CES week is Vegas on hard mode

If you’ve ever tried to book Las Vegas in early January and thought, “Why is everything suddenly so expensive?” you’re not imagining it. CES week can flip normal Vegas pricing upside down, even for basic rooms. It’s one of those travel windows where the city feels like it’s running at full capacity.

The good news is you can still book smart if you know what’s driving the surge. Once you understand the patterns, you can dodge the worst rates, avoid surprise fees, and keep your trip fun. Think of this as your “Vegas during CES” playbook.

A giant crowd lands all at once

CES is not a small convention tucked into one hotel ballroom. CES 2024 drew 138,789 attendees in its verified attendance audit, and a large share came from outside the U.S. That kind of crowd eats up rooms fast, especially near the convention zones.

For CES 2026, early local projections suggest attendance could approach recent CES levels, though official figures are not released until after the event. Many people are traveling on company budgets, and that changes hotel behavior. When businesses are paying, hotels push rates higher.

Vegas has rooms, but timing matters

Las Vegas has a huge hotel supply, around 150,000 rooms, but that number doesn’t protect you when demand spikes at the same time. CES concentrates demand into a tight area and a tight set of dates. Hotels closest to the action feel it first.

The other issue is that CES is multi-venue and citywide. It spreads across the Las Vegas Convention Center area and major resorts, so the pricing ripple travels fast. Even “backup” hotels can rise once the first wave sells out.

CES hits the midweek sweet spot

Vegas is built around weekend leisure travelers, but conventions are the machine that fills rooms Monday through Thursday. CES lands right in that convention sweet spot, so the city doesn’t need to discount midweek. Hotels know their inventory will move.

Industry data shows how big the swing can be around CES timing. STR reporting noted a CES calendar shift week where Las Vegas RevPAR jumped 129%, and the city posted 79.8% occupancy, some of the strongest in the nation. That’s why prices feel like they’re on a different planet.

receptionist and hostess working with guests at reception desk in

Convention pricing” is a real thing

Hotels don’t set one fixed price for January and call it a day. They use dynamic pricing, and big conventions permit them to raise rates aggressively. If a hotel thinks rooms will sell anyway, it will test higher prices.

Las Vegas Review-Journal reporting frames CES 2026 is the first major convention of the year and notes resorts trying to “cash in” after a weaker 2025 performance. Demand plus business strategy equals sticker shock. That’s why you want a plan early.

Strip vs downtown is the big gap

One of the easiest “smart booking” moves is to compare the Strip to downtown before you panic. In a Review-Journal survey for CES opening night, the average Strip rate was $262.14, while downtown averaged $112.90. That gap can pay for a lot of meals and Uber rides.

The catch is convenience. The Strip is closer to many CES events, and some travelers value being five minutes away more than saving money. But if you’re not attending CES, downtown can be the value play that still feels like Vegas.

Yes, rooms can hit $1,000+

During CES week, some hotels go from pricey to jaw-dropping. In a Review-Journal survey of opening-night CES rates, the highest listed price reached $1,207 at the Waldorf Astoria, illustrating how extreme pricing can become during peak demand.

Even if you’re not booking luxury, high-end pricing affects everyone. When premium properties fill up, travelers spill into midrange hotels. Midrange hotels then raise rates because they can. It’s a chain reaction.

fremont east las vegas

Downtown deals still exist

Here’s the part travelers love: downtown can still have surprisingly low rates even during CES. The same Review-Journal survey listed multiple downtown properties under $100 a night, with some far below that. That’s not guaranteed, but it’s a real pattern.

Downtown also gives you a different Vegas vibe. Fremont Street is walkable, lively, and usually easier on the wallet. If your trip is more food and fun than convention meetings, it can be a smarter base.

The official CES hotel pipeline

If you are attending CES, don’t ignore the official housing channel. CES says it secures rooms through a booking site powered by onPeak, and it states that onPeak is the only official housing agent for CES 2026. That matters because “official” blocks can be more stable than random third-party listings.

CES also straight-up warns that rates increase as January approaches and some hotels sell out quickly. Even if you don’t book through it, that line tells you what the market does. The earlier you shop, the more options you’ll see.

closeup of a persons hand searching hotels with low prices

Book early, but keep your flexibility

The smartest CES-week strategy is locking something in early that you can cancel. When organizers warn prices rise as January gets closer, that’s your signal to grab a refundable rate if you can. You’re basically reserving a “price ceiling” for yourself.

Then you keep checking. Sometimes new inventory appears, or a hotel adjusts pricing, or a better location opens up. If your booking is flexible, you can upgrade your plan without losing money. It may not be exciting, but it works.

Stay near the Monorail line

If you want Strip access without Strip prices, the Monorail can help. The official route map lists stops including MGM Grand, Horseshoe/Paris, Flamingo/Caesars Palace, Harrah’s/The LINQ, the Las Vegas Convention Center station, Westgate, and SAHARA. That’s a lot of useful real estate.

This is why off-Strip does not always mean “stuck.” You can pick a hotel that’s cheaper but still connected. Just remember you may still do some walking through properties to reach stations. Comfortable shoes are not optional.

Use points like a price shield

CES week is when reward points can feel like real money. If cash rates are painful, points or comps can soften the blow. MGM Rewards, for example, advertises converting points into comps for rooms and more across MGM Resorts destinations.

The key is checking early because award availability can disappear fast during a mega-event week. If you have points across multiple programs, compare them like you’re comparison shopping airlines. Sometimes the “best deal” is simply the one that actually has availability.

couple at counter paying for hotel

Resort fees are the sneaky budget killer

Vegas is famous for a headline price that is not your final price. Resort fees can add a big nightly charge.

Industry surveys from consumer finance and travel pricing trackers estimate average Las Vegas resort fees at roughly $40 per night before tax in 2025. That means a “deal” can evaporate at checkout.

The FTC finalized rules targeting hidden fees in lodging pricing in 2024, with phased enforcement beginning in 2025, increasing pressure on hotels to disclose total costs upfront

Fee transparency is getting more attention nationally. For travelers, the habit remains the same: always compare the total cost.

las vegas august 21 2024 rtc double decker deuce bus

Transportation costs rise too

During CES, traffic thickens and ride-share demand spikes, especially around the convention zones. That doesn’t always show up in your hotel budget, but you feel it fast. A cheaper hotel can get expensive if you’re paying surge pricing twice a day.

The fix is planning your movement like a local. Use the Monorail when it makes sense, walk shorter hops when the weather cooperates, and bundle your stops so you’re not bouncing back and forth. Vegas looks compact on a map, but it’s a long-walk city.

On the bright side, CES could provide a strong boost for Las Vegas tourism following a slower industry year in 2025.

Now for the real question: Would you ever plan a Vegas trip during CES, or would you avoid it on purpose? Share your take in the comments.

This slideshow was made with AI assistance and human editing.

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Nauris Pukis
Somewhere between tourist and local. I've always been remote-first. Home is my anchor, but the world is my creative fuel. I love to spend months absorbing each destination, absorbing local inspiration into my work, proving that the best ideas often have foreign accents.

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