

Bottled Blonde Las Vegas is a vibrant two-story destination on the Las Vegas Strip, blending sports, dining, nightlife, and live entertainment. On the main floor, catch every game on our many TVs while enjoying our extensive food menu, full bar, and nightly live music. Upstairs, the rooftop offers an open-air party atmosphere with panoramic views of the Bellagio fountains, high-energy DJs, and premium bottle service. From casual lunches and game days to live music nights and late-night celebrations, Bottled Blonde is your go-to spot for food, drinks, and entertainment in Las Vegas.
Address and Contact Information
Address: 3639 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109
Phone: (702) 690-2992
Website: https://bottledblondelv.com/
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Related Web Results
Bottled Blonde Las Vegas | Food, Drinks & Events
Bottled Blonde Las Vegas (@bottledblondelv) – Instagram
Bottled Blonde – Las Vegas, NV – OpenTable
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Reviews
The draft beers were a bit pricey, but that seems to be the norm in Vegas these days. The atmosphere reminded me of a classier version of Hooters, with a fun, casual energy and a polished look. We stayed about an hour and left feeling satisfied and refreshed.
Next time we are in town we will definitely pop back in and try the food to see how it measures up. Overall, Bottled Blonde is worth a visit.
There were TVs everywhere, a beer pong setup downstairs, and a lot of activity. Very nice open layout. There was even a little corner where a live band could set up. I was hovering around the host’s podium and saw another party go up to the second floor before we were seated. I went back to the podium to check on our seating status, and she acted like she had never seen me before and looked confused. Then she informed us to go upstairs to see another host who would help us. We went upstairs, but nobody was at the podium. A few minutes later, she came around the corner. We told her we’d like an outside table, and she led us to the balcony area with a large couch overlooking the Vegas Strip. The couch didn’t really have much shade and was getting a lot of direct sunlight. Wifey found the one shaded corner and settled in. I was fine with the direct sunlight. Our goal was just to get something light for lunch to share. We reviewed the menu, and nothing really jumped out at us—it looked like typical bar food: pizzas, wings, the usual. We decided to share the fried mac & cheese bites and chicken tenders. We reviewed the beer selection, it had many of the usual suspects and a few local craft options. When our server came by, we started to tell her which beers we wanted, and she informed us all the kegs were down and there was no draft beer. After hearing that, we just decided to just leave and go somewhere else. I was actually excited to try this new place, but unfortunately, it wasn’t a great first experience. The best thing I noticed was the layout, upstairs included. However, the beer and food menu, as well as the initial podium service, were not that great. 2.5 Rating
I bought these F1 tickets months ago, before they were even publicly listed and then quietly delisted from Bottled Blonde’s own website. I paid nearly $1,000 PER PERSON for what they advertised as premium rooftop access with views of the race — I got them as a birthday surprise for my girlfriend. Instead, what we walked into was a blatant bait-and-switch scam, run by the most hostile management team I’ve ever encountered in Las Vegas.
Let me be clear:
There were NO views of the race. Zero.
Why? Because they put a giant VIP table section across the entire viewing line — meaning only VIP tables had any sightline of the track, and the rest of us were shoved behind furniture, bodies, and barriers with absolutely no visibility.
And yet they sold these tickets as “viewing access.” This wasn’t an accident. It was deliberate and predatory.
Dozens of attendees around me were furious as well. Most of them had purchased through StubHub, where the seller was listed as Bottled Blonde—even though the staff later claimed they “never sold tickets through any third party.” That is a lie, and I saw it with my own eyes. The majority of guests I spoke to were holding StubHub confirmations.
They also kept changing and shifting entrance times all week long, clearly to squeeze as much money out of people as possible and keep expectations foggy right up until the moment you walked in and realized there was no view.
And the final insult? They sold same-day GA access at the door for a fraction of what I paid, and it was literally the same thing as “premium GA” — no difference except the price. It felt like employees were improvising prices on the spot. Whether or not money was being pocketed internally, the entire operation gave off the vibe of a venue trying to milk every dollar from confused guests during F1 weekend.
But the worst part of the night was the behavior of the manager, Alex, and the management team in general. Alex was shockingly rude, dismissive, confrontational, and acted as if guests pointing out the scams were somehow the problem. When I calmly raised the obvious issues — no views, fake seat numbers, misleading ads — his response wasn’t professionalism. It was aggression. At one point he even threatened to trespass me simply for questioning why I paid nearly a thousand dollars for nothing that was promised.
Given how small and petty he acted, I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s already planning his next shopping spree at Gap Kids, which is about the only place his ego and management skills belong. Corporate management should check the accounting from last night before some of that ends up spent on children’s clothes for their child manager.
And the “free food” they advertised? Pure slop. Not premium, not curated, not remotely aligned with the price point — just low-quality cafeteria-tier food thrown together and passed off as some kind of F1 hospitality. And the so-called open bar was another scam: it didn’t even open until the race was already underway. By the time anyone could access it, the event you supposedly paid for was in full swing. It was an “open bar” in name only — deliberately delayed, clearly designed to minimize what they had to provide.
This venue is unsafe, predatory, and openly hostile to paying customers. No one should ever spend a dollar here. Frankly, the way they operated during F1 weekend, they deserve to collapse under their own financial misconduct, and Alex should never work in Las Vegas hospitality again.
I’ll be joining Sarah and Michael in their complaints, filings, and every next step. This place should not be allowed to operate the way it does.
Avoid this venue. Tell your friends to avoid it. If you value your safety, your money, or basic respect, do not go here.
There’s no cover/ dress code. Food is decent but I love their seasoned fries. Service can be kinda slow depending on who you your server is. Bartenders upstairs are awesome though. They have different DJs playing (they post who on bottle blondes IG).
Just visited last night and they now serve food late night also (11pm-1am Friday& Saturday) which is great. Sometimes you get the munchies after some dancing and drinks.
I ordered the Wagyu truffle burger, and it was absolutely phenomenal. Perfectly cooked, rich, juicy, and layered with deep, savory flavor. The truffle infusion was balanced and luxurious, not overpowering, and every bite tasted like a high-end steakhouse disguised as comfort food. Easily one of the best burgers I’ve had in a long time.
Calais paired the food and drinks flawlessly, offering great recommendations and keeping everything flowing smoothly all night. You can tell she takes pride in her craft and in creating an experience, not just serving drinks. Exceptional service, amazing food, and an atmosphere that hits on all levels. If you’re at Bottle Blonde, do yourself a favor and sit at the bar with Calais — she elevates the whole experience.