Visitors dropped for a 6th straight month in Las Vegas as head of tourism insists Sin City isn't dead

Authored by cbsnews.com and submitted by etfvfva

LAS VEGAS — The top tourism official in Las Vegas says the city hasn't priced out regular travelers, even as July visitor counts fell and casinos took in more from gamblers.

Steve Hill, CEO of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA), said monthly figures can bounce around but argued the destination remains competitive at different price points.

"We're not happy with the downturn but the city's taking steps to address that," Hill told reporters Friday.

Steve Hill, CEO of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA), speaks to the media. CBS News

Las Vegas saw a 12% decline in visitors compared to a year ago, hosting about 3.1 million people, according to LVCVA data.

Convention attendance fell about 10% in June, then rose about 10% in July. Looking over a longer stretch, Hill said the meetings business is roughly flat and the next 16 months of bookings look especially strong.

With social media griping about add-on costs, resorts are leaning into promotions.

Recent examples include: Resorts World waiving resort fees and paid parking through Sept. 10, the Sahara Las Vegas Hotel offering free parking, late check-out and upgrades on select stays, Downtown Grand Hotel bundling dining credits, free slot play, no resort fee and The Strat touting "Summer of Value" rooms with taxes and fees included.

The tourism agency is also pushing budget tips and free activities citywide.

"The idea that generally Las Vegas is not a value, that it is overpriced, I don't think our customers are doing math when they are concerned about a specific issue," Hill said. "They're expressing concern about that specific topic, that tends to then move into a narrative around Las Vegas is expensive or Las Vegas is not a value, but if you actually do the math on that, that's not accurate."

The skyline on the north end of the Las Vegas Strip, with casino operators in the area including Resorts World, Fontainebleau, Sahara and Circus Circus, as viewed from the observation deck atop The Strat. L.E. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Traffic from Canada is down about 18%, which Hill attributed in part to friction caused by politics and tariffs. By contrast, visits from Mexico, the United Kingdom and Australia are rising, with more flights into Las Vegas.

He also criticized a $250 U.S. visa fee for travelers from non-waiver countries, costs that can top $1,000 for a family of four, and long processing times that he said suppress demand.

Despite the downward trend in overall visitors, Nevada gaming revenue remains resilient, a sign that visitors who do come are still spending.

Nevada casinos kept $1.36 billion from gamblers in July, up 4% from a year earlier, according to data from state regulators.

The Las Vegas Strip drove the increase with $749 million, a 5.6% gain. Downtown Las Vegas rose 3.6%.

Hill expects momentum to build in the fall, citing a packed events calendar and stronger bookings into December.

"Don't believe the narrative," Hill said.

SaulTNNutz on August 30th, 2025 at 17:39 UTC »

The charm of Vegas had always been that it was a slightly-trashy 3-day getaway that was cheap. It's now incredibly trashy and incredibly expensive. Food and drinks there are now stadium prices. 

SentientBaseball on August 30th, 2025 at 17:31 UTC »

Las Vegas, like a lot of things in today's fucked up world, has decided to start catering specifically to the upper middle class and above. People who can afford to throw away 10K plus on 3-4 days in Vegas. It's not a spot for average working-class Americans to spend a nice weekend anymore. Those people who spend thousands of dollars a weekend aren't complaining about drink prices and table minimums, and Vegas makes their money regardless.

HORROR_VIBE_OFFICIAL on August 30th, 2025 at 17:27 UTC »

Wild that gaming revenue is UP but visitors are DOWN. Basically fewer people, spending more money. Classic ‘rich get richer’ economics.