Things to Do in Las Vegas in Your Twenties
Las Vegas, also known as Sin City, is often billed as an adult’s playground. Between its nightclubs, casinos and live entertainment, the city is geared toward the enjoyment of young adults. While you have to be at least 21 to enjoy most of what Las Vegas has to offer, if you are of age, the sky is the limit. Here are the things everyone in their twenties can enjoy in the city.
Downtown bar-hopping
Bar, Cocktail Bar, American
When drawing up your “things to do before turning 30” list, bar-hopping in Las Vegas should feature high. Start at Commonwealth: a 6,000sqft (557sqm) downtown tavern with a rooftop terrace, live DJs, a banging dance floor and ever-changing cocktail menu. From here, hop between dive bars, seedy cocktail lounges and speakeasies such as the Downtown Cocktail Room, Atomic Liquors (the oldest bar in Vegas) and Corduroy. Hangovers are a guarantee.
Catch a Summer League game
Sports Center, Stadium
The Summer League Games are a highlight on the Las Vegas calendar. Former and current NBA basketball players play in the four-tournament-style games. You can watch slam dunking legends alongside undrafted rookies courtside while escaping the searing desert heat outside. The games traditionally take place at the Cox Pavilion and Thomas & Mack Center, both on the official UNLV campus.
Relax (or party) by the pool
Bar, North American
If you are in Las Vegas in your twenties, you have to go to a legendary pool party. In fact, it should be written into Nevada state law. Head to Daylight Beach Club at Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino. It’s a 50,000sqft (4,650sqm) day club with EDM Saturdays, Hip Hop Sundays and past DJs that include Dash Berlin, French Montana and Steve Aoki. Bust out your best beachwear, book a cabana by the pool close to the action and let the rosé flow all day long.
See a concert at the Brooklyn Bowl
Bowling Alley, Music Venue, Theater
Brooklyn Bowl started out in 2009 as a music venue, bowling alley and Blue Ribbon restaurant in Williamsburg, New York, housed inside an old iron works warehouse. It’s now a massive music venue on the Linq Promenade in Las Vegas and the place to catch rock, indie and hip hop concerts, plus themed dance party nights and tribute shows. Past performers include Ellie Goulding, Beck, Jimmy Eat World and Tinie Tempah.
Get “Dirty”
Casino Hotel
Las Vegas can be an expensive city for young people, but the laughs are free. The Dirty at 12:30 is a free-entry, late-night stand-up comedy show every Friday at the Southpoint Hotel and Casino. Safely assume from the name you’ll get more than dad jokes here. Hosted by Gabe Lopez, the night often draws in 350 people (there’s seating for 185). Expect regular celebrity cameos, unbilled walk-ons by established comedians and sets by upcoming comics.
Go to First Friday
Music Venue
Allow a lazy afternoon melt into evening at this ever evolving community-driven festival in the city’s Arts District that pulls together art, music, food and fashion in a laid-back space. Watch a live gig, eat delicious bites from food carts and browse various stalls. The event is underpinned by the First Friday Foundation, which works with the local community to harness creativity in the city. If you happen to be in town on the first Friday of the month, you’ve no excuse but to head down.
Go skiing in Lee Canyon
Ski Resort
Find your favorite nightclub
Nightclub, American
Going fully nocturnal in Las Vegas is to be expected. That’s because the city has the biggest upscale nightclubs in the world featuring the best DJs, sound systems, lighting, dancers and all-night parties. The LIGHT Vegas in Mandalay Bay, for example, is a glitzy LED-drenched mega club with regular performances by Rick Ross, Tyga, DJ E-Rock and music covering EDM, hip hop and pop. No two nights are the same – all you have to do is party like it’s your birthday.
Ride the High Roller
Amusement Park
Go ice skating
Building, Sports Center
Ice skating might not seem possible in the desert, but the Ice Rink begs to differ. The Ice Rink on top of the Cosmopolitan attempts to inject a little winter wonderland into the Las Vegas desert. Grab your friends, hot cocoa and some s’mores and enjoy the 4,200sqft (390sqm) rink to the sound of classic Christmas tunes.
Play beer pong at O’Sheas
Bar, Irish
The ultimate college drinking game has a permanent home at O’Sheas. Located inside the LINQ on the Strip, anyone can walk in and join a game. While you wait, you can enjoy the live music or try one of the 50 types of beer on tap (if you’re not into beer, try the Irish Bloody Mary or Pot of Gold). The cheap drinks and the multitude of table games make O’Sheas a favorite of Las Vegas’s younger crowds.
Fly on top of the Strat
Casino Hotel, Hotel
Try an escape room
Building
See a drive-in movie
Cinema
For a real “throwback Thursday,” drive out to the West Wind Drive-In Theater. It’s one of the few drive-ins left in the U.S. and is ideal for group outings. It’s the cheapest movie theater to go to in Las Vegas, and you can bring food and drinks inside.
Visit the Park
Park
Anyone staying at the New York New York or Monte Carlo will have easy access to the Park. It’s a dining and entertainment district – marked by a 40ft (12m) statue known as Bliss Dance – that sits between the two properties and has become a popular place to visit, especially during events at the T-Mobile Arena. When concerts aren’t going on, you can find live artists, music and performances taking place in and around the park.
Take a ride on a zipline
Amusement Park
See MJ ONE
Concert Hall, Music Venue, Stadium
If you’ve got the time and the money, check out Cirque du Soleil’s MJ ONE, which pays tribute to the life and career of Michael Jackson, complete with high-flying acrobatics and intricate choreography. Millennials will instantly recognize numbers from the show such as “Billie Jean,” “Dirty Diana,” “Bad” and “Smooth Criminal.” Tickets aren’t cheap, but well worth every penny.
Judy Cogan contributed additional reporting to this article.