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Is Crockfords Las Vegas Family-Friendly? An Honest Take

crockfords las vegas lxr hotels & resorts

Crockfords has cavernous rooms, a cluster of pools, and dozens of dining options. It also has casino floors you can smell from the elevator, a 16-and-up gym, an 18-and-up spa, and a price tag that makes a third child sound affordable. So, is Crockfords Las Vegas family-friendly? I won’t bury the lede. No, it is not. It’s a gorgeous adults-only luxury tower wearing a “we welcome everyone” name tag. Stay elsewhere.

Quick Verdict: Is Crockfords Las Vegas Family-Friendly?

  • Family-friendly? No. Beautiful, yes. Built for kids, absolutely not.
  • Where it is: The Crockfords (LXR) tower inside Resorts World Las Vegas, at the north end of the Strip — a long, hot walk from the action you flew in to see.
  • What it costs: Cash rates run roughly $250–$770 a night depending on season (averaging around $480 in mid-2026), plus a $55-a-night resort fee and self-parking that jumped to $21.
  • For kids, there is: a pool (when it’s open), and… that’s about it. No arcade. No kids’ club. No waterslide.
  • The honest take: If you want Las Vegas with kids, point the minivan at the Venetian or Excalibur instead.

Is Crockfords Las Vegas Family-Friendly?: Things to Consider

1. The Location Isn’t Great

2. Parking is Confusing

3. The Cheapest Rooms Are Larger Than Average Studios

4. People Smoke in Casinos

5. Kids Can’t Gamble

6. The Pool Closes Early

7. The Entertainment Doesn’t Cater to Kids

8. The Dayclub and Nightclub Are Not for Families

9. You Won’t Be Able to Use the Spa

10. The Restaurants Are Overpriced

11. The Mall in the Resort is Filled with Stores for Adults

12. Customer Service is Lacking

13. Everything is Expensive (But There Are Ways to Save)

crockfords las vegas lxr hotels & resorts hallway

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Is Crockfords Las Vegas Family-Friendly?

Quick orientation before the reasons: Crockfords is the small, ultra-luxury LXR (Hilton) brand tower tucked inside Resorts World Las Vegas. Resorts World is a 59-story building that crams three Hilton brands under one roof — the Las Vegas Hilton, the Conrad, and Crockfords — for roughly 3,500 rooms total. Crockfords is the tiny crown jewel up top, with only a few hundred rooms. It’s stunning. It’s also, top to bottom, built for grown-ups with deep pockets. Here’s why I wouldn’t bring the kids.

1. Is Crockfords Las Vegas on the Strip?

Crockfords sits inside Resorts World at the very north end of the Strip (the official address is 3000 South Las Vegas Boulevard). Technically, yes, it’s on the Strip. Practically, it’s marooned up at the quiet end, more than a mile from most of the resorts you actually flew here to gawk at. With kids and the Las Vegas heat, that “short walk on the Strip” becomes a death march punctuated by requests for water and a bathroom. It’s not an ideal location for a family.

crockfords in las vegas exterior

2. How Much is Parking at Crockfords Las Vegas?

Valet parking is complimentary for Crockfords hotel guests, but the entrance is gloriously hard to find. The Crockfords drop-off is set behind the property and isn’t clearly marked, so you can easily sail past it into the wrong place.

Do not pull into the big main Resorts World lobby entrance. If you find yourself there (which we did), turn right out of the property, then right on Sammy Davis Jr. Drive, then right onto Resorts World Avenue, and look for the Crockfords entrance. It’s harder than it needs to be — like the building is testing whether you really belong.

Pro tip: If you give up hunting for the Crockfords entrance and park in the main garage instead, self-parking now runs about $21 for up to 24 hours (it was $10 the last time I wrote this — Resorts World brought back paid parking in late 2025 with a license-plate-reader system, so there are no gates or tickets to lose). Nevada residents and upper-tier Genting Rewards members still park for free; basic enrollment no longer guarantees it, so check the current policy before you count on free parking.

hilton crockfords mall red ball

3. The Cheapest Rooms Are Larger Than Average Studios

The entry-level rooms here are nothing to write home about. The standard “Superior” studios are bigger than your average hotel room — somewhere in the 500-to-550-square-foot range — but they’re still studios. There’s no door to close on your children, and there’s no bathtub, which means no easy way to wrangle a sandy, exhausted toddler at the end of the day.

