REVIEW · LAS VEGAS
Las Vegas Nightclub or Pool Party Crawl with Luxury Party Bus
Book on Viator →Operated by Las Vegas Club Crawl | Turnt Up Tours · Bookable on Viator
Big Vegas nights, minus the line stress.
This Las Vegas nightclub or pool party crawl is built around a hosted club-hop on a party bus, with VIP-style access at big-name Strip venues. You choose the daytime pool party version or a nighttime nightclub crawl, and the schedule is designed to keep your group moving instead of wandering the Strip.
What I like most is the value structure. You get cover charges and VIP skip-the-line perks bundled in, so you’re not doing the math (or paying extra) at every door. I also like the bus format: complimentary cocktails on the ride help the night start earlier and keeps momentum between venues.
One drawback to consider up front: dress code and club security are strict. If you show up even slightly off-plan, you can get turned away, and the tour ends at a different Strip club than where you started.
In This Review
- Key Things You Should Know Before You Go
- How The Party Bus Club Crawl Keeps You Moving On The Strip
- Party Bus Logistics: No Hotel Pickup, A Real Group Pace
- Nightclub Stops You May Hit: Tao, Zouk, Omnia, LIV, Hakkasan, Marquee, Jewel
- Tao Nightclub at The Venetian
- Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World
- Omnia at Caesars Palace
- LIV Nightclub at Fontainebleau
- Hakkasan at MGM Grand
- Marquee at The Cosmopolitan
- Jewel at Aria
- Daytime Pool Party Crawl: What Changes When It’s Not Nightlife
- Price and Value: Why $99 Can Feel Like A Deal
- Complimentary Cocktails On The Bus: Fun, But Know What You’re Getting
- Dress Code and Security: The Rule That Can End Your Night Fast
- Timing, Check-In, and Host Texts: How You Don’t Get Left Behind
- Who This Las Vegas Crawl Is For (And Who Should Skip It)
- Packing Tips That Actually Prevent Problems
- Should You Book This Las Vegas Nightclub or Pool Party Crawl?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- What is the price per person?
- How long does the Las Vegas nightclub or pool party crawl take?
- How many clubs do I visit?
- Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?
- Are drinks included, and are they unlimited?
- What is included in the ticket price besides club access?
- What are the tour meeting and end points?
- What age do you have to be to join?
- What dress code rules do I need to follow?
- Can I get a refund or change the date?
Key Things You Should Know Before You Go

- VIP skip-the-line entry plus cover charges are part of the price, aiming to save you both time and surprise fees.
- The party bus ride is a big part of the experience with complimentary cocktails served onboard.
- Three venues are the target for most departures, but the exact clubs can rotate based on the night.
- Nightclub and pool party versions are different animals: swimwear and pool-venue rules can be their own hurdle.
- Plan for strict dress code enforcement (especially for men, and for pool days).
- Expect a mixed group and a real schedule, with hosts using texts and check-in routines to keep everyone together.
How The Party Bus Club Crawl Keeps You Moving On The Strip

This experience is simple in design: you meet on the Strip, then your host keeps the pace while the party bus does the heavy lifting. Your tour runs about 3 to 8 hours depending on whether it’s the daytime pool route or a nighttime nightclub crawl.
Most departures are built around three major stops with an admission ticket included at each. Expect about one hour at each venue for the nightclub version, and less time if the schedule compresses at the door (lines and security checks can be real at Vegas clubs).
The tour also ends on the Strip, but it can be a different nightclub than where you started. That’s not a bug; it’s part of how the itinerary works with venue access and bus drop-offs.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas.
Party Bus Logistics: No Hotel Pickup, A Real Group Pace

There’s no hotel pickup or drop-off. You start at a Las Vegas Strip meeting point and the tour ends at a nightclub on the Strip. In practice, that means you should know your way around the Strip before you rely on the group.
The bus itself is where a lot of the “hosted” feel comes from. One operator response notes the party bus holds 42 guests, and a past departure example had 34 people plus 2 hostesses, which tells you the tour is not meant for an endless crowd.
A helpful reality check from the schedule: you’re not going to be doing a sightseeing bus tour down every boulevard. The ride is mostly a moving lounge that gets you between venues fast, and sometimes the bus can take shorter routes instead of offering a long view loop.
Nightclub Stops You May Hit: Tao, Zouk, Omnia, LIV, Hakkasan, Marquee, Jewel

