What to Know
Buffets exist across Las Vegas, from value to premium options, according to Visit Las Vegas and local guides.
Top-tier buffets often price dinner and weekend brunches between about $45 and $85, according to multiple sources.
Examples: Bacchanal Buffet at Caesars lists weekend brunch and dinner around $65-$85.
Buffets still rule parts of the Strip. Believe it or not, they are not dead.
If you want quantity and variety, there is usually a buffet for that. The question is how much you'll pay.
We checked the menus, the hotel pages, and the Vegas guides. The answers are simple and not all the same.
Price tiers, explained like a local
Vegas buffets fall into clear price tiers. That makes choosing easier than you think.
Value buffets often run lower. Visit Las Vegas notes many fall in the $30-$60 range.
Mid-range choices sit in the middle. Local guides and reviews list many buffets between about $40 and $70, depending on the meal and day.
Top-tier spots push higher. Several guides show premium dinner and weekend brunch prices often between roughly $45 and $75.
Not every buffet fits a neat box. Some events and holiday meals bump prices above standard rates.
Buffet math in Vegas: cheap, not cheap, and yes, a splurge.
The Stack Is Real
Lines and plates stack up. Your strategy matters more than your appetite.
Who charges what: named examples you can actually check
If you want to look up official numbers, start with the big names. Their pages list pricing ranges and meal types.
Bacchanal Buffet at Caesars Palace. The Caesars site lists weekend brunch and dinner pricing generally in the $65-$85 range.
Wynn buffet at Wynn Las Vegas. Wynn describes its buffet as a premium option with typical dinner and weekend brunch prices often in the $60-$80 range.
The Buffet at Bellagio. Bellagio notes weekend dinners and brunches likely priced between about $60 and $80.
If you want the hotel page, go to the hotel page. They usually say the price.
Your Uber Driver Knows This
Locals will tell you which places are worth skipping. Listen when they do.
How guidebooks and editors frame buffet pricing
Local guides and food writers keep a running list of top buffets and price norms.
Vegas Eater maps note many well-known buffets range from about $40 for breakfast or lunch to $60 or more for dinner and weekend specials.
Thrillist groups top-tier buffets in a similar bucket, saying dinner can be between about $45 and $75.
Translation: breakfast is the bargain, dinner is the flex.
Quick tips for picking the right buffet
Pick faster with a few local rules of thumb. These are opinions, not official facts.
Go for breakfast or lunch if you want the lowest menu price. Guides show lower rate windows for daytime meals.
Treat weekend brunch or dinner like an experience. Premium spots list higher ranges for these meals.
Check hotel pages before you go. Hotels and buffet pages often list current pricing ranges.
If you are on the Strip and hungry, breakfast buys you more plate for your dollar.
The Desert Does Not Care About Your Schedule
Buffet hours and holidays matter. Prices shift when the whole city shows up.
Why these numbers matter to visitors and locals
Buffet pricing tells you what the meal is meant to be: budget, reliable, or a splurge.
Visit Las Vegas frames the city as a place with buffet options that range from value to upscale, so choices match budgets and moods.
You can eat cheap. You can also treat it like a Vegas night out. Both are valid choices.
Why Vegas Cares
Buffets are part of Vegas culture, and they still show up on hotel menus and local guides. The city's dining scene keeps a range of options, so residents and visitors both find something that fits their day and wallet.
Local pages and food guides keep track of price trends. That helps locals steer newcomers toward the buffet that fits their plan, whether it is quick value or a weekend splurge.
Bottom of the Bowl
If you want the exact current price for a specific buffet, check the venue page.
For a sense of scale, value options often fall near $30-$60, many buffets sit around $40-$70, and top-tier weekend dinners or brunches commonly land between roughly $45 and $85, depending on the place you pick.
Plan, pick your mood, and bring a big appetite.
Vegas will handle the rest.






