Whole Mediterranean fish is sold by the pound at Estiatorio Milos, and on a Friday the room at The Venetian fills with tables of eight who came to celebrate something. A bachelorette dinner in Las Vegas has a specific brief: it needs to seat a loud, happy group, it needs photographs the bride will keep, and it needs a kitchen that can carry the table for two hours before anyone thinks about a club.
These six rooms do that job. They run from Greek seafood to Italian-American theatre to a dining room you enter through a working pawn shop. Every one takes large parties, every one is built for noise, and every one is good enough that the meal is the event, not the warm-up.
What makes a Las Vegas bachelorette dinner work
The table size decides everything. Vegas dining rooms split into two registers for groups: the seafood and Italian houses that seat ten without flinching, and the tasting counters that cannot. For a bachelorette of six to twelve you want the former. Book the large round or the booth, name the bride when you reserve, and ask whether the room can manage a cake or a dessert plate with a candle.
Location inside the Strip matters more than the address. The best bachelorette tables sit inside The Venetian, Aria and The Cosmopolitan, where dinner, drinks and a club are a short walk apart and nobody has to find a cab between courses. Plan dinner for 8pm or earlier so the kitchen has its full pace, then move the party on.
Estiatorio Milos
Food: 9/10 | Ambience: 8/10 | Value: 7/10
Costas Spiliadis built the Strip's most serious seafood room — reserve the long table for a bachelorette that wants to eat well.
Costas Spiliadis runs Estiatorio Milos as a Greek fish market with a dining room attached. The Milos Special arrives first at almost every table: a tower of paper-thin fried zucchini and eggplant with saganaki cheese and a tzatziki for dipping. Then the whole fish, chosen by the group from a bed of ice and sold by the pound (lavraki and fagri run roughly $59 to $72 a pound), grilled simply and filleted at the table.
For a bachelorette this is the grown-up option. The room is bright, the seafood is pristine, and a table of ten reads as a celebration rather than a problem. Lunch carries a famously good fixed-price menu if the group wants to eat before a pool day instead of after a club.
Not for: Anyone wanting red meat or a quiet two-top. This is a fish house built for sharing, and the whole-fish bill climbs fast for a large group.
Read the full Estiatorio Milos reviewBest for: Bachelorette, Birthday, Impress Clients
Carbone
Food: 9/10 | Ambience: 9/10 | Value: 6/10
Mario Carbone's tableside theatre and the spicy rigatoni vodka make this the photograph the bride keeps — book it three weeks out.
Carbone, from Mario Carbone and Rich Torrisi of Major Food Group, plays mid-century Italian-American as performance. Captains in burgundy dinner jackets prepare Caesar salad and carve veal parmesan tableside, and the spicy rigatoni vodka has become the single most photographed pasta in Las Vegas. The room is dark, loud and dressed for a night out.
It is the most theatrical table on this list, which is exactly what a bachelorette wants. Reserve a booth, dress the part, and expect the captains to make a fuss of the bride. Prices are steep (pastas in the high $30s, the veal well past $70), so set expectations with the group before the bill lands.
Not for: Budget-minded groups or anyone after a calm dinner. Carbone is expensive and deliberately loud, and the dress code is real.
Read the full Carbone reviewBest for: Bachelorette, Birthday, Close a Deal
Beauty & Essex
Food: 8/10 | Ambience: 9/10 | Value: 7/10
You enter Chris Santos's room through a working pawn shop, which is the whole point — take a bachelorette here for the entrance alone.
Chris Santos hides Beauty & Essex behind a functioning pawn shop at The Cosmopolitan; the dining room opens up beyond the counter of guitars and jewellery. The menu is built for sharing across a big table: the grilled cheese with smoked bacon and tomato-soup dumplings, the lobster tacos, and the famous touch of a complimentary glass of champagne poured in the ladies' room.
Few rooms in Vegas are this purpose-built for a bachelorette. The reveal-behind-the-pawn-shop entrance gives the group its first photograph, the small plates keep the table grazing and talking, and the energy never drops. Book the main dining room rather than the lounge for a seated group dinner.
Not for: Anyone who wants a formal, plated tasting menu. This is high-energy shared dining, and the pawn-shop gimmick is part of the deal.
Read the full Beauty & Essex reviewBest for: Bachelorette, Birthday, Team Dinner
Zuma
Food: 9/10 | Ambience: 8/10 | Value: 7/10
Rainer Becker's robata izakaya and the miso black cod are the easy group win — reserve early and order to the centre of the table.
Zuma, Rainer Becker's contemporary izakaya, brings its robata grill and sushi counter to The Cosmopolitan. The miso-marinated black cod wrapped in hoba leaf is the dish the whole table will fight over; the spicy beef tenderloin with sesame and the rock-shrimp tempura keep the sharing going. Plates arrive as they are ready rather than in courses, which suits a group that wants to talk.
