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Las Vegas Facts

Wallet Watch: Las Vegas Resort Fees Will Rise on March 1

How high can mandatory resort fees go? Sky high, apparently.

Notwithstanding an overwhelming consensus among travelers and the media that the fees amount to legal extortion, resort operators just can’t get enough of them.

In late 2016, MGM Resorts raised resort fees at five of its properties by an average of 10 percent, following similar hikes at five Caesars hotels earlier in the year.

And now,  as reported by the industry trade publication Travel Weekly, Caesars will again raise mandatory fees, from March 1, “bringing those fees in line with competition.”

At Caesars Palace, the Nobu Hotel, The Cromwell, Paris Las Vegas, and Planet Hollywood, the fees will rise by $3, to $35 a night. And at Bally’s, Flamingo Las Vegas, Harrah’s, the Linq, and Rio, fees will rise by $1, to $30.

The increased resort fees aren’t the only budget-busters in store for Las Vegas visitors. This year, the city’s room-rate tax increased from 12 percent to 13.35 percent. That applies to the resort fee as well as the base room rate. And further eroding the value of consumers’ travel dollars, fees for parking, once free, have been imposed by the majority of Las Vegas’s largest hotels, adding as much as $18 a day to the final hotel tab.

So far, the cost spikes haven’t dampened demand. According to Travel Weekly, Las Vegas visitor numbers for both 2015 and 2016 were at record levels. Occupancy rate for Las Vegas Strip hotels was 90.1 percent, even as average nightly room rates increased 4.5 percent to almost $136.

For now, the perception persists that Las Vegas is Fun City, not Expensive City. At some point, however, those unethical and extortionate resort fees are going to give Vegas a new, unwanted moniker: Rip Off City.

Reader Reality Check

Las Vegas used to be a destination as famous for its affordable hotel rates and free buffets as it was for its gambling. Is it still a bargain?

More from SmarterTravel:

After 20 years working in the travel industry, and 15 years writing about it, Tim Winship knows a thing or two about travel. Follow him on Twitter @twinship.

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