Nevada is the most misunderstood state in America. Mention it to most people and they picture Las Vegas: the Strip’s blazing towers of light, the roar of slot machines, the spectacle of a city that has reinvented excess as an art form. And Las Vegas is genuinely remarkable, a place unlike anywhere else on Earth, deserving every bit of the attention it receives. But Las Vegas is not Nevada. It occupies a corner of the state’s southern tip, and beyond it stretches one of the largest, most thinly populated, and most geologically dramatic landscapes in North America.