The rooms have minibars stocked with items for purchase, but not much refrigerator space for anything you actually brought. One of your minibar purchase options is, I am not kidding, a “Sexy Kit.” Nothing says “bring the whole family” like a curated romance bundle next to the $9 water.

The suites, on the other hand, are genuinely amazing — and priced for people whose accountants have accountants. Plan to drop many thousands of dollars.

Pro tip: Download the Hilton Honors app for a digital room key — handy, given how many physical keys we ended up holding (more on that disaster below).

Note: The rooms have massagers that simulate the motion of someone punching you repeatedly. It took one of my kids about four seconds to pinch his skin and give himself a nasty bruise. Be a better parent than I was and take that thing away from young kids.

If you do decide to book, here are your room choices. (Square footages below are what the property has historically published; I’ve personally confirmed the standard rooms run on the larger side, but treat the suite figures as a guide, not gospel.)

Superior Rooms

Superior rooms are studios. If you need a break from your kids, your only refuge is the bathroom, and you won’t be able to soak your troubles away (no tub and all). These rooms come with one king or two queens.

On the plus side, they’re on high floors with giant windows, and you can choose a city view or a Strip view. We landed a sweeping panorama of the roof of Circus Circus. It hasn’t been painted in quite some time.

Room size: around 550 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 4

One-Bedroom Suites

The one-bedroom suites come with one king and a pullout couch in a separate living area. The bathrooms include a soaking tub and a separate shower — finally, a door you can close.

You can also book entertainment suites that offer a smaller bedroom with a larger living area and a powder room for guests.

These rooms can be booked with a view of the city or Strip, or on the pool deck level (5th floor).

Room size: roughly 1,100–1,250 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 4

Two-Bedroom Suites

The two-bedroom suites include two master bedrooms with one king-sized bed each, a living area, a walk-in closet, and one bathroom with a soaking tub and separate shower. This room comes with a Strip view.

You can also book entertainment suites with smaller bedrooms, larger living areas, and a powder room for guests.

Room size: about 2,000–2,200 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 6

Three-Bedroom Suites

The three-bedroom suites have a master bedroom with a king-sized bed and en suite with a soaking tub and separate shower, a second bedroom with a king-sized bed and en suite, and a third small private sleeping room. They also have spacious living areas, kitchens, and media centers.

These rooms come with views of the Strip.

Room size: around 3,000 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 6

Pool Villa

The Pool Villa has two bedrooms (one with one king and one with two queens), a dining room, kitchen, massage room, media room, and private outdoor space with a pool. You read that right. Your own pool, that nobody closes at dinnertime.

Room size: roughly 3,300 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 6

Penthouse Suite

The Penthouse Suite has four bedrooms (two kings and two queens), a master bathroom with a soaking tub and separate shower, and a powder room. The living area includes a media center, a dining table for eight, a butler’s pantry, and a sofa bed.

Room size: around 3,300 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 8

Two-Bedroom Presidential Suite

The Presidential Suite has two bedrooms with one king-sized bed each, a gym, a media room, a full bar, and two bathrooms with soaking tubs and separate showers.

This room has views of the Strip.

Room size: about 3,300 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 6

Four-Bedroom Presidential Suite

The four-bedroom Presidential Suite has a master bedroom that takes up a third of the suite with a king-sized bed and a giant en suite bathroom, a second master bedroom with an en suite bathroom, and two more bedrooms (one with a king and one with two queens).

The common area has a dining room, wet bar, and media room.

The room has views of the Strip.

Room size: around 4,500 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 10

Chairman Villa

The Chairman Villa has four bedrooms (with a mix of kings and queens), four bathrooms, a billiards room, a dining room, a kitchen, a karaoke room, and a balcony (a bold move in Las Vegas).

Room size: roughly 5,500 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 8

Palace Suites

The Palace Suites come with three or four bedrooms in a mix of kings and queens. All have en suites with soaking tubs, separate showers, and walk-in closets, plus a billiards room, karaoke room, kitchen, and private outdoor space with a pool.

Room size: roughly 6,500–7,000 square feet

Maximum number of guests: 8–10

crockfords room

4. People Smoke in Casinos

Can kids stay at Resorts World Las Vegas? Yes, but that doesn’t mean they should.

