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The Ultimate 3-Day Las Vegas Bachelorette Party Itinerary

By Casey Morgan·April 18, 2026·Las Vegas Guide →
The Ultimate 3-Day Las Vegas Bachelorette Party Itinerary
Quick Summary
Trip length3 days / 2 nights
Best time to visitMarch, April, October, November
Ideal group size6 to 12 people
Budget per person$600 to $2,000+
VibeHigh-energy, glamorous, go-big-or-go-home

Why Las Vegas for Your Bachelorette?

Las Vegas is the bachelorette destination that wrote the rulebook. Every hotel is a destination, every restaurant has a Michelin-worthy pedigree, and the pool scenes are genuinely some of the best parties you will attend all year.

The real magic is that Vegas works for every kind of group. You can keep it classy with spa days and tasting menus, go full send with dayclub passes and bottle service, or do both on the same day. That flexibility is hard to find anywhere else.

Day 1: Arrive, Settle In, and Turn It Up

Morning

Most groups fly in Friday morning to maximize time. Drop your bags and head straight to the Sadelle's at Bellagio for brunch. Their smoked salmon towers and wood-fired bagels are worth every penny of the $45 to $65 per person price tag. One reviewer on Yelp called it "the only brunch in Vegas that actually made me slow down and enjoy myself."

Afternoon

Check in at The Cosmopolitan, which sits in the sweet spot of glamorous without being stuffy. Terrace rooms with Strip views run $250 to $450/night. Get settled, make a group photo wall in the room, and hydrate before the night ahead.

Spend the late afternoon at the Boulevard Pool at the Cosmo. It is a cabana-style rooftop pool with a DJ, and it feels more like a European beach club than a Vegas pool. Cabanas start at $500 for the day and are absolutely worth splitting across the group.

Evening

Dinner at Beauty and Essex inside the Cosmopolitan. The pawn shop entrance, the two-story dining room, and the chandelier-lit bar set the tone perfectly. Order the truffle pizza, the short rib sliders, and the "Toast" cocktail. Budget $80 to $120/person with drinks.

After dinner, walk straight to Marquee Nightclub on the ground floor of the same building. It regularly books top-40 DJs and the bachelorette group entrance is usually complimentary if you RSVP in advance through their website. Table minimums start at $2,000 so coordinate if you want a section.

Day 2: Dayclub Royalty and a Dinner You Will Talk About for Years

Morning

Sleep in. This is non-negotiable. Order room service or wander to Tableau at Wynn for a lighter brunch. Their egg white frittata and avocado toast give you fuel without the food coma. Expect $30 to $50/person.

Afternoon

Today is the main event: Wet Republic Ultra Pool at MGM Grand. This is the premier dayclub in Vegas, full stop. General admission runs $40 to $75/person on weekends, and VIP table packages with bottle service start at $1,500. Book at least two weeks in advance. The crowd is electric, the DJs are legitimate, and the setup is stunning.

Grab a late afternoon snack at the MGM Grand food hall or rally back to your room for a quick reset before dinner. The walk from Wet Republic back to the room is a good time to actually talk to each other between sets.

Evening

This is the splurge dinner. Delilah at Wynn is the most talked-about supper club in Las Vegas right now. The old Hollywood aesthetic, the live singers performing tableside, and the food all deliver. The wagyu tartare and the whole roasted chicken for the table are standouts. Budget $150 to $200/person with cocktails. Make reservations the moment you book your flights.

After dinner, stay at Wynn and move to XS Nightclub. The outdoor pool deck with fire features is unlike any club in the world. Bachelorette group entry is typically free before midnight with an RSVP. This is the night everyone will remember.

Day 3: Recover, Spa, and a Proper Send-Off Dinner

Morning

Brunch at Bouchon Bistro at The Venetian. Thomas Keller's Vegas outpost is the most civilized morning you will have on the Strip. The croque madame and the lemon ricotta pancakes are both perfect. Budget $50 to $70/person. The dining room feels like Paris, which is a welcome change of pace after two nights on the Strip.

Afternoon

Book a treatment at Canyon Ranch SpaClub at The Venetian. Signature massages start at $185 for 50 minutes, and the spa access alone (pools, steam, sauna) is $65/person. This is a genuine recovery session after two big nights. The "Serenity" couples massage package is popular for smaller groups doing duo treatments.

After the spa, spend a couple of relaxed hours walking the Grand Canal Shoppes inside The Venetian. No obligation to buy anything, it is just a genuinely pleasant way to decompress before the evening.

Evening

Last dinner at Nobu at Caesars Palace. The black cod miso is a non-negotiable order. Yellowtail jalapeño and the wagyu gyoza round out the table. Budget $100 to $150/person. "Nobu Vegas somehow beats every other Nobu in the world," per a recent Google review, and the group will agree.

Cap the night with a walk along the Strip with a drink from any of the walk-up bars. The LINQ Promenade has a good strip of outdoor options, and watching the Bellagio fountains one last time before checkout never gets old.

Budget Breakdown

CategoryBudgetMid-RangeSplurge
Accommodation (per person/night)$80$175$350+
Food per day$75$150$250+
Activities (pool/spa/dayclub)$50$150$400+
Nightlife (cover/drinks)$80$200$500+
Total per person (3 days)$600$1,200$2,500+

Pro Tips

  • RSVP to nightclubs at least 48 hours in advance. Bachelorette groups almost always get complimentary female entry, but you need to actually submit the guest list form on the club's website.
  • Book Delilah and Nobu the same day you book your flights. These fill up 3 to 4 weeks out on weekends, especially Friday and Saturday.
  • The Cosmopolitan's location is the best on the Strip for walkability. You can reach Bellagio, the Wynn, and Caesars without needing an Uber.
  • Bring a rechargeable portable fan. Vegas in summer is genuinely brutal, and pool-to-nightclub transitions are miserable when you are overheating. April and October are the sweet spot months.

Where to Stay

The Cosmopolitan is the top pick for bachelorette groups. Rooms are stylish, the location is central, and both Beauty and Essex and Marquee are steps from your door. Rates run $200 to $500/night depending on season. The Wynn is the luxury upgrade at $350 to $700/night, and it is worth it if your group wants a more resort-style experience with less foot traffic. For groups watching the budget, Paris Las Vegas offers solid Strip-view rooms at $120 to $220/night with the Eiffel Tower replica as a bonus backdrop for photos.

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