Caesars Palace 
Celine Dion headlines at quintessential Vegas resort
This resort is home to one of Vegas' main attractions: a shopping/dining/entertainment mall called The Forum Shops.
Guestrooms all offer TV Internet access, and Palace Tower rooms feature two-person spa tubs.
Amenities include an opulent pool complex, luxury cabanas, a 23,000-square-foot health spa, and more.
Hotel prices and availability
Map showing Caesars Palace
Dining at the Caesars Palace
Spago - This spot replicates celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck''s original casual-dining, fusion-food Hollywood restaurant with choices such as roast John Dory with shrimp couscous, blue crab salad, and lamb with baked polenta.
Chinoise - Another example of a Wolfgang Puck restaurant that outlived the Los Angeles original, Chinoise features dim sum, sushi, noodles, and Asian-accented dishes such as lobster in coconut-curry sauce.
Empress Court - This ornate, second-floor restaurant overlooks the pool complex, features Asian delicacies such as shark''s fin, abalone, and bird''s nests, and keeps seafood fresh in live tanks.
Hyakumi - Servers in kimonos. Japanese garden. Sushi, teppanyaki, and other Japanese specialties. Asian noodles for lunch.
Neros - Intimate steakhouse serving beef, seafood, lamb, chicken, veal, and prime rib and featuring the Caesar salad, crab cakes, and chocolate soufflé.
Terrazza - Tuscan-style, traditional, and contemporary Italian fare such as pastas, risotti, grilled lamb, and seared ahi with balsamic vinegar. Terrace seating by the pool complex and inside under an elaborate dome. Fronted by a lounge offering live jazz Wednesday-Sunday.
Café Lago - Breakfast, lunch, and dinner buffets, plus a 24-hour à la carte menu. Big booths, long banquettes, and poolside terrace seating.
Mesa Grill - Innovative Southwestern cuisine by award-winning chef/TV personality Bobby Flay.
Cypress Street Marketplace - This nine-shop food court includes everything from pizza to wok-cooked dishes.
The Cheesecake Factory - Chain restaurant featuring long global menu, huge portions, many cheesecakes and other desserts.
Bertolini''s - Pasta, pizza, Italian fare in casual setting, with expansive sidewalk" seating inside The Forum Shops.
Planet Hollywood - Movie memorabilia and long American-food menu.
La Salsa - Mexican specialties and margarita bar.
Spanish Steps Bar - Serves 50 frozen-fruit cocktails under an umbrella-style
Attractions near this hotel
Driving directions from McCarran International Airport: Exit the airport via Swenson St. Turn left on E Naples Ave, then right on Paradise Rd. Turn left on E Flamingo Rd, then turn right onto Las Vegas Blvd (the Strip).
Getting around: Guests wanting to visit other locations on the Strip have several convenient options. City buses (less than $5) run the length of the Strip; private trollies (less than $5) serve some of the larger casinos. Many guests choose to walk. Guests also can take the Las Vegas monorail (less than $5), which runs along the Strip, stopping at major hotels and the convention center. Stations include the MGM Grand, Bally’s/Paris, Flamingo/Caesars Palace, Harrah’s/Imperial, and the convention center. Averaging 16 miles per hour, the monorail takes approximately 15 minutes to complete the 4-mile trip. Daily, multi-day, and multi-ride passes are available. For other destinations, a rental car is the best option. (All fees subject to change without notice.)
The Las Vegas Monorail ($5) operates along the Las Vegas resort corridor connecting major resort properties and the convention center. The average speed is 16 miles per hour, or 15 minutes to complete the 4-mile run. Stations are: MGM Grand, Bally’s/Paris, Flamingo/Caesars Palace, Harrah’s/Imperial, and the Las Vegas Convention Center. The monorail operates from 7 AM to 2 AM on weekdays, 7 AM to 3 AM on weekends. Daily, multi-day, and multi-ride passes are available.
Fees and hours are subject to change without prior notification.
Madame Tussaud''s Wax Museum (Venetian hotel) - 0.5 miles
Fashion Show Mall (shopping, dining) - 1 mile
Las Vegas Convention Center - 3 miles
Downtown Las Vegas - 4 miles
Hoover Dam/Lake Mead - 32 miles
Entertainment
The Colosseum Way is an expansive pedestrian gateway, leading visitors from the Las Vegas Boulevard entrance to the Colosseum, The Forum Shops at Caesars, and other attractions including an Elton John boutique and the porte cochere, refaced with a classic pediment and Corinthian columns, similar to those of the Palace Tower. Added casino space includes the Palace court high-limit slot casino and the Seahorse Lounge.
The Colosseum at Caesars Palace is a 4,100-seat theater that is home to "A New Day," the theatrical spectacular starring Celine Dion, created by Franco Dragone and presented by Chrysler. Elton John also headlines a production titled "The Red Piano."
Under a sky-painted ceiling whose lighting varies from morning to evening, The Forum Shops mall offers shopping, dining, and entertainment amid a depiction of an ancient Roman neighborhood. Shops number nearly 100 and restaurants and cafés a dozen. Entertainment includes a sound-light-laser show featuring Roman gods at one giant fountain and, at another, a fire-water-smoke show during which mythical Atlantis rises and falls in a 50,000-gallon aquarium while outsized, animatronic characters struggle to rule the island.
In two casinos of different character, Caesars Palace supplies 129,000 square feet of slots, video poker, blackjack, craps, roulette, baccarat, mini-baccarat, pai gow poker, and pai gow. Included are a high-limit salon and a race and sports book offering individual flat-screen televisions and plush table seating. The newer Forum Casino features a high ceiling, one half sleek, black, and all curves and the other half elaborately decorated in Roman classical style.
Caesars Palace Amphitheatre - With permanent seating for 1,600, this venue on the Roman Plaza expands in various configurations to accommodate 4,500.
Belle Luce - A 200-seat venue for private functions, designed around a Roman rotunda, with fountains and statuary.
At the Shadow Bar, juggling bartenders entertain up front while topless dancers perform in silhouette behind screens flanking the bar.
Clubbers rock the night away at Cleopatra''s Barge, where the dance floor is located on a floating barge.