Smoking is still allowed on the casino gaming floor. Nevada’s clean-indoor-air law continues to exempt casinos, and as of 2026 Park MGM is the only fully smoke-free casino on the Strip — so don’t expect Resorts World to be a fresh-air oasis anytime soon.

The casinos are huge, and you will absolutely have to walk through them to get almost anywhere. If you don’t love the idea of your kids inhaling secondhand smoke on the way to dinner, this is a real problem, not a hypothetical one.

crockfords casino & lounge

5. Kids Can’t Gamble

Are kids allowed at Resorts World? They can stay in the hotel rooms and eat at the restaurants, but the casino floor is off-limits to anyone under 21.

And of course, kids can’t gamble — but nobody told the casino’s interior designers. The floors are vast, bright, and loud, and the slot machines look an awful lot like the arcade games your kids will beg to play.

So your family walks through a smoky room full of forbidden, blinking arcade-adjacent machines, and then keeps walking, because there’s no arcade for kids in the hotel. There’s no good consolation prize.

Pro tip: If you want an actual arcade, head to Excalibur, which is built far more with families in mind.

resorts world mall

6. The Pool Closes Early

Resorts World has a cluster of pools, none of which have a waterslide. One is reserved for cabana guests only, and another is a VIP pool that doesn’t allow kids at all. So the “many pools” pitch shrinks fast once you have a child in tow.

There is a family pool with some small water features, but it was closed every single time we went, and nobody could tell me why.

When we visited, the pool closed at 6:00 p.m. (hours change seasonally, so confirm the current schedule before you build your day around it). I appreciate the strategy — cut off the free fun so the adults wander off to spend a fortune on dinner and gambling — but kids don’t have that option. There is, genuinely, nothing else for them to do at this resort once the pool gates lock.

Pro tip: You can rent a cabana by the family pool, but it isn’t cheap (when we visited, the family-pool cabanas ran around $500 and the cabana-only section was roughly $1,400 — verify current rates, because Las Vegas prices only ever go one direction). My real advice: don’t reserve a cabana. Arrive early and grab free seats.

pool

7. The Entertainment Doesn’t Cater to Kids

Resorts World books shows headlined by (mostly) B-list names and the occasional bigger residency. Most of it is not aimed at kids, but if you time your trip right, you might catch something they’d enjoy. Check the schedule for your dates and set your expectations accordingly.

piano

8. The Day Club and Nightclub Aren’t For Families

There’s a day club for people who want to party in the daytime and a nightclub for people who want to party until it’s daytime again. Billboards along the street featuring people in bikinis advertise the day club, in case you weren’t sure of the target demographic.

If you’re 22, single, and gloriously free of responsibility, this is your scene. If you’re traveling with a stroller, a sippy cup, and a 7:30 bedtime, I suspect it is not.

tower and pool

9. You Won’t Be Able to Use the Spa

Resorts World has Awana Spa, a genuinely beautiful space with sensory rooms, pools, and unique treatments. The minimum age is 18, so this won’t be a family activity. If you’re here on a friends’ trip, though, it’s worth a stop — the kind of grown-up escape that fits a girls’ weekend far better than a family vacation.

The wellness area also has a fitness center, accessible to hotel guests with their room key during posted hours. The age policies on the gym keep teens out of much of it too, so don’t count on it as a kid-friendly outlet.

Pro tip: If you do visit the spa, join the free Genting Rewards program at the hotel for discounted treatments.

lobby

10. Are the Restaurants at Resorts World Worth It?

Resorts World has dozens of restaurants and bars, and all of them are priced for people who just won at the tables. There’s plenty of fine dining most families will skip, plus casual and fast-food options that are friendlier on the wallet — but everything still carries the trapped-in-a-Las-Vegas-resort markup.

If you’re a Hilton Honors member with Gold or Diamond status, you get a food-and-beverage credit (Gold is $15 per person per day for up to two people; Diamond is $25 per person per day for up to two). The good news since I first wrote this: the credit is now redeemable at multiple venues — the Dawg House Saloon, Juniors, and Sun’s Out Buns Out — rather than just one spot.

