Madame Tussauds Las Vegas Las Vegas Attraction
Attraction Preview Watch a sneak peek
Attraction Gallery Get a preview of the experience
Attraction Information
What happens when obsessive craftsmanship meets celebrity culture in the most theatrical city on earth? At Madame Tussauds Las Vegas, the line between fan and famous disappears — and the results are stranger, funnier, and more impressive than you'd expect.
There's something quietly disarming about standing next to a wax figure so precisely crafted that your brain genuinely hesitates. Madame Tussauds has been perfecting that hesitation since 1835, when Marie Tussaud's traveling exhibition of eerily lifelike portraits first unnerved audiences across Britain. The Las Vegas outpost carries that same unsettling artistry into an environment purpose-built for spectacle — the Venetian resort complex on the Strip — where every room is engineered to pull you deeper into a different world.
The museum isn't a single experience so much as a layered series of them. Club Tussauds drops you into the kind of pop-culture universe most people only encounter through screens — figures like Beyoncé and Megan Thee Stallion rendered with a precision that captures posture, expression, and attitude, not just likeness. Miley Cyrus' life-size wrecking ball invites the kind of photo that will confuse people on your social feed for days. In the Viva Las Vegas section, the focus shifts to legacy — the entertainers and icons who gave this city its identity, a quieter tribute in the middle of all the spectacle. Then there's the Marvel 4D Experience, which leans fully into sensory overload, trading stillness for motion and immersing you in a cinematic format that earns the word "experience" in a way most attractions don't.
The Hangover Movie Bar Experience brings a specific strand of Las Vegas mythology to life — the Wolf Pack's chaotic fictional weekend given a physical address and a drink menu. It's self-aware, campy, and exactly as fun as it sounds. The Speakeasy Experience layers in something more atmospheric: dim lighting, the suggestion of exclusivity, and the kind of environment that makes you feel like you stumbled into something the rest of the Strip doesn't know about. Together, these rooms don't just display famous faces — they explore what fame actually means in a city that has always treated celebrity as its primary currency.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between Club Tussauds, Viva Las Vegas, and the Speakeasy — are they really that distinct?
Each zone has its own personality. Club Tussauds is high-energy pop culture — think Beyoncé poses and Miley's wrecking ball. Viva Las Vegas is more reflective, honoring the legends who defined this city's entertainment identity. The Speakeasy shifts the mood entirely, leaning into dim-lit atmosphere and Vegas nightlife mystique. They flow together but feel like three genuinely different rooms.
Is Madame Tussauds Las Vegas something the whole family can enjoy, or is it geared more toward adults?
It works across generations. Younger kids gravitate toward the interactive photo moments — climbing on the wrecking ball, posing with pop stars. Teens and adults get more out of the cultural references, especially The Hangover Movie Bar and the Speakeasy. The Marvel 4D Experience tends to be the universal crowd-pleaser, hitting differently for fans of every age.
How long should I plan to spend at Madame Tussauds, and is it the kind of place you rush through?
Most visitors spend one to two hours, though photo enthusiasts easily stretch that. The layout rewards slow exploration — figures like Travis Barker are staged for interaction, not just observation, and the Hangover Bar and Speakeasy both have enough atmosphere to linger in. Rushing defeats the point; the whole draw is getting close enough to genuinely second-guess what you're looking at.
Choose Your Visit Time Select a date and time that works for you
Need a different date?
Browse available dates and pricing below