Las Vegas has some of the most over-the-top hotel rooms on the planet, and a private in-room hot tub is one of the best ways to use that to your advantage. Sink into the jets after a long night on the Strip, or crack a bottle of something cold and soak before you even leave the room – either way, it changes the whole feel of a Vegas stay. Every hotel on this list has a genuine jetted tub in the room, not a shared pool hot tub.
Table of Contents
Las Vegas Hotels

| 1. The Venetian Resort Las Vegas Best for Couples ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: 10-min walk to Bellagio Fountains Guest Reviews: Grand Canal gondola rides on-site, renovated suites, 40+ restaurants, direct Sphere access Best Room: Grand King Suite Price: From USD $350 – $700 per night |

| 2. The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas Best Outdoor Hot Tub ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: 5-min walk to Bellagio Fountains Guest Reviews: Private terraces with Bellagio fountain views, 19 restaurants on-site, three distinct pool experiences, Sahra Spa hammam Best Room: Bungalow Suite Price: From USD $600 – $1,500 per night |

| 3. Hilton Grand Vacations Club Elara Center Strip Las Vegas Best Value ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: Connected via walkway to Planet Hollywood, 8-min walk to Bellagio Fountains Guest Reviews: Oversized whirlpool tub next to the bed, full kitchen, projector screen TV, floor-to-ceiling Strip views Best Room: 1-Bedroom King Suite Price: From USD $220 – $400 per night |

| 4. SKYLOFTS at MGM Grand Most Luxurious ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: On the Las Vegas Strip, 7-min walk to T-Mobile Arena Guest Reviews: Infinity hot tub deep enough to float in, steam shower with nine jets, 24-hour butler service, private elevator to 29th floor Best Room: 1-Bedroom Loft Price: From USD $850 – $1,500 per night |

| 5. New York-New York Hotel & Casino ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: On the Las Vegas Strip, 5-min walk to T-Mobile Arena Guest Reviews: Clover-shaped jetted tub in the bedroom, roller coaster on-site, Nine Fine Irishmen pub, dueling piano bar Best Room: Spa Suite Price: From USD $100 – $200 per night |

| 6. JW Marriott Las Vegas Resort & Spa ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: 20-min drive from the Strip, free shuttle included, near Red Rock Canyon Guest Reviews: Jetted tub in every room, recently renovated, waterfall pool with grotto, Spa Aquae with 36 treatment rooms Best Room: King Room with Balcony Price: From USD $150 – $300 per night |

