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Your Guide to Las Vegas’ Members-Only Social Clubs


Posted on: April 22, 2026, 07:15h. 

Last updated on: April 22, 2026, 07:23h.

A ton of unwanted national attention was drawn this week to the secret, members-only club at Fontainebleau Las Vegas. According to a a $250 million defamation lawsuit filed April 20 by Kash Patel against The Atlantic, the magazine fabricated claims that the FBI director drank to the point of “obvious intoxication” there and in Washington, DC. All this attention raises a bigger question… In a city built with the public’s money, just how many of these elite sanctuaries are hidden in plain sight?

This and other images of the Vinyl Room, opening in Mandalay Bay in the former Foundation Room space, were briefly available on Live Nation’s site before being taken down. (Image: Live Nation via Vital Vegas)

The First Social Clubs

While the member’s only social club feels like a modern Vegas contrivance, the concept traces back to 17th-century London, where exclusive coffee houses evolved into elite gentlemen’s clubs like White’s (1693).

In the U.S., the trend began in New York City with the Union Club in 1836, established to cater to the city’s emerging class of industrialists. The modern “creative” social club was pioneered by Soho House in London (1995), which moved away from the stuffy aristocratic model toward a hub for media, arts, and networking — a blueprint the Las Vegas Strip is now adopting to lure deep-pocketed travelers.

Social clubs appeal to their potential members via invite-only membership screening that keeps out the riff-raff, exorbitant initial fees and dues that keep out the poor and middle class, cultural programming, and private‑club governance.

The List (And You’re Not On It)

Las Vegas has many lounges restricted to high-tier members: The Chairman’s Lounge at Bellagio; Executive Suite at Encore; Reserve at Park MGM; Laurel Lounge at Caesars Palace, Paris and the Linq; Club 66 at Resorts World; and Prestige Club at Venetian/Palazzo (available only to guests who book Prestige-level suites). However, there have only ever been four real social clubs. One stopped being member’s-only in 2019 but will be replaced by a new member’s-only club in July.

As Las Vegas pivots away from serving the middle and working classes in order to maximize shareholder value, we can expect many more on the Strip in the coming years.

Another rendering of the Vinyl Room. (Image: Live Nation via Vital Vegas)

1. Vinyl Room (former Foundation Room)
Mandalay Bay
Cost:
$750, $2,500, and $6,000 annual membership tiers anticipated

Las Vegas got its first members-only social club in March 1999 when the House of Blues imported its Foundation Room concept from L.A. It opened on the Mandalay Bay’s top floor — advertised as the 63rd floor though it’s really the 43rd. (Click here for the explanation.)

Operated by the House of Blues, it featured a private club, dining area, and outdoor patios with panoramic Strip views, as well as its own private elevator. Membership was $3,200 annually plus a $400 donation to the House of Blues Music Forward Foundation.

The Foundation Room — which was acquired along with the House of Blues brand by Live Nation in 2006 — stopped selling private memberships in 2019, transitioning to a “public lounge” model to increase foot traffic. When that didn’t work, it closed the club in September 2025.

By July 2026, Live Nation will reopen the space as the Vinyl Room, a story broken by Casino.org’s own Vital Vegas. Early renderings (briefly leaked on Live Nation’s site) depict a music lover’s paradise with warm hardwood floors, mid-century plush seating, and floor-to-ceiling displays of gold records.

Higher-tier membership is expected to include enhanced Live Nation ticket access and preferred seating at the House of Blues downstairs.

The stairway to a heaven known as the off-Strip Stirling Club. (Image; Stirling Club)

2. Stirling Club
Turnberry Place
Fees: $5,000 initiation; $550 monthly dues

The Stirling Club opened in December 2001 and closed in May 2012, due to the economic downturn and a dispute over fee increases between the developer and the residence of Turnberry Place. Seven years later, it reopened under new ownership after a $10 million renovation.

Located off the Strip behind the Westgate in an upscale condo complex, the Stirling is a 73,000 square-foot behemoth. It is also the only club on the list with a massive wellness focus, featuring clay tennis courts, a fitness center, spa and a professional-grade Pilates.

Its members mostly include Vegas’ wealthiest locals — though plenty of visitors also belong.

The Poodle Room features panoramic views of the Strip and, possibly, of FBI director Kash Patel. (Image: Brandon Barré/Fontainebleau Las Vegas)

3. Poodle Room
Fontainebleau
Fees:
Undisclosed, but if you have to ask…

The Poodle Room opened along with the Fontainebleau in December 2023. It offers a 1960s aesthetic, a private terrace with 360-degree views from the 67th floor, and a highly guarded “no photos” policy to ensure member privacy.

However, because access is also open to guests staying in the Fontainebleau’s Fleur de Lis suites, and to select American Express cardholders, its exclusivity is debated.

4. Zero Bond
The Wynn
Fees:
$1,000-$50,000 initiation; $2,750-$7,500 annual dues

Zero Bond. (Image: Wynn Las Vegas)

Opened in March 2026 as a partnership between Wynn Resorts and New York’s exclusive Zero Bond, this is the most “New York” of the clubs. Its Legacy membership ($50,000 initiation) is the ultimate status symbol, offering perks such as a complimentary round at the Wynn Golf Club, a $3,000 private event credit, and a custom Zero Bond cashmere sweater.

The club serves as a “culture and connection” hub where members can view a $40 million art collection while overlooking the 18th green and dine on a culinary program led by Chef Alfred Portale.

 

 



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