Nobu Hotel at Caesars Palace — The Strip
The Nobu Luxury King is a 350-square-foot room on the upper floors of Nobu Hotel at Caesars Palace, accommodating up to 2 guests from $180 per night. The room's design draws from kintsugi — the Japanese practice of repairing pottery with gold — giving it a distinct visual identity you won't find in standard Caesars rooms. Guests receive dedicated concierge service and priority seating at Nobu Restaurant.
Situated on the upper floors of Nobu Hotel's separate tower inside Caesars Palace, the Luxury King translates a centuries-old Japanese art philosophy into a contemporary Las Vegas room without leaning on the city's usual maximalist playbook.
At 350 square feet, the Nobu Luxury King works with a focused layout: one king bed, a custom sofa paired with a quartzite coffee table on a gold base, and a statement desk. The design concept is kintsugi — the Japanese tradition of mending broken pottery with gold epoxy — which informs the gold accent details woven throughout the room's surfaces and furnishings. The result is a deliberately restrained aesthetic that reads as warm rather than cold, influenced by the zen plum and gold palette carried across the wider Nobu Hotel tower.
The room is non-smoking and configured for up to 2 guests. Staying in the Nobu Hotel section of Caesars Palace comes with two practical upgrades over a standard Caesars booking: dedicated concierge service specific to Nobu Hotel guests, and priority seating access at Nobu Restaurant. The hotel property as a whole holds a AAA Four Diamond designation, which the organization attributes to its attention to both service standards and physical surroundings.
The Nobu Luxury King sits within a tower that operates with a deliberately different atmosphere from the main Caesars Palace building — guests are physically separated from the broader casino floor energy, which makes this room a better match for two travelers who want a quieter, design-forward base than for those prioritizing proximity to gaming. For guests who want Strip views or a partial Strip view, Nobu Hotel also offers Strip View and Partial Strip View King room categories on the upper floors of the same tower, so the Luxury King is the entry point into the Nobu room tier.
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The Nobu Luxury King is 350 square feet. It fits one king bed, a custom sofa, a quartzite coffee table with a gold base, and a statement desk within that footprint. The room accommodates a maximum of 2 guests.
Kintsugi is a Japanese art form in which broken pottery is repaired using gold epoxy, turning the fracture lines into a decorative feature rather than hiding them. Nobu Hotel used this concept as the design inspiration for its newly renovated rooms, including the Luxury King, which is reflected in the gold accent details throughout the room's furnishings and surfaces.
Yes. Guests staying in the Nobu Luxury King receive dedicated concierge service through Nobu Hotel and access to priority seating at Nobu Restaurant. These inclusions apply to Nobu Hotel guests broadly and are not an upgrade add-on.
The Nobu Luxury King does not specify a Strip view. Nobu Hotel at Caesars Palace offers separate room categories — the Nobu Strip View Room and the Nobu Partial Strip View Room — for guests who want guaranteed sightlines to the Las Vegas Strip. Both of those categories are also located on the upper floors of the Nobu tower and share the same kintsugi-inspired design and king bed configuration.
The Nobu Luxury King is the entry-level king room in the Nobu Hotel tier. Above it, the hotel offers the Nobu Partial Strip View Room and the Nobu Strip View Room, which add guaranteed exterior views at higher price points. For significantly larger accommodations, the Nobu Penthouse ranges from 2,200 to 4,350 square feet and includes a curved staircase, second-story terrace, and a 90-inch flat screen, while the three-bedroom Nobu Villa spans 10,300 square feet with a rooftop patio overlooking the Strip.