| 7. The Signature at MGM Grand ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Location: 10-min walk to the Strip, connected to MGM Grand via covered moving walkway Guest Reviews: Huge jetted hot tub in every suite, private balcony with Strip views, full kitchen, free valet parking, no resort fee Best Room: Deluxe Balcony Strip View Suite Price: From USD $150 – $300 per night |
Why Stay in a Las Vegas Hotel with an In-Room Hot Tub
Las Vegas hotel rooms are built for excess, and an in-room hot tub takes that logic to its natural conclusion. After a long night on the Strip — or before you even leave the room — there’s nothing quite like sinking into a private jetted tub with a drink in hand and the city lights outside the window. It reframes the whole stay. Instead of treating your room as just somewhere to sleep between casino sessions, you actually want to be in it.
The other reason it matters in Vegas specifically is the sheer volume of walking. Most people underestimate how much ground they cover in a day here — easily 15,000 to 20,000 steps across casino floors, shows, restaurants, and pool decks. A jetted tub at the end of that does something a regular bath simply doesn’t.
There’s also the romance factor. Vegas is one of the most popular destinations in the world for couples — anniversaries, honeymoons, proposals, bachelorette trips — and an in-room hot tub is one of the few hotel amenities that genuinely changes the atmosphere of a room rather than just adding a checkbox.
Overview of Accommodation Options
The hotels on this page span a wide range of styles and price points, so it’s worth knowing how they break down before you book.
- At the luxury end, SKYLOFTS at MGM Grand is in a category of its own. Every loft comes with a personal butler, Bvlgari bath products, and an infinity-edge spa tub that guests consistently describe as one of the best in Las Vegas. It’s a small, intimate property — only 51 lofts — which means the service level is genuinely different from a 3,000-room Strip resort. Rates reflect that.
- The Venetian and The Cosmopolitan sit in the upper-mid tier, both centrally located on the Strip with strong food and entertainment offerings on-site. The Venetian’s Grand King Suite is the more classic choice — oversized Roman-style jetted tub, Italian marble, gondolas outside the window. The Cosmopolitan leans more contemporary, and its Bungalow Suites with private plunge pool tubs on the balcony are genuinely hard to find anywhere else in Vegas.
- For something more residential in feel, The Signature at MGM Grand and Elara by Hilton Grand Vacations both deliver full-kitchen suites with private balconies and confirmed jetted tubs at prices well below the top-tier Strip properties. Elara has some of the largest whirlpool tubs in Vegas by most accounts, and The Signature gives you Strip-connected access without the casino-floor chaos.
- New York-New York is the budget option here, and a good one. The Spa Suite’s clover-shaped two-person jetted tub is a fun, unpretentious choice for couples who want the hot tub experience without paying luxury prices.
- Outside the Strip entirely, JW Marriott Las Vegas Resort & Spa in Summerlin is the retreat option — 50 acres of gardens, a jetted tub in every single room, and a free shuttle to the Strip when you want it.
Best Areas to Stay
- Center Strip (Cosmopolitan, Venetian, SKYLOFTS, New York-New York) This is the heart of Las Vegas — Bellagio fountains, T-Mobile Arena, the best restaurant concentration on the boulevard, and walkable access to almost everything worth doing. If you want to step out of your hotel and be immediately in the middle of it all, this is where you want to be. The trade-off is noise, crowds, and generally higher room rates. For a hot tub stay specifically, it’s the most indulgent combination — jets on, city lights on, Strip energy right outside.
- Planet Hollywood / Park MGM Corridor (The Signature at MGM Grand) Slightly south of center, this stretch is a touch calmer than the Bellagio-to-Venetian corridor but still within easy walking distance of most major attractions. The Signature sits just off the Strip itself, connected via covered walkway to MGM Grand — which means you get the quiet of a non-casino hotel with full access to one of the largest entertainment complexes in Vegas. Good choice if you want space and calm without sacrificing location.
- Fashion Show Drive / North Strip (Elara) Elara sits just off the Strip near the Fashion Show Mall, connected directly to Miracle Mile shops and restaurants. It’s a few minutes’ walk from the Venetian and Wynn, but without the resort-fee overhead of the big casino hotels. Quieter at night than center Strip, which suits couples who want the hot tub experience to actually feel relaxing rather than like a pit stop between parties.
