Pros

  • Extensive business services, including a notary public
  • On-site restaurant has healthy food options
  • Next door to Piero's, a highly rated Italian restaurant
  • Fitness center is packed with top-of-the-line equipment
  • Free parking
See More Pros

Cons

  • Tiny suites (380 sq. ft.)
  • On an empty road that's well off the Strip
  • Small pool in a drab setting
  • Fee for Internet
See More Cons

Bottom Line

Right outside the Las Vegas Convention Center, this hotel offers ample business services and a well-equipped gym. Yet with a forgettable pool, no nightlife and remote location from the action on the Strip, it has little to recommend for anyone other than conventioneers. Plus, suites are on the small side.

See More Bottom Line

Hotel & Amenities Photos

Amenities

  • Cribs
  • Fitness Center
  • Internet
  • Jacuzzi
  • Pool

Oyster Hotel Review

Las Vegas Marriott

Scene

A business hotel near the Las Vegas Convention Center. For a party, look elsewhere.

This 278-room hotel is strictly business. The Las Vegas Convention Center is the only nearby attraction (if you consider 3.2 million square feet of meeting space an attraction). No parties or gambling can be found on-site -- for frivolity you'll have to take a seven-minute cab ride to the casino-hotels of the Strip. And the small pool barely qualifies as a swimming hole. But what the Marriott does best is cater to business travelers, with a three-minute walk to the convention site, a 24-hour business center, a well-equipped fitness center and a restaurant that, while no standout, offers healthy entrees -- something frequent hotel diners may appreciate. Most of the hotel's common spaces were also renovated in 2012, so the lobby area, restaurant, and pool were given an update.

A better suite option next to the convention center is the Renaissance, which has more spacious rooms. Marriott devotees who don't need to be so close to the convention center might prefer the Marriott Grand Chateau, which is located right behind the Strip's busiest section and offers large apartments with fully equipped kitchens and in-room Jacuzzis.

See More Scene

Location

Convenient to the Las Vegas Convention Center -- and not much else.

Located on the wide and lightly traveled Convention Center Drive, this hotel was built to be handy to the Las Vegas Convention Center, which is just a three-minute walk away. What else is around? An excellent Italian restaurant Piero's is on one side, and a decrepit casino-hotel called Greek Isles is on the other. That's about it. The Las Vegas Strip is a 15-minute walk that's bearable only when the sun's gone down. By cab, it takes about seven minutes.

The hotel is a $12 cab ride from the McCarran airport. Free parking is available on the property.

Most Las Vegas visitors want to explore all of the big properties along the densely packed three-and-a-half mile long stretch of hotel-casinos known as the Strip. Cabs are easy to find at virtually any time of day or night. A generally less expensive option is the Deuce, a double-decker bus that runs up and down the strip 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and costs $3 to ride. There's also a monorail system, which stops at MGM Grand, Bally's/Paris, Flamingo/Caesars Palace, Harrah's/Imperial Palace, the Las Vegas Convention Center, the Hilton, and the Sahara. A single-ride ticket is $5; a one-day pass is $13. If you're traveling along the Strip with at least one other person, a cab is often the least expensive option.

See More Location

Rooms

The suites, small by Vegas standards, squeeze in a king-size bed, living area and pantry.

  • At 380 square feet, these are tiny suites -- the average standard single room in Vegas is about the same size.
  • The suite, called a guest room, comes with a full-size sofa bed in the living room, as well as a coffee table, bureau, a work desk, and a wet bar.
  • Some suites have French doors that separate the bedroom from the living room, adding a sense of privacy.
  • The suites have a modern, middle-of-the-road aesthetic: red and yellow walls, dark wood laminate, black-and-white landscape photos, and gingham sofas.
  • The king-size bed has a down-filled duvet, down pillows, and a pillow-top mattress.
  • There are 42-inch flat-screen TVs in each room, both with premium cable like HBO and pay-per-view current movie releases.
  • Wi-Fi is available for a fee
  • The bathroom has a sink in a separate room from the tub/shower and toilet.
  • Free newspaper delivery on weekdays
See More Rooms

Features

Full business services, including a 24-hour business center, meeting rooms and a notary public. The small fitness center is packed with modern equipment, but the pool disappoints.

  • 24-hour business center is equipped with PCs, printers, a fax/copy machine.
  • Fee for Wi-Fi
  • 24-hour fitness center
  • Pool and Jacuzzi
See More Features

Family

Not an ideal family vacation spot, but a workable choice for kids tagging along on a business trip.

This is not a family hotel in any obvious way: The pool is small and lacks a lifeguard, few kid-friendly activities or distractions are provided, and a great majority of the guests are business travelers. But if you're thinking of bringing your kids along on a work trip, this isn't the worst you can do. For one, the hotel's mature vibe and distance from the Strip means you'll keep your kids away from risque shows and rowdy revelers.

To give the parents privacy, families should ask for a suite with French doors separating the bedroom from the living room, which are available at no extra cost. The hotel doesn't provide rollaway beds, but the sofas pull out to create a full-size bed. Cribs are free.

See More Family

All-Inclusive / Food

The on-site restaurant Cafe 325 is open for lunch and dinner, and room service is available daily.