Your exact club lineup can rotate, but the big-name venues in the mix are the kind of places where VIP access and skip-the-line perks matter. Here are the specific venues included as examples, and what they’re known for.
Tao Nightclub at The Venetian
Tao is famous for a high-energy dance floor and Asian-inspired décor, plus top-tier DJs. It’s the kind of venue where the room feels designed for a full-on club night rather than a casual stop.
Practical thought: Tao tends to be busy, so arriving when your host tells you to is the difference between flowing in and losing time.
Zouk Nightclub at Resorts World
Zouk is known for cutting-edge visuals with massive LED walls and immersive sound. It’s built for big production energy and big-name DJ sets.
Practical thought: If you care about sound and light effects, Zouk is one of the strongest options on the route.
Omnia at Caesars Palace
Omnia’s signature look is the iconic kinetic chandelier, and it runs as a multi-level nightlife experience. If you want a Vegas club that feels like a whole show, Omnia usually delivers.
Practical thought: Multi-level clubs can be loud and crowded, so don’t plan on finding a quiet corner.
LIV Nightclub at Fontainebleau
LIV is imported from Miami in spirit and style, with a luxury feel and high-energy entertainment. It can be a highlight if you like the more polished, high-glam side of Vegas nightlife.
Practical thought: This is the kind of venue where dress code and timing matter even more than you expect.
Hakkasan at MGM Grand
Hakkasan is multi-level with cutting-edge visuals and an elite clubbing atmosphere. It’s one of the mega-club names that many people come to Vegas specifically to try.
Practical thought: Even when it feels like you “arrive on time,” security and crowd flow can still take a few minutes.
Marquee at The Cosmopolitan
Marquee is a staple on the Strip with multiple dance floors and a rooftop patio. It’s a good choice if you want a club that offers more than one vibe in a single building.
Practical thought: Rooftops can still be packed, so don’t assume you’ll escape the crowd.
Jewel at Aria
Jewel is also a multi-level club with globally known DJ talent and a polished, modern party feel. It’s often a strong pick when the rest of the lineup is heavy on the biggest names.
Practical thought: If the club is full, your best move is to give the first 10 minutes for the room to “settle” after check-in and then choose where to stand.
Daytime Pool Party Crawl: What Changes When It’s Not Nightlife
You can choose a daytime pool party crawl instead of the nightclub version. The big change is that pool venues have very specific rules around swimwear and how you move through the space.
One detailed experience involved pool stops and the reality that pool clubs can close when weather turns. In that case, cold temps and wind led to closures after the tour had started, and the group shifted toward an alternate plan like photos and drinks while detouring around what was open.
What you should plan for on pool days:
Pool clubs can be crowded, bars can have long lines, and space can disappear quickly once the doors open. Even if you have VIP access for entry, you may still be dealing with a dense scene once you’re inside.
Also, pool venues require the right swim setup. In one case, basketball shorts were treated as the wrong category (they were not accepted as swimwear), forcing a last-minute purchase just to get in. That’s the kind of snag you can avoid by packing true swimwear.
Price and Value: Why $99 Can Feel Like A Deal
At $99 per person, the tour’s value comes from bundling three expensive-ish pieces of the Vegas night: entry, cover charges, and line-cutting access.
The tour includes:
- Access to 3 venues (often among major Strip clubs)
- VIP skip-the-line entry
- Cover charges
- A tour host
- Complimentary cocktails on the bus
- A luxury party bus ride between stops
When you compare that to how much it can cost to get into top clubs on your own, it starts to make sense. One experience noted some clubs can charge over $60 per person, and the tour bundles entry so you don’t have to pay that kind of number three times.
Is $99 a guarantee of a perfect night? No. If the club lineup you want most rotates out that night, you may feel like the trade-off is less exciting. But as a structured Vegas plan with entry and priority help built in, the math often checks out.
Complimentary Cocktails On The Bus: Fun, But Know What You’re Getting

The party bus part isn’t a gimmick. The tour includes complimentary cocktails, and one route example included unlimited-style pours of a limited set (vodka and tequila with juice). Drinks were served in plastic bottles since it’s a moving party bus.
A few experiences also criticized the drink quality as basic or non-branded, and one specific comment called out bottom-shelf liquor and no other options. That lines up with how bus drink service usually works in practice: it’s fast, controlled, and designed to keep the party moving, not to run a cocktail bar tasting.
What I’d do with that info: If you want top-shelf mixology, treat the bus drinks as a pre-game. Bring patience for the fact that this is mass-service party logistics, not bartender-perfection.
Dress Code and Security: The Rule That Can End Your Night Fast