- Summerlin (JW Marriott) About 20 minutes west of the Strip, Summerlin is where Las Vegas locals actually live — manicured streets, Red Rock Canyon on the doorstep, and none of the sensory overload of the boulevard. The JW Marriott here is a genuine resort in the traditional sense: sprawling gardens, waterfall pool, spa, golf. The free shuttle means the Strip is accessible when you want it, but the whole point of staying here is to not feel like you’re in Vegas every waking moment. Couples looking for more privacy will love this place.
How to Choose the Right Hotel
The hot tub is the baseline — every hotel here has one. What actually separates them is what surrounds it.
- Budget is the most obvious filter. New York-New York and The Signature both come in well under $300 most nights and deliver a genuine jetted tub experience without the luxury markup. Elara sits in a similar range and arguably has the best tub for the price of anything on this list. SKYLOFTS starts at $850 and is a completely different product — butler service, Bvlgari amenities, 51 lofts total. There’s no wrong answer, but be honest about what you’re actually paying for.
- How much time you plan to spend in the room matters. If the hot tub is the main event and you’re planning a slow, indulgent stay — late mornings, long soaks, room service — The Cosmopolitan’s Bungalow or SKYLOFTS will reward that style of trip in a way a standard suite won’t. Both are designed around the idea that the room itself is the experience. If you’re mostly out all day and want the tub as an end-of-night ritual, a Deluxe Suite at The Signature or a King Suite at Elara does the job at a fraction of the price.
- Strip access versus escape is a genuine decision. Being on the Strip means convenience but also noise, smoke, and the relentless pull of the casino floor. JW Marriott is the deliberate alternative — you go there to slow down, not speed up. The free shuttle keeps the Strip accessible without making it unavoidable.
- For couples treating this as a romantic stay, the room view can matter as much as the tub itself. The Venetian’s Grand King Suite pairs the jetted tub with one of the more theatrical hotel environments in Vegas. The Cosmopolitan’s Terrace Suite puts the Bellagio fountains in your eyeline. Both are worth the premium if the setting is part of what you’re paying for.
When to Book
- Peak season runs October through April. This is when Vegas sees its busiest periods — Formula 1 in November, New Year’s Eve, Valentine’s Day, March sporting events, and spring break all drive rates up sharply. Hot tub suites at properties like The Venetian and The Cosmopolitan can double or triple in price during these windows. Book at least 6–8 weeks out for peak weekends, and 3–4 months out for major events.
- Summer is the sweet spot for value. June through September is brutally hot outside, which pushes room rates down considerably at most Strip properties. The hot tub-in-room experience is actually ideal for summer Vegas — you’re not missing much by staying in during the afternoon heat, and rates at places like The Signature and Elara can drop significantly. If you’re flexible on timing, this is when the best value appears.
- Weekdays are substantially cheaper than weekends year-round. Vegas hotel pricing is driven almost entirely by demand, and weekends — particularly Friday and Saturday — command a heavy premium. A Tuesday through Thursday stay at the same suite can cost 30–50% less than a Friday through Sunday booking at the same property.
- Book hot-tub-specific room types early regardless of season. Standard rooms have thousands of units available. Jetted tub suites — particularly at SKYLOFTS, the Cosmopolitan Bungalows, and the Venetian Grand King — are a fraction of a property’s total inventory. They sell out well before standard rooms do, especially on weekends and holidays.
- Watch out for Formula 1 weekend in November. The Las Vegas Grand Prix has rapidly become one of the biggest room-rate spikes of the year. Properties across the Strip price aggressively for that weekend — expect to pay two to four times standard rates, and book months in advance if you’re combining F1 with a hot tub suite stay.
- Last-minute bookings rarely work for this category. Unlike standard rooms which sometimes see last-minute discounting, premium suite inventory tends to either sell out or hold price. If you’re hoping to wing it on arrival, you’ll likely find the jetted tub rooms gone or priced at peak regardless of the day.
Insider Tips for a Better Stay
- Request a high floor when booking a hot tub suite. Most properties assign specific rooms at check-in rather than guaranteeing a floor level unless you ask. At The Signature and Elara especially, the view from the tub varies dramatically between a low floor facing a parking structure and a high floor with Strip or mountain views. Call the hotel directly after booking and make the request — it costs nothing and makes a real difference.
- Timing your soak beats the obvious moments. Everyone thinks of the hot tub as an end-of-night wind-down, but the genuinely underrated slot is late afternoon before you go out — jets on, city starting to light up outside, nowhere to be for another hour. It sets the tone for the evening far better than rushing through a shower.