  • The hotel's on-site restaurant Cafe 325 serves American fare for lunch and dinner, and an extensive breakfast buffet.
  • Room service is available daily
See More All-Inclusive / Food

Things You Should Know About Las Vegas Marriott

Also Known As

  • Marriott Las Vegas
  • Marriott Suites Las Vegas

Room Types

  • King Guest Room
  • Queen/Queen Room

Address

325 Convention Center Drive, Las Vegas, Nevada 89109, United States

Phone

(702) 650-2000

Website

Oyster Hotel Review

Las Vegas Marriott

Scene

A business hotel near the Las Vegas Convention Center. For a party, look elsewhere.

This 278-room hotel is strictly business. The Las Vegas Convention Center is the only nearby attraction (if you consider 3.2 million square feet of meeting space an attraction). No parties or gambling can be found on-site -- for frivolity you'll have to take a seven-minute cab ride to the casino-hotels of the Strip. And the small pool barely qualifies as a swimming hole. But what the Marriott does best is cater to business travelers, with a three-minute walk to the convention site, a 24-hour business center, a well-equipped fitness center and a restaurant that, while no standout, offers healthy entrees -- something frequent hotel diners may appreciate. Most of the hotel's common spaces were also renovated in 2012, so the lobby area, restaurant, and pool were given an update.

A better suite option next to the convention center is the Renaissance, which has more spacious rooms. Marriott devotees who don't need to be so close to the convention center might prefer the Marriott Grand Chateau, which is located right behind the Strip's busiest section and offers large apartments with fully equipped kitchens and in-room Jacuzzis.

See More Scene

Location

Convenient to the Las Vegas Convention Center -- and not much else.

Located on the wide and lightly traveled Convention Center Drive, this hotel was built to be handy to the Las Vegas Convention Center, which is just a three-minute walk away. What else is around? An excellent Italian restaurant Piero's is on one side, and a decrepit casino-hotel called Greek Isles is on the other. That's about it. The Las Vegas Strip is a 15-minute walk that's bearable only when the sun's gone down. By cab, it takes about seven minutes.

The hotel is a $12 cab ride from the McCarran airport. Free parking is available on the property.

Most Las Vegas visitors want to explore all of the big properties along the densely packed three-and-a-half mile long stretch of hotel-casinos known as the Strip. Cabs are easy to find at virtually any time of day or night. A generally less expensive option is the Deuce, a double-decker bus that runs up and down the strip 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and costs $3 to ride. There's also a monorail system, which stops at MGM Grand, Bally's/Paris, Flamingo/Caesars Palace, Harrah's/Imperial Palace, the Las Vegas Convention Center, the Hilton, and the Sahara. A single-ride ticket is $5; a one-day pass is $13. If you're traveling along the Strip with at least one other person, a cab is often the least expensive option.

See More Location

Rooms

The suites, small by Vegas standards, squeeze in a king-size bed, living area and pantry.

  • At 380 square feet, these are tiny suites -- the average standard single room in Vegas is about the same size.
  • The suite, called a guest room, comes with a full-size sofa bed in the living room, as well as a coffee table, bureau, a work desk, and a wet bar.
  • Some suites have French doors that separate the bedroom from the living room, adding a sense of privacy.
  • The suites have a modern, middle-of-the-road aesthetic: red and yellow walls, dark wood laminate, black-and-white landscape photos, and gingham sofas.
  • The king-size bed has a down-filled duvet, down pillows, and a pillow-top mattress.
  • There are 42-inch flat-screen TVs in each room, both with premium cable like HBO and pay-per-view current movie releases.
  • Wi-Fi is available for a fee
  • The bathroom has a sink in a separate room from the tub/shower and toilet.
  • Free newspaper delivery on weekdays
See More Rooms

Features

Full business services, including a 24-hour business center, meeting rooms and a notary public. The small fitness center is packed with modern equipment, but the pool disappoints.

  • 24-hour business center is equipped with PCs, printers, a fax/copy machine.
  • Fee for Wi-Fi
  • 24-hour fitness center
  • Pool and Jacuzzi
See More Features

Family

Not an ideal family vacation spot, but a workable choice for kids tagging along on a business trip.

This is not a family hotel in any obvious way: The pool is small and lacks a lifeguard, few kid-friendly activities or distractions are provided, and a great majority of the guests are business travelers. But if you're thinking of bringing your kids along on a work trip, this isn't the worst you can do. For one, the hotel's mature vibe and distance from the Strip means you'll keep your kids away from risque shows and rowdy revelers.

To give the parents privacy, families should ask for a suite with French doors separating the bedroom from the living room, which are available at no extra cost. The hotel doesn't provide rollaway beds, but the sofas pull out to create a full-size bed. Cribs are free.

See More Family

All-Inclusive / Food

The on-site restaurant Cafe 325 is open for lunch and dinner, and room service is available daily.

  • The hotel's on-site restaurant Cafe 325 serves American fare for lunch and dinner, and an extensive breakfast buffet.
  • Room service is available daily
See More All-Inclusive / Food

Hotel & Amenities Photos

Best Rates

Amenities

  • Air Conditioner

  • Airport Transportation

  • Basic Television

  • Business Center

  • Cable

  • Cribs

  • Dry Cleaning

  • Fitness Center

  • Internet

  • Jacuzzi

  • Kids Allowed

  • Laundry

  • Meeting / Conference Rooms

  • Mini Bar (with liquor)

  • Pool

  • Poolside Drink Service

  • Rental Car Service Desk Onsite

  • Room Service

  • Separate Bedroom / Living Room Space

  • Tennis Court

Disclaimer: This content was accurate at the time the hotel was reviewed. Please check our partner sites when booking to verify that details are still correct.