Every Food Hall in Las Vegas Ranked: The Complete 2026 Guide
Las Vegas has embraced the food hall trend with over a dozen multi-vendor dining destinations. From celebrity chef concepts to local favorites, here is every food hall ranked by quality, value, and variety.
Food halls have become one of the defining dining trends in Las Vegas. They solve the eternal Vegas problem — groups with different tastes who want to eat together. Instead of compromising on a single restaurant, everyone can get exactly what they want under one roof. Here is every food hall in Las Vegas, ranked by overall quality.
1. Famous Foods Street Eats at Resorts World (Best Overall)
The clear winner. A 24,000-square-foot food hall curated by James Beard Award-winning chef Boon Chu. The concept brings authentic Southeast Asian street food vendors alongside other global cuisines. Must-try stalls: Boon Chu's Thai street noodles, Geylang Claypot Rice (Singaporean), and Blood Bros. BBQ (Texas-style brisket from the James Beard-nominated Houston team). Prices are reasonable for the Strip — most dishes $12-$20. Open late (until 2 AM on weekends).
2. Block 16 Urban Food Hall at The Cosmopolitan
The original Las Vegas food hall and still one of the best. Compact but curated, with standout stalls including Hattie B's Hot Chicken (Nashville-style, legitimately spicy), Tekka Bar (hand-roll sushi from the team behind Nobu), and District: Donuts. Sliders. Brew. (New Orleans-style beignets and craft sliders). The hidden speakeasy Ghost Donkey is accessible through this food hall. Most items $10-$18.
3. Proper Eats at ARIA
Opened in 2023 and immediately became a contender. The highlight is Bao Wow (creative bao buns from a Michelin-trained chef) and Wexler's Deli (the best pastrami sandwich on the Strip, hand-sliced to order). The space is beautifully designed with communal seating and a central bar. Prices are moderate — $12-$22 for most items.
4. Chinatown (Off-Strip — The Real Food Hall)
Technically not a single food hall, but the 3-mile stretch of Spring Mountain Road functions as one. Over 200 Asian restaurants representing Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese, Thai, Filipino, and Mongolian cuisines. Best picks: Raku (Japanese robata — possibly the best restaurant in Las Vegas, period), Chengdu Taste (Sichuan), 8 East (pan-Asian tapas), and Kung Fu Thai & Chinese (open 24 hours, massive menu, $8-$12 entrees). This is where chefs eat on their nights off.
5. Eataly at Park MGM
The Italian marketplace concept with multiple restaurants, a market, and cooking classes. La Pizza & La Pasta is the best value (handmade pasta from $16), while the rooftop restaurant offers a more upscale experience with Strip views. The market section sells imported Italian ingredients, fresh bread, and house-made gelato. Good for browsing even if you do not eat — the free samples at the cheese and charcuterie counters are generous.
6. The District at Green Valley Ranch (Off-Strip)
Henderson's answer to Strip food halls. A collection of local restaurants and shops in an outdoor Mediterranean-style setting. Less flashy than Strip options but more authentic — these are actual local businesses, not celebrity chef concepts. Highlights: Bottiglia (Italian with a great patio), Borracha (Mexican cocktails and tacos), and King's Fish House (seafood). Free parking, no resort fees, no crowds.
7. Fulton Street Food Hall at Harrah's
The budget-friendly option. Nothing here will blow your mind, but everything is competent and affordable by Strip standards. KFC (yes, really — but it is a full-service KFC with beer), Fulton Street Pizza (decent New York-style slices for $5), and Noodle Bar (serviceable Asian noodle soups for $10-$14). Open 24 hours, which matters at 3 AM when your options are limited.
Food Hall Tips
- Avoid peak hours (12-1 PM and 6-8 PM) at Strip food halls. Lines at popular stalls can exceed 30 minutes during these windows.
- Share dishes — most food hall portions are designed for sharing. Order 3-4 items for two people and try everything.
- Chinatown is the best value in Las Vegas dining, period. A meal for two with drinks rarely exceeds $40, and the quality rivals or exceeds Strip restaurants charging three times more.
- Food halls do not take reservations — just show up. But some individual stalls within food halls (like Wexler's at Proper Eats) have their own ordering systems or apps that let you skip the line.
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