Lounges · Las Vegas
You don't need elite status — or a particular credit card — to use a lounge at Las Vegas (LAS). Several LAS lounges take Priority Pass or sell a walk-in day pass at the door, so you can buy a few quiet hours before your flight. Below is every lounge by terminal, how to get in, and where to find a shower — then how to keep an eye on the live LAS security wait so a lounge stop doesn't cost you the gate.

The Club at LAS
Terminal 1 (D Gates) & Terminal 3 (E Gates)
Walk-in day pass: $60 per booking online via the operator.
Chase Sapphire Lounge by The Club
Terminal 1 (C Gates)
Capital One Lounge
Concourse D (Level 2, near Gate D50)
Walk-in day pass: $90 general public ($45 with a Venture or Spark Miles card).
American Express Centurion Lounge
Concourse D (opposite Gate D1, transit-accessible post-security from T1 & T3)
Ways in across these lounges: Walk-in day pass · Lounge membership · Amex Platinum / Centurion.
There are four common ways in, and only one needs status. Priority Pass is a paid membership that gets you into participating lounges on its network. A walk-in day pass, sold at the door of independent lounges like The Club or an Escape Lounge, buys a few hours with no membership at all. Airline clubs admit their own members and premium-cabin passengers, and some sell a same-day pass. And a few lounges are run for active U.S. militaryat no charge. We don't push any credit card here — just the door that fits your trip. For what each way in costs and when a lounge is worth it, see our full guide on how to get into an airport lounge.
Showers at LAS live inside the larger airline and flagship lounges rather than in public areas. If a shower is the point — after a red-eye or before a long-haul — look for a flagship or international lounge, or a Minute Suites-style rest room.
Before you head to the gate
Waiting out a delay or a long layover in a lounge? Comfort is great until boarding sneaks up. Check the live LAS security wait times first, then recompute when to leave for your gate — your Leave-By Time so you walk to security with exactly enough time to get through the line — not a minute wasted, not a flight missed.
Lounges, hours and amenities change — we verified LAS's details as of June 27, 2026. Always confirm hours and access on the day you fly. Not affiliated with the TSA, any airline, or any lounge operator.
Most lounges at LAS are airline clubs rather than Priority Pass lounges, so check the Priority Pass app for the current LAS list before you rely on it. Priority Pass membership lets you in without flying that airline or buying a separate pass.
Often, yes. LAS has lounges that sell a walk-in day pass at the door or through Priority Pass, so you can buy a few hours of quiet without any airline status or membership. Space is first-come, so it can fill up at peak times — and you don't need a premium credit card to get in.
Showers at LAS are typically found inside the larger airline and flagship lounges rather than in public areas. If a shower matters for your layover, look for a flagship or international business-class lounge.
For a long layover, usually yes — a seat, quiet, free food and Wi-Fi, and often a shower beat a crowded gate. Just keep one eye on the clock: when it's time to move, check the live LAS security wait so a relaxing lounge stop doesn't turn into a rushed walk to the gate.