Las Vegas Harry Reid International is one of only two US airports with both an Amex Centurion Lounge and a Capital One Lounge in the same concourse, and almost every lounge at LAS sits inside that one space. The D Gates Concourse holds four of the five credit-card-accessible lounges. The fifth, The Club LAS, is in Terminal 1's C Gates and exists mostly as a Priority Pass option for low-cost-carrier travelers.
Here is every lounge at LAS, organized by terminal and access type, with the credit cards that get you in and what to expect.
LAS Terminal Layout
Harry Reid International (renamed from McCarran in 2021) has two terminals. Terminal 1 holds Concourses A, B, and C, which serve Southwest, Spirit, Frontier, JetBlue from select gates, Sun Country, and most low-cost carriers. Terminal 3 holds Concourses D and E, which serve Delta, United, Alaska, Hawaiian, American, JetBlue from other gates, and all international flights.
The D Gates Concourse is unusual: it sits between the two terminals and is connected to both by an underground passenger tram. That means you can fly out of either Terminal 1 or Terminal 3 and still reach the D Gates lounges airside, as long as your flight actually departs from a D Gate. If you are flying out of Concourse A, B, or C in Terminal 1, you cannot reach the D Gates without re-clearing security.
E Gates handle international departures and connect to D airside. There are no lounges in E Gates currently.
Centurion Lounge (D Gates Concourse)
The Centurion Lounge at LAS sits on Level 2 above the D Gates Concourse. It opened in 2018 and was one of the first Centurion Lounges to introduce the network's chef-driven menu format. The space includes hot food rotating seasonally, a full cocktail bar with bartender-staffed pours, shower suites, dedicated work areas, and a quiet room.
Access requires an Amex Platinum, Business Platinum, or Centurion card with a same-day boarding pass on any airline. The Delta SkyMiles Reserve also grants access when flying Delta. No Priority Pass entry, no day passes.
Guests cost $50 per adult and $30 per child (ages 2 to 17). Two free guests per visit are included if you spent $75,000 or more in eligible Amex purchases in the current or prior calendar year. A 5-hour pre-departure time limit took effect across the Centurion network in 2026.
The lounge gets crowded during peak Friday and Sunday afternoon departures. Arriving before 11 AM or after 8 PM is noticeably quieter. The entrance is on the upper level, accessed by a dedicated elevator near the D Gates security exit.
Capital One Lounge (D Gates Concourse)
The Capital One Lounge at LAS opened in January 2023 and remains one of the best-designed lounges in any US airport. The space spans roughly 11,000 square feet on the upper level of the D Gates Concourse, a short walk from the Centurion Lounge. The food is chef-curated with hot and cold stations, the bar program includes a curated wine selection, and there are private nap pods, shower suites, and a kid-friendly play area.
Access is through the Capital One Venture X (unlimited free visits with two free guests), the Capital One Venture (two free visits per year, then $45 each), or the Capital One Spark Cash Plus business card. Capital One cardholders without lounge benefits pay $45 per visit. Non-Capital One cardholders pay $65 walk-in.
The Capital One Lounge enforces a 3-hour maximum stay tracked from check-in. Reservations are encouraged through the Capital One mobile app during peak hours, especially Friday afternoons and Sunday departures. Walk-ins are accepted when capacity permits.
This is the strongest value lounge at LAS. The annual fee on the Capital One Venture X ($395) is less than half the Amex Platinum's, and you get unlimited visits plus two free guests at every Capital One Lounge in the network.
Delta Sky Club (D Gates Concourse)
The Delta Sky Club at LAS is on the upper level of D Gates, near gate D-32. The space includes complimentary food and a full bar, Wi-Fi, comfortable seating, and shower suites. It is a standard mid-tier Sky Club, smaller than the flagship locations at JFK or ATL but solid for a focus-city operation.
Access requires a same-day Delta boarding pass plus one of the following: Delta Sky Club membership, the Delta SkyMiles Reserve (15 visits per program year, unlimited with $75,000 spend), or the Amex Platinum (10 visits per year when flying Delta, unlimited with $75,000 spend). Basic Economy tickets are excluded. Hours track Delta's daily departure schedule, generally early morning to late evening.
The 3-hour pre-departure rule applies. Connecting passengers are exempt.
