energy dance-floor chaos.
You can also read our reviews of more nightlife experiences in Las Vegas
How the Three-Club Plan Plays Out on the Strip

The promise is that you’ll visit three A-list nightclubs during the evening, with no cover charges and no waiting in lines included. The reality of Vegas is that door policies can still cause friction during peak hours, but the intent is clear: you’re paying for smoother entry.
Here’s how the pacing typically works:
- The first two stops are in the same hotel, and you’ll walk between them.
- After that, you hop back on the limo party bus for the other locations.
This structure is handy because it reduces transit time early, when you’re still building your night. But it also means you should wear shoes you can walk in, because the tour is described as having a fair amount of walking.
Also, note the seating rule. Nightclubs generally don’t allow seating without bottle service, and bottle service isn’t included. So even if you want to pace yourself between beats, you might end up standing most of the time.
Stop 1 Through Stop 3: What the Nightclub Stops Feel Like
Your first stop is about getting the tour rolling. You meet your host at a bar/starting point on the Strip, then you’ll likely spend some time at that first venue before moving to the next. From there, the night shifts across multiple properties.
A helpful detail from real-world experiences: the venues you hit can vary by night, and some schedules lean more lounge than dance club. I wouldn’t assume every stop will be a full-volume party the whole time.
For example, I’ve seen clubs and venues referenced like:
- Foundation Room at Paris
- Drai’s at The Cromwell
- Chateau at Paris
- Ghost Bar at The Palms
- Tao
So if you’re chasing a specific vibe, plan with flexibility. One club might be rooftop-glam and photo-friendly; another might feel tighter or more subdued. Your best strategy is to treat each stop like its own mini-event and move with the energy instead of expecting a single style all night long.
Unlimited Drinks on the Bus: Big Perk, Mixed Details
The biggest value lever here is unlimited drinks onboard the party bus. That means you can start the evening socially, keep the group together, and reduce the chance that you’ll waste the first hour waiting around for alcohol.
That said, the quality and format of the included drinks can vary. Some people talk about premixed or basic “well” style pours rather than premium cocktails. In other words: it’s great that drinks are included, but don’t expect a craft-cocktail bar menu.
What you should do:
- Drink, but pace yourself. Even with the free bus drinks, you’ll be walking and standing later.
- If you have a strong preference (gin vs vodka, beer vs mixed drinks), don’t count on the bus serving exactly what you want every time.
Also, alcoholic drinks at the clubs are available to purchase, but they’re not part of the included package. So your budget mindset should be: bus drinks are handled; club drinks can add up.
The Dress Code and ID Rules That Can Stop You at the Door
If you’ve ever had Vegas ruin your plans for a silly reason, this is where it usually happens.
The tour includes a clear dress code:
- No shorts
- No tennis shoes
- No swimwear
- Women should wear heels or wedges for entry into clubs
If you’re traveling light, this is a big one to check before you commit. Bring the shoes you can actually wear while walking from one spot to another.
Next: minimum age is 21.
And for international visitors: your passport is required to enter nightclubs. International citizenship IDs won’t work.
Bottom line: if you’re even slightly unsure your outfit meets the club standard, fix it at home. Getting turned away at the first door is the one downside that will kill the vibe instantly.
Walking, Standing, and Bottle Service: The Hidden Trade-Off

This tour is not a sit-everywhere-and-feel-cushy evening. The tour notes that there is fairly substantial walking, and nightclubs typically don’t permit seating without bottle service (bottle service isn’t included).
So what does that mean for you in practical terms?
- You’ll likely stand while others cluster near seating areas.
- If you want to rest, you may need to buy into the club’s preferred setup.
- The “luxury tour” feel comes from the transportation and entry, not from guaranteed comfort inside the venues.
If you’re with a group where some people love bottle service and others don’t, you’ll want to talk about it before you go. Otherwise, you’ll spend money mid-night on something you didn’t plan for, or you’ll spend the night wishing you had.
Music Style and Crowd Energy: Don’t Book Blind
This is the hardest part to predict in Vegas: music taste. Some people felt the music didn’t match their expectations, while others seemed to love the vibe at the clubs they reached.
That’s why I treat this tour like a “variety-night” plan, not a guaranteed match to your exact genre. You may find the night leans into mainstream club tracks, and you may not always get the music you want.
