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How much do you have to spend to get room comps in Vegas?

Here's some advice: don't chase comps! And: never gamble more than you can afford to lose... If you play blackjack for at least four hours a day and average between $75-$100 per hand, that should be enough to get your rooms comped on the back end at Luxor for week nights .



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To get comped high-end rooms, you need to play a minimum of 4 hours per day, and have average bets of a minimum of $25. That was the old formula, so maybe higher minimum required these days. What you get in comps will also depend on which resort you stay at.

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Asking for a Comped Room The host is a person in the casino that can make the decision to give you a comped room. If you've been playing for a long time and have been gambling a good amount of money, stop a waitress or go to the front desk and ask to speak with the host.

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It's easy to go big in Vegas. But what you might not know is that it can also be easy to do Vegas on $100 a day! Excluding hotel and travel costs, see how you can have an affordable trip to Vegas while still having a great time.

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Of course. Get yourself a players card, use it each time you gamble and the free room offers will begin to roll in. Not only rooms, but meal money and some gambling as well. I go once a year and stay at 2 different casinos.

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And yes, most other major casinos do charge resort fees on comped rooms — and tax on the fees to boot. But as always around here, there's no real cut-and-dried answer; in this case, it often depends on a couple of factors: at which casino you have the comp and which casino department has issued the comp.

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Basically slipping a $20 in your passport when checking in and asking for a nicer room or on a higher floor? Some used it on busy restaurants to get a head of the line.

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Depends if you gamble or not. $2,000 on a budget including hotel room, basic food, drink, attractions, no gambling. $4,000 if you go to the celebrity chef restaurants, go to lots of bars & night clubs with expensive drinks, do lots of shopping, pay swimming pool lounge chair fees, tipping 15%.

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There may be no such thing as a free lunch, but there are free drinks when you're in downtown Vegas and you're gambling! Casinos downtown serve drinks to gamblers free of charge. Different casinos have different policies about free drinks, so make sure to ask a bartender or cocktail waitress about the policies.

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Bring cash. You can cover many Vegas expenses with a credit card, but according to a Nevada law, playing chips isn't one of them. If you plan on gambling, make sure to bring cash or use a card like the Charles Schwab Bank Debit Card to avoid fees on ATM withdrawals.

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