United Club (D Gates Concourse)
The United Club at LAS is on the mezzanine above the United gates in D Concourse, near gate D-13. It is mid-sized with complimentary snacks and drinks, a full bar, Wi-Fi, and standard work-from-airport seating. No showers.
Access is through United Club membership, the United Club Infinite card, Star Alliance Gold status on a same-day United or partner ticket, or a day pass (~$59). Hours generally run from early morning to mid-evening, tied to United's departure schedule from LAS.
This is a competent United Club, on par with United's other focus-city locations rather than a hub-airport lounge.
The Club LAS (Terminal 1, C Gates)
The Club LAS is the only Priority Pass lounge at Harry Reid International. It is in Terminal 1's C Gates Concourse, past the security checkpoint, near the rotunda area. The space is smaller than the D Gates lounges and exists mostly as a quiet hour for travelers flying out of Terminal 1's low-cost carriers.
Access is through Priority Pass, LoungeKey, or a walk-in day pass (around $50). Maximum stay for Priority Pass members is 3 hours. Cards that include Priority Pass Select: Amex Platinum, Chase Sapphire Reserve, Capital One Venture X, Hilton Honors Aspire, Bilt Palladium.
The food is closer to a continental breakfast and snack format than a hot-food restaurant. The bar includes complimentary house pours and charges for premium drinks. If you are flying Spirit, Frontier, Allegiant, or Sun Country out of A, B, or C concourses, this is your only realistic lounge option at LAS.
For broader context on which cards include lounge access, see the credit card airport lounge access guide.
What LAS Does Not Have
The lounges that are missing matter as much as the lounges that exist. None of these are at Harry Reid International:
| Lounge | Status at LAS |
|---|---|
| American Admirals Club | Not present (American flies from D Gates but operates no lounge) |
| United Polaris Lounge | Not present (no long-haul international United departures) |
| Chase Sapphire Lounge | Not present, not in current Chase pipeline |
| Alaska Lounge | Not present (Alaska flies from D Gates but no lounge) |
The nearest Admirals Club is at Phoenix PHX or Los Angeles LAX. The nearest Polaris Lounges are at LAX, San Francisco SFO, and Newark EWR. If you fly American or Alaska through LAS regularly, your only credit-card-accessible options are the Centurion Lounge (Amex Platinum, on any same-day boarding pass), the Capital One Lounge, or Priority Pass at The Club LAS.
Credit Card Lounge Access at LAS
| Card | Annual Fee | Lounges at LAS |
|---|---|---|
| Amex Platinum | $895 | Centurion Lounge, Delta Sky Club (Delta flights), The Club LAS via Priority Pass |
| Capital One Venture X | $395 | Capital One Lounge, The Club LAS via Priority Pass |
| Chase Sapphire Reserve | $795 | The Club LAS via Priority Pass |
| Delta SkyMiles Reserve | $650 | Delta Sky Club, Centurion Lounge (Delta flights) |
| United Club | $525 | United Club |
| Hilton Honors Aspire | $550 | The Club LAS via Priority Pass |
| Bilt Palladium | $495 | The Club LAS via Priority Pass |
LAS is one of the best US airports for the Capital One Venture X. The Capital One Lounge alone is worth a meaningful share of the $395 annual fee for travelers who fly through LAS more than a couple of times a year, and the card also covers The Club LAS through Priority Pass. The Amex Platinum is the only card that opens both the Centurion Lounge and a Delta Sky Club here, but you pay $500 more per year for that breadth.
For a full breakdown of how the Amex Platinum and Chase Sapphire Reserve compare on lounge access, earning rates, and total annual value, see our Amex Platinum vs Chase Sapphire Reserve comparison. For the closer Amex Platinum and Capital One Venture X matchup, the Amex Platinum vs Capital One Venture X comparison covers the trade-offs.
Bottom Line
LAS is a Capital-One-and-Centurion airport. The two best lounges are both in the D Gates Concourse, and the Capital One Venture X is the strongest value because it covers the Capital One Lounge plus The Club LAS for less than half the Amex Platinum's fee. The Amex Platinum still wins on raw breadth by adding Centurion and Delta Sky Club access. If you fly out of Terminal 1's A, B, or C concourses, neither premium card matters here and Priority Pass at The Club LAS is your only option. The Card Advisor can show how each card ranks against your full spending profile rather than just the LAS lounge picture. For more in our airport lounge series, see our guides to LAX, SFO, Orlando MCO, and San Diego SAN.
