Las Vegas weekly update — July 1, 2026
By the ThingsVegas Editorial Team | Published July 1, 2026 · 3 min read
What happened in Las Vegas this week that matters for your trip. Updated every Tuesday.
Las Vegas drew 3.49 million visitors in May — and prices are following
LVCVA data published June 30 shows Las Vegas welcomed 3.49 million visitors in May 2026, up 2% year over year. Hotel occupancy reached 84.7%. The average daily room rate climbed to $210.63. Convention attendance surged nearly 15%, driven by multiple trade shows running concurrently with EDC, four BTS concerts, and Golden Knights playoff games.
What this means for your trip: those May numbers are not a one-month spike. July and August bookings are running ahead of last year at most Strip properties. If you have not booked your hotel yet, do it now. Midweek stays and properties off the center Strip are where the remaining value is. Weekend rooms near the Bellagio-to-MGM corridor are tight and priced accordingly.
Le Cirque at Bellagio closes permanently August 23
Le Cirque has operated at Bellagio since the resort opened in 1998 — one of the longest-running fine dining operations in Las Vegas. It closes after dinner service on August 23, 2026. MGM Resorts has not announced plans for the space.
What this means for your trip: August is the last chance. Reservations are available now and will fill before the closing date. Visitors arriving after August 23 should plan Bellagio dining around Prime Steakhouse, Picasso, and Spago, all of which remain open. No replacement concept has been confirmed.
The second largest In-N-Out in the country opened on the south Strip
A new In-N-Out Burger opened on the third level of the BLVD Mall, spanning 10,500 square feet across two floors. Indoor seating covers 170 guests. The rooftop terrace seats 50 outdoors with a direct view toward Aria. An In-N-Out company store is attached — the only one currently on the Strip.
What this means for your trip: this is a useful option for visitors staying near Mandalay Bay, Luxor, and Excalibur. The rooftop terrace view is worth the stop on its own. Expect significant lines during peak dinner hours and Saturday afternoons — tourist novelty combined with genuine local loyalty will keep this one busy through the summer. The BLVD Mall location is a short walk from the south end of the Strip or a quick rideshare from the center.
Fremont Street free concerts run every weekend through Labor Day
The Downtown Rocks Summer Concert Series continues at Fremont Street Experience through September 7, with rotating acts on Friday and Saturday nights under the canopy. Finger Eleven headlined June 27. Upcoming acts span rock, country, and pop from the 1990s and 2000s.
What this means for your trip: concert nights downtown change the experience significantly. Crowds are heavier, the pedestrian zone is congested by 9 p.m., and nearby hotels charge more on those specific nights. If you are staying downtown, check the concert calendar before booking your dates. If you are going for the concerts, they are free and the Fremont canopy delivers a sound environment that outdoor Strip venues cannot match. Check the current schedule at fremontstreetexperience.com.
Las Vegas Updates publishes every Tuesday. Items are verified against published sources and dated. For show schedules, ticket availability, and restaurant reservations, always confirm directly with the venue.