- Bring your own bath salts or aromatherapy drops. Hotels at this level provide good toiletries but rarely anything for the tub itself. A small bag of bath salts or a few drops of essential oil costs almost nothing and transforms the experience. Eucalyptus works particularly well after a long day on your feet.
- Check resort fee inclusions before you arrive. Several properties on this list charge daily resort fees on top of the room rate — The Venetian, Cosmopolitan, and SKYLOFTS all do. What those fees cover varies: at JW Marriott the fee includes the Strip shuttle and daily drinks; at others it’s mainly WiFi and pool access. Knowing what’s already paid for saves you from paying twice for things like fitness center access or parking.
- At The Signature, the covered walkway to MGM Grand is your best friend. It’s air-conditioned, bypasses the street entirely, and deposits you directly into one of the largest casino and dining complexes on the Strip. In summer heat or after a long night, that matters more than it sounds.
- Midweek arrivals get better room assignments. Front desk staff have more flexibility to honour floor or view preferences when the property isn’t at full capacity. If your schedule allows a Sunday or Monday arrival rather than Friday, your chances of landing the suite with the better outlook improve noticeably.
- SKYLOFTS guests should use the butler proactively. The personal butler service is included in the rate but many guests treat it passively — waiting to be offered things rather than asking. Use them to pre-stock the minibar with your preferences, arrange tub-side dining, or organise show tickets before you arrive. That’s what they’re there for.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Do all the hotels on this list have genuine jetted tubs, not just soaking tubs?
Yes — every property listed here has been verified for actual jets. Soaking tubs are common in Las Vegas hotels and are often marketed ambiguously, so each entry was cross-checked against guest reviews, booking platform listings, and third-party sources before being included.
2. Which hotel has the best hot tub for couples?
The Cosmopolitan’s Bungalow Suite with its private balcony plunge pool is the most dramatic option, while The Venetian’s Grand King Suite offers the most classically romantic setting. Both are strong choices depending on whether you want something theatrical and modern or grand and traditional.
3. Can I book a hot tub suite last minute in Las Vegas?
Jetted tub suites represent a small fraction of total room inventory at any property, so last-minute availability is unreliable. Standard rooms are far easier to find at short notice. If a hot tub suite is important to your trip, book at least a few weeks ahead — more during peak season.
4. Is The Signature at MGM Grand actually on the Strip?
It sits just off Las Vegas Boulevard, connected to MGM Grand via a covered moving walkway. The walk to the Strip takes around 10 minutes on foot. It’s close enough to be genuinely convenient but far enough to feel removed from the noise and foot traffic of the boulevard itself.
5. Are there hot tub suites in Las Vegas without a casino in the hotel?
Several options here are non-gaming properties. Elara by Hilton Grand Vacations has no casino on-site, nor does the JW Marriott Las Vegas Resort & Spa — though both are close to casino hotels. The Signature at MGM Grand is also casino-free, though it connects directly to the MGM Grand casino next door.
6. What is the cheapest hotel on this list with a hot tub suite?
New York-New York offers the most affordable entry point, with Spa Suites regularly available from around $100 per night on weekdays. The Signature at MGM Grand and Elara are also competitively priced and offer significantly more space and amenities for the money than most Strip casino hotels at similar rates.
7. Do Las Vegas hotels charge resort fees on top of the hot tub suite rate?
Most Strip casino hotels charge a daily resort fee regardless of room type, typically ranging from $35 to $55 per night plus tax. The Signature at MGM Grand and JW Marriott both charge resort fees, though JW Marriott’s fee includes the Strip shuttle and daily drink credits. Always check the total rate including fees before comparing properties.
8. Is the JW Marriott hot tub in every room or only select suites?
Every guest room and suite at the JW Marriott Las Vegas Resort & Spa includes a two-person whirlpool tub — it’s not a suite upgrade or add-on. This makes it one of the few Las Vegas hotels where you don’t need to specifically seek out a hot tub room type when booking.
9. Which hotel is best for a Las Vegas honeymoon with a hot tub?
The Cosmopolitan Bungalow Suite and The Venetian Grand King Suite are the two strongest options for a honeymoon. SKYLOFTS at MGM Grand is worth considering if budget allows — the butler service, Bvlgari amenities, and infinity-edge spa tub create an experience that feels genuinely private and indulgent rather than just a nice hotel room..