That matters, because the Dawg House Saloon is a Nashville-style sports bar that historically restricted kids to a handful of tables in the hallway — high, barstool-type seats with signs warning of a per-seat minimum. When we visited, the server didn’t enforce the minimum, but nothing about parking your toddler at a bar-height stool screams “family dinner.” With the credit now usable elsewhere, you’re no longer cornered into it, which is a real improvement. Confirm the current kid policy at whichever venue you choose.

Pro tip: Crockfords has historically offered a small complimentary breakfast in the lobby with coffee, pastries, and fruit. It comes and goes and tends to be limited, so don’t build your morning around it — but if it’s there during your stay, it’ll save you a few dollars.

Bonus pro tip: You generally cannot redeem a Hilton Honors dining credit on the night you check in — you have to wait until the next day, and the front desk does not advertise this.

Extra bonus pro tip: To see all your options, check the Resorts World map or download the Resorts World app before your visit.

Extra bonus pro tip: You can grab takeout from the Dawg House at its in-restaurant yellow trailer, the Mouse House (it slings grilled cheese), and it works with the Hilton Honors dining credit.

crockfords restaurants the mouse house

11. The Mall in the Resort is Filled with Stores for Adults

There’s a mall inside Resorts World, and it has almost nothing for kids. Aside from a Resorts World gift shop, the stores are stuffy, expensive, and toy-free — the kind of place where a kid touches a $400 handbag and you age five years.

mall display

12. Customer Service is Lacking

When a hotel is this expensive, it’s reasonable to expect great service. We stayed for free, but the cash rate at the time of our stay was about $1,300 a night. We did not have a $1,300-a-night experience. Buckle up for a long story.

Reserving the Hotel

We booked using two Free Night Certificates earned with our Hilton Honors American Express cards. When I made the booking, the phone agent assured me the reservations were linked and that we wouldn’t need to check out after the first night.

Check-in

At check-in, front desk Agent Number One said the reservations were not, in fact, already linked — but she linked them. She confirmed we were in the same room both nights and would not need to check out after the first night.

A few minutes later, the Hilton Honors app prompted me to check out. Back to the front desk, where Agent Number Two told me to ignore the app and handed me a new set of keys.

Day Two

The next day, housekeeping never came. Instead, a man knocked at 9:38 p.m. to ask why we hadn’t checked out. Note that we have young kids who were asleep at this hour.

I went to the desk yet again and found Agent Number Two working. She seemingly realized she’d missed a step the night before, gave me my third set of keys, and told me she was adding a $50 dining credit to my account that could be used anywhere.

Checkout Day

On actual checkout day, I went to the desk to confirm we really had that $50 dining credit, because by then I trusted no one in that building. Agent Number Three said we didn’t. I told the story again, and she said she’d add it — and confirmed, once more, that it could be used anywhere.

Less than an hour later, our keys stopped working. Back to the desk for the fourth set of keys.

Finally, I checked out. Agent Number Four told me I had a balance because the $50 credit could only be used at the Dawg House. Agent Number Three was nowhere to be found. I pushed back, he eventually removed it, but seriously though — come on.

light fixture

13. Everything is Expensive (But There Are Ways to Save)

Everything, and I mean everything, is expensive here. Cash rates run roughly $250 to $770 a night depending on the season (June and November tend to be the cheapest), averaging somewhere around $480 in mid-2026. On top of the room, budget a $55-per-night resort fee plus tax — which, in a nice bit of news, is waived when you book with Hilton points or a Free Night Certificate.

You can save meaningfully on the room rate, but there isn’t much you can do about everything else. The pool closes early, there are no free activities for kids, and the dining markup is real. Plan to budget more than you normally would, and lean hard on points wherever you can — the same playbook I use to save money on big family trips generally.

If you do decide to go, don’t pay full price. Here’s how to soften the blow.

Direct Booking Deals

The resort runs promotions periodically. Check the current offers for your dates before you book anything.

Join the Free Genting Rewards Program

Genting Rewards is the casino loyalty program, and it hands out perks like discounted dining and spa treatments. Free parking used to come with basic enrollment; these days only upper-tier members get it, so don’t assume signing up gets you free parking. It’s still free to join, though, so even if you get nothing out of it, you’re not out anything.