A smart way to handle it:
- If you love a wide range of club music, you’ll probably have more fun.
- If you only like one style and want it all night, consider researching the venues’ typical sound before you lock in the tour.
Price and Value: Is $99 a Good Deal for Your Night?
At $99 per person, the math comes down to three things you don’t pay for:
- Cover charges at the clubs
- VIP-style entry (the goal is no lines)
- Transportation between venues via limo party bus
- Unlimited drinks on board
Even if club drinks are extra, the onboard inclusion can remove one of the biggest nightlife costs early. You also avoid buying transportation between scattered Strip venues—taxis and rideshares can add up fast when you’re coordinating groups and late-night timing.
But value depends on your expectations:
- If you want a smooth, party-focused ride plus three door-smooth club stops, it can feel like a win.
- If you expect nonstop dancing at every venue, or you want premium drink quality at all times, you might feel disappointed.
I’d also point out that some people felt the tour didn’t feel like the full “multiple-stop, multiple-club” experience on certain nights. So it’s not just about the price. It’s about how your specific night lines up with the venue schedule and door flow.
Where the Tour Shines Most (And Where It Might Not)
This works best if you:
- Want an organized way to hit multiple Strip nightclubs without planning every move
- Like meeting a group and keeping the energy up on the bus
- Are okay standing inside clubs and spending a bit extra only if you choose bottle service
- Care more about atmosphere and access than perfect music-matching
It might not be your best pick if you:
- Hate walking or have mobility limits (because the tour includes walking between early stops and standing inside clubs)
- Are very picky about music style and want one consistent sound all night
- Want to control every drink you sip (the bus drinks may not match your exact tastes)
Practical Tips to Get the Most Out of the Evening
A few small choices will make this tour feel smoother:
- Wear shoes that meet the rules and that you won’t regret after an hour of standing.
- Plan to arrive and check in on time so the tour clock doesn’t eat your club time.
- Bring your passport if you’re international—don’t gamble on alternate IDs.
- If you drink on the bus, slow down a bit. You’ll still be navigating the next venues on foot.
- Bring a backup plan mindset. Even with a VIP entry plan, Vegas nightlife can shift quickly based on crowd levels.
Should You Book the Vegas Rock Star Nightclub Tour?
If your goal is a VIP-style Strip nightlife night with limo party-bus transport and unlimited drinks on board, this can be a solid way to spend $99—especially for groups who want convenience more than micromanaging every detail.
I’d say book it if:
- You want to bounce between multiple club locations without dealing with cover charges
- You’re fine with standing and club seating limitations
- You’re dressed to meet the entry rules
I’d reconsider if:
- You’re set on a specific music genre and only that genre
- You dislike walking and you want guaranteed seating
- You expect included perks to cover everything inside each club (club drinks are extra)
If you want a big, social Vegas night with fewer hassles than planning it yourself, this tour can deliver. Just go in knowing it’s built around access and transport—and you’ll enjoy it more when you treat the clubs as part of a fast-moving nightlife circuit rather than a guaranteed dance-floor marathon.
FAQ
How long is the Vegas Rock Star Nightclub Tour?
It runs for about 5 hours.
What does the ticket price include?
You get transportation by deluxe limo party bus between clubs, cover charges to the clubs, and unlimited drinks onboard the party bus. Admission is handled as part of the tour.
Are drinks included at the clubs?
No. Alcoholic drinks at the clubs are available to purchase, but they are not included.
Do I need to worry about lines or cover charges?
The tour is set up to cover club entry costs and aim to prevent waiting in line. Door rules can still apply at the nightclub level, but cover charges and the intended VIP entry are part of the experience.
Where does the tour start and end?
It starts and ends on the Las Vegas Strip, near public transportation.
How old do you need to be?
Minimum age is 21.
What is the dress code for club entry?
No shorts, tennis shoes, or swimwear. Females must wear heels or wedges for entry.
Do international guests need a passport?
Yes. A passport is required for international guests to enter the nightclubs. International citizenship IDs are not accepted.
Will I be sitting during the club stops?
Plan on standing. Nightclubs do not permit seating without bottle service, and bottle service is not included.
Is this tour refundable if my plans change?
No. It’s non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.
How big is the group?
The tour has a maximum of 40 travelers.