For a bachelorette it strikes a useful balance: serious Japanese cooking in a room that still feels like a night out. Order the izakaya-style sharing menu for the table so nobody has to negotiate, and ask for a corner banquette where the group can spread out.
Not for: Anyone expecting traditional, quiet kaiseki. Zuma is a loud, design-led izakaya, and the bill on sake and black cod adds up quickly.
Read the full Zuma reviewBest for: Bachelorette, Birthday, Impress Clients
TAO Asian Bistro
Food: 7/10 | Ambience: 9/10 | Value: 7/10
A twenty-foot Buddha, a nightclub upstairs and lettuce wraps for the table — go once for a bachelorette that wants dinner and the party in one building.
TAO has anchored The Venetian since 2005 and remains the most efficient bachelorette move in the city: a pan-Asian dining room under a twenty-foot Buddha, with a nightclub on the floor above. The satay, the chicken lettuce wraps and the miso-glazed Chilean sea bass are reliable group orderers, and the kitchen is used to large, celebratory tables.
Nobody comes to TAO for the most precise cooking in Las Vegas. They come because dinner, drinks and the club share an address, the room is built for a party, and a table of ten is the house specialty. Book dinner, then walk the group upstairs.
Not for: Diners chasing refined, chef-driven food. TAO is a scene first and a kitchen second, and weekend nights run loud and late.
Read the full TAO Asian Bistro reviewBest for: Bachelorette, Birthday, Team Dinner
Wakuda
Food: 9/10 | Ambience: 8/10 | Value: 6/10
Tetsuya Wakuda, the chef behind Singapore's Waku Ghin, brought his precision to The Venetian — save it for the bachelorette that wants the splurge dinner.
Tetsuya Wakuda, the chef behind Sydney's Tetsuya's and Singapore's Waku Ghin, opened Wakuda at The Venetian in 2022. The room serves modern Japanese with real technique: wagyu, sashimi cut to order, and a tasting that moves through the kitchen's best work. The design, by André Fu, gives a group a genuinely beautiful room for photographs.
This is the table for the bachelorette that wants its big dinner to be the splurge of the trip rather than the loud part. Reserve the chef's counter or a private nook, and let the kitchen drive with omakase rather than ordering plate by plate.
Not for: Large rowdy groups on a budget. Wakuda is a refined, expensive room, and it rewards a smaller party that came to eat seriously.
Read the full Wakuda reviewBest for: Bachelorette, Birthday, Proposal
How to book a Las Vegas bachelorette dinner
Reserve every room on this list at least two to three weeks ahead for a Friday or Saturday, and longer over fight weekends, residencies and holidays. The Strip's best rooms sell their prime 8pm tables first. Most take large parties through OpenTable, Resy or SevenRooms, but for groups of eight or more it is worth calling the restaurant directly to confirm a single table rather than a split.
Name the bachelorette and the bride when you book. Vegas rooms are generous with celebrations and will often arrange a dessert plate, a candle or a glass of champagne if they know in advance, but they will not improvise it for a table of ten that arrived as a surprise. Set the dinner for 8pm or earlier so the kitchen is at full pace, agree the budget with the group beforehand, and you can move straight from the table to the club.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best restaurant for a bachelorette dinner in Las Vegas?
Carbone at Aria is the strongest all-round bachelorette table for 2026. Mario Carbone's tableside theatre, the spicy rigatoni vodka and the dark, dressed-up room give the group the dinner and the photographs in one sitting. For a serious seafood alternative, Estiatorio Milos at The Venetian seats a large party beautifully.
Which Las Vegas restaurants take large groups for a bachelorette?
All six rooms here take large parties, but Beauty & Essex, TAO and Estiatorio Milos are the easiest for groups of eight or more. Call the restaurant directly rather than booking online for a single large table, name the bride, and reserve two to three weeks ahead for a weekend. See the full Las Vegas dining guide for more group rooms.
How far in advance should I book a bachelorette dinner in Las Vegas?
Book two to three weeks ahead for a standard weekend, and four to six weeks for fight weekends, major residencies and holidays. Prime 8pm tables go first. If your group is six or more, confirm a single table by phone, because online systems often split large parties across two bookings that the room cannot seat together.
Where should a bachelorette go after dinner on the Strip?
Choose a restaurant inside the resort whose club you want, so the group never needs a cab between dinner and dancing. TAO at The Venetian has its nightclub directly upstairs, and Carbone and Zuma sit minutes from Aria and Cosmopolitan nightlife. Book dinner for 8pm, then move the party on.