Join the Free Hilton Honors Program

Crockfords is a Hilton property, so it can be booked with points, and you’ll earn points on a paid stay. Depending on your status, you may get a dining credit and other perks. The Hilton Honors program is free and applies across all Hilton brands. There’s no reason not to join.

Check Third-Party Booking Options

You may be able to find discounted rates on third-party sites like Booking.com, Hotellook, Tripadvisor, Expedia, Hotels.com, or Travelocity.

Groupon

Groupon isn’t what it used to be. I wouldn’t expect half-price rooms, but it’s worth a look.

Use Miles and Points

Miles and points are a great way to save a boatload on travel, and this is exactly the kind of pricey hotel where they shine. Don’t shy away from using credit card points to subsidize your trips — if you’re new to the game, my points-and-miles guide for beginners is a good starting point.

American Express Hilton Cards

American Express offers a line of Hilton credit cards. They earn Hilton Honors points, and some include Free Night Certificates. They also grant automatic status with perks like dining credits and room upgrades. You can book Crockfords with Hilton points, or — better yet — a Free Night Certificate.

Pro tip: Compare the benefits before you pick a card. You can hold more than one at the same time.

Bonus pro tip: If you book with Hilton points or a Free Night Certificate, the $55 resort fee is waived.

American Express Membership Rewards Points Cards

American Express also offers several cards that earn Membership Rewards points (Amex’s currency). You can use those points to book this hotel through the Amex Travel portal.

Crockfords is also part of American Express’ Fine Hotels & Resorts program. Book through the Amex Travel portal as an eligible cardholder and you’ll get perks like daily breakfast for two, a property credit, and late checkout when available.

Pro tip: The American Express Platinum card includes an annual credit toward a Fine Hotels & Resorts or prepaid hotel booking. You typically must prepay to trigger it, so check your current card terms.

Capital One

Capital One has a line of cards that earn Capital One miles. You can use them to book this hotel through Capital One’s travel portal, or book directly and erase the charge from your statement.

Chase

Chase offers several cards that earn Ultimate Rewards (Chase’s currency). You can book this hotel in Chase’s travel portal with those points.

Citibank

Citibank has multiple cards that earn ThankYou points (Citi’s currency). You can use them to book this hotel through the ThankYou portal.

crockfords las vegas elephant

FAQ: Crockfords Las Vegas with Kids

Is Crockfords Las Vegas family-friendly?

No. It’s a luxury, adults-oriented tower inside a casino resort. Kids can sleep and eat there, but there’s no arcade, no kids’ club, no waterslide, an 18-and-up spa, smoking on the casino floor you have to cross, and a pool that closes around dinnertime. It’s lovely — for grown-ups.

Can kids stay at Resorts World Las Vegas?

Yes, children can stay in the hotel rooms and eat at the restaurants. The casino gaming floor, the day club, the nightclub, and the spa are off-limits to minors, and you’ll generally have to walk through the casino to get around the property.

How much does it cost to stay at Crockfords?

Cash rates run roughly $250 to $770 a night depending on the season, averaging around $480 in mid-2026, with June and November typically cheapest. Add a $55-a-night resort fee plus tax (waived on Hilton points or Free Night Certificate stays) and about $21 for self-parking.

Is Crockfords actually on the Las Vegas Strip?

Yes, but at the far north end. It’s inside Resorts World (3000 South Las Vegas Boulevard), more than a mile from most of the resorts and attractions you probably want to visit — a long, hot walk with kids.

Where should families stay in Las Vegas instead?

For more central, more kid-oriented options, I’d point you to the Venetian or Excalibur. The Venetian for families is a much better fit, and Excalibur has an arcade and a more affordable, kid-friendly vibe. Pack smart with our Las Vegas packing list for families before you go.

Final Thoughts – Is Crockfords Las Vegas Family-Friendly?

Is Crockfords Las Vegas family-friendly? No, it is not — and if anything, the case has gotten stronger since I first wrote this. Parking went from $10 to $21, there’s now a $55 resort fee, the casino is still smoky, the spa is still 18-and-up, and the whole place is still a polished, adults-only luxury machine. I’ve never been shy about saying Las Vegas isn’t my favorite spot for family travel. If you decide to go anyway, try the Venetian or Excalibur with the kids. There’s more for them to do, and the locations are better.

is crockfords las vegas family friendly pin

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