Fast track
- MGM's all-inclusive package at Luxor or Excalibur starts at $330 for two guests for two nights — and packs in an amazing number of values
- The à-la-carte value clears $875 once you price out every included element individually — meals, show tickets, resort fees, coaster rides, and parking
- MGM's own site claims $400+ in savings versus booking separately, which means the math practically does your vacation planning for you
- Stack the package with Vegas's deep bench of free attractions this summer and your $330 goes from a great deal to practically priceless
Here's a number that should stop you mid-scroll: $330. That's what MGM Resorts is charging for two people to spend two nights on the Las Vegas Strip—including meals, a show, a roller coaster, resort fees, and parking. Not a timeshare pitch. Not a too-good-to-be-true ad. An actual bookable package at Luxor or Excalibur, live right now.
Let’s do the math.
The Line-Item Breakdown
The package includes a two-night stay for two guests at either Luxor or Excalibur, with resort fees folded in — roughly $45 per room per night, or $90 total, bundled cleanly into your single upfront price. Self-parking is included too, at a value of about $15 per night, so $30 in convenient, covered access before you've even hit the casino floor.
Then come the meals. Both guests receive breakfast, lunch, and dinner for each of the two nights—six meals per person, redeemable via digital vouchers in the MGM Rewards app at 10 participating restaurants across MGM's South Strip properties. Locations include The Buffet at Excalibur, Pyramid Cafe, Diablo's Cantina, Public House, Tom's Watch Bar, and the MGM Grand Buffet, among others. A buffet breakfast runs about $35 per person; a sit-down lunch or dinner closer to $45 per person. Multiply that across six meals for two people and you're looking at $480 in dining — conservatively.
The package also includes two tickets to a show of your choice. At Luxor, that means Blue Man Group, Carrot Top, or FANTASY. At Excalibur, you're choosing among The Australian Bee Gees, The Mac King Comedy Magic Show, or Thunder from Down Under. Show tickets on the Strip typically run $70–$120 per person — call it $160 for two, on the low end.
Toss in one ride on The Big Apple Coaster at New York-New York — about $20 per person, or $40 for two — and the tally reads:
|
Item |
Retail Value (2 guests) |
|---|---|
|
2-night hotel room |
~$160–$200 |
|
Resort fees (2 nights) |
~$90 |
|
Self-parking (2 nights) |
~$30 |
|
6 meals per person (12 total) |
~$480 |
|
Show tickets (2) |
~$160 |
|
Big Apple Coaster (2 rides) |
~$40 |
|
Total à-la-carte |
~$960–$1,000 |
How Vegas Stacks Up
All-inclusive packages are having a moment — Cancún, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Cabo — and the bundled vacation is officially the smart way to travel in 2026. But we did that math too, and the numbers are eye-opening. According to pricing data from KAYAK and a 2026 all-inclusive cost analysis from travel site Lovely Cottage, the average all-inclusive getaway runs about $3,200 per trip, with budget-friendly Caribbean and Mexico resorts averaging $180–$450 per person, per night before flights. That's a two-night trip for two people running anywhere from $720 to well over $1,800 —just for the resort.
Vegas, by contrast, is charging $330 total— or both of you, for both nights, with meals and entertainment included. If the goal is a fully programmed, no-surprises vacation where everything is handled before you land, the Strip just quietly became the best-value all-inclusive destination in America.
The Real Value
Here's what this package actually delivers: a fully programmed Vegas weekend where the big decisions— where to eat, what show to see, how to get around—are already handled. You arrive with a meal plan loaded into your phone, show tickets ready to redeem, and a coaster ride waiting for whenever the mood strikes.
Pre-planning your spending is one of the smartest moves you can make in travel (when it’s possible!), and this package essentially does it for you. Las Vegas is leaning increasingly into this model, with Caesars Entertainment, Circa Resort & Casino, The Plaza, and Resorts World piloting bundled packages of their own.
Free Vegas, This Summer
Other than the price, here’s the differentiator: once your package covers meals, lodging, and a show, Las Vegas hands you an entire city's worth of free entertainment. The Fountains of Bellagio, the summer display at, the Bellagio Conservatory & Botanical Gardens, Wynn’s Lake of Dreams light show, free circus acts at Circus Circus and the Fremont Street Experience’s 1,500-foot LED canopy are all zero dollars — and all genuinely worth your time. Your $330 covers the essentials; Vegas takes care of the rest.
FAQs
Q: Can I book this package for just one person?
The package is priced for two guests sharing a room for two nights and cannot currently be split for solo travel. Solo travelers would need to pay the full two-guest rate.
Q: Do the meal vouchers work at any MGM restaurant?
No—meals are redeemable at 10 specific participating outlets across MGM's South Strip properties, including restaurants at Excalibur, Luxor, New York-New York, Mandalay Bay, and MGM Grand. The vouchers load digitally into the MGM Rewards app.
Q: Which shows are included, and how do I book them?
At Luxor, you can choose from Blue Man Group, Carrot Top, or FANTASY. At Excalibur, options are The Australian Bee Gees Show, The Mac King Comedy Magic Show, and Thunder from Down Under. Tickets are redeemable at any MGM Resorts property box office and are subject to availability and dark days.
Q: Does this package include drinks?
Each meal comes with one beer or glass of wine plus nonalcoholic beverages — so cocktails are on you. Think of it as the universe gently reminding you that you're still in Vegas.