parking for night in casino parking lots in Vegas

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Anyone have any suggestions as to casinos that allow it in Vegas Thanks
There are truck lots close to the Casinos that allow it. But you might have to put up with the Lizards. I know there are Casinos in Laughlin that allow it, and even have hookups.
 
The Clark County Health Department doesn't allow RVs to overnight in parking lots so you won't find legal overnight parking in Las Vegas. The casinos in Laughlin, NV (also in Clark County) protested when this ban was put into effect about 15 years ago and got an exemption where people register with the casino and are limited to a maximum of 14 days. As part of the agreement the casinos have to provide a free dump station and a source of drinking water to the RVers staying in their parking lots. Last time I was there the dump station for all the parking lots was a grate on a hill next to the maintenance garage behind the Tropicana Casino and it was also used by tour buses dumping their toilet tanks (they don't use a hose, just let it rip and rinse the concrete down afterwards).

Don Laughlin's Riverside Casino in Laughlin also has a massive (740 spaces) full hookup RV park across the street with reasonable rates.

In Las Vegas there are several RV parks along upper Boulder Highway on the east side in the $30-40 range but you may have to put up with ne'er-do-wells wandering through in the evenings. I've stayed at King's Row and Roadrunner in the past.
 
Hi, We were in Las Vegas last spring and left our camper at Fletcher View Campground for 3 days while we went to Las Vegas. It's a small campground and the camp hosts were very nice. We stayed at the Flamingo and behind it was a large gated parking lot. I noticed a bunch of campers in it. I don't believe anyone was camping in them, but just parked over night.
 
You might try staying in Boulder Beach Campground on Lake Mead. (Don't get it confused with the next-door RV park.) It is a very nice, no hookup, but large spots, well separated from one another, and cost is only $20 for most people, but only $10 per night for people with Federal senior passes. There is a water fill and dump station, and it is right on a very nice, paved bike path. It used to be first-come first-served, but now requires reservations. If you can't get in there, Las Vegas Bay is only a few miles away and is even closer to Las Vegas.
 
Not Vegas but you can camp here potentially for 4 nights

Good catch, Jackie. FWIW, Railroad Pass is the oldest casino in continuous operation in Nevada. I often stop there for a break going in or out of town. It's about an hour and a half away from my home base in Pahrump. Las Vegas traffic is on one side of it, there's a couple of hours of empty desert driving on the other.
 
Riverside casino in Laughlin has new policy effective 2023. They are really limiting the number and moved them to one small area. But the rv park across the street is very reasonable...
As for Vegas, I second saying at Lake Mead rec. Sires, Callville nice and never full.
 
We usually stay at Lake Mead. The developed campgrounds are $20 ($10 with senior or Access pass). And there’s free dispersed camping also. Much quieter than in LV. You do have to reserve sites at the campgrounds but you can go in, pick a site, and reserve it online or by phone right then. We just spent a week at Las Vegas Bay - quiet, close to Henderson, plenty of sites available.
 
Thanks for sharing your experience with parking in Vegas. It sounds like staying at Lake Mead is a great option, especially with the affordable campgrounds and free dispersed camping. Quieter and closer to nature, I can see why it's a preferred choice.
 
Gambling addicts will always trumpet how much they've won but can't remember how much they've lost. The overwhelming majority of online gamblers, especially, reside in the loss column.
My mother was a gambling addict. My dad could not support her habit so she dumped him and married her boss. Then she moved them to Reno and ran through all his money and his investments. He died broke.
 
Gambling addicts will always trumpet how much they've won but can't remember how much they've lost. The overwhelming majority of online gamblers, especially, reside in the loss column.
When I was younger I worked in a convenience store and people would buy $20 on scratch tickets and come back 2 minutes later with a $10 winner convinced they won money.
 
My mother was a gambling addict. My dad could not support her habit so she dumped him and married her boss. Then she moved them to Reno and ran through all his money and his investments. He died broke.
Gambling, like alcohol and drugs ruins lives and destroys families. But as we continue “defining deviancy down”, the MLB channel even has an hour long afternoon show promoting gambling on baseball. In Louisiana and Mississippi the highways are plastered with billboards informing travelers of a gambling addiction hotline they can call if they can’t stop giving their money to Casinos or online betting sites as if that makes it all better now.
 
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