Vegas clubs and pool venues enforce rules like they’re serious business, because they are. The tour data calls out that dress codes are strictly enforced and security decisions control entry.
For men, the guidance is:
- Slacks, dress shoes, and a button-down shirt
- Jackets and ties optional
- No jeans, sneakers, flip-flops, t-shirts, hats, beachwear, or sweats
For women:
- Dresses or skirts/slacks with blouses
- High-heeled shoes
- No jeans, sneakers, flip-flops, t-shirts, hats, beachwear, or sweats
Two practical add-ons from real-world notes:
- Pool-day swimwear rules can be stricter than you think, and basketball shorts may not be accepted as swimwear.
- Bag policies vary by club security. One experience described needing to check a larger bag because some venues wouldn’t allow it in the main area, and the check-in process cost money.
The most helpful mindset here is to dress like you’re going to a real club, not a “Vegas casual” outing. If you want an easy night, remove uncertainty before you arrive.
Timing, Check-In, and Host Texts: How You Don’t Get Left Behind

Hosts matter on this kind of tour. The rhythm depends on everyone hitting check-in points and staying aware of drop-off timing.
In positive experiences, hosts like Jocelyn and Alexis helped keep things on schedule with strong energy and drink support. Other tours highlighted Anna and Grace as entertaining hosts who made transitions smooth. Jazmin was described as laying down ground rules so the group could party without chaos. Kelsey was praised for texting to make sure people stayed on track.
In less-positive cases, the common issue wasn’t the club brand; it was missed meeting points and being late to a venue window. The tour operator states it can refuse someone who gets too intoxicated or disturbs other guests, and hosts use texts and waiting routines to avoid stragglers being left behind.
So your best strategy is boring and effective:
- Be ready early at each meeting point
- Keep an eye on your phone
- Answer host texts fast
Who This Las Vegas Crawl Is For (And Who Should Skip It)
This is ideal if you want:
- A planned nightlife path instead of mapping clubs yourself
- VIP-style help at big Strip venues
- A party bus that makes it easy to meet people and move as a group
- A fun format for a birthday or bachelorette-style night
It’s less ideal if:
- You hate crowds and long waits, even with skip-the-line perks
- Your group might arrive late or ignore the schedule
- You’re planning to dress casually or hope to wing the dress code
- You want a mellow, sit-down evening with lots of downtime
Packing Tips That Actually Prevent Problems
For nightclub nights:
- Bring the outfit your club dress code wants (button-down or dress/skirt setup for the group rules)
- Wear appropriate shoes (club security has no patience for “almost rules”)
- Carry a photo ID ready to show
For pool party days:
- Pack true swimwear, not “maybe swim” shorts
- Bring a hat and sun protection (one experience specifically recommended sun hats)
- Expect that space can be tight once you’re inside, so decide if you want to be in the middle of it or find quieter edges
For the whole tour:
- Plan to meet on the Strip with enough time to check in and get oriented
- Keep your phone charged so you can read host messages
Should You Book This Las Vegas Nightclub or Pool Party Crawl?
If you want a simple Vegas night with built-in entry help and you’re willing to follow the dress code, I think this is a strong pick for the price. The $99 value comes from three things working together: cover charges handled, priority access at major venues, and a party bus that turns travel time into part of the fun.
Skip it if you’re looking for flexible itinerary control, a calm experience, or high-end cocktail service quality. Also be honest about pool-day risk: weather can change what’s open, and that can reshape the plan mid-route.
FAQ
FAQ
What is the price per person?
The tour costs $99.00 per person.
How long does the Las Vegas nightclub or pool party crawl take?
It runs for about 3 to 8 hours.
How many clubs do I visit?
The experience is designed around access to 3 Vegas night clubs. The exact venues can vary by night.
Is hotel pickup or drop-off included?
No. Hotel pickup and drop-off are not included.
Are drinks included, and are they unlimited?
Complimentary cocktails are included on the bus. The experience is described as having unlimited cocktails on the ride, with one set of drink options served on the party bus.
What is included in the ticket price besides club access?
You get VIP skip-the-line entry, cover charges, a tour host, complimentary cocktails on the bus, and a luxury party bus ride between stops.
What are the tour meeting and end points?
You meet on the Las Vegas Strip, NV, USA, and the tour ends at a nightclub on the Las Vegas Strip. The final nightclub may be different from where you started.
What age do you have to be to join?
You must be 21 or older.
What dress code rules do I need to follow?
The dress code is strictly enforced. Men should wear slacks, dress shoes, and button-down shirts (jackets and ties optional). Women should wear dresses or skirts/slacks with blouses and high-heeled shoes. Jeans, sneakers, flip-flops, t-shirts, hats, beachwear, and sweats are not allowed.
Can I get a refund or change the date?
No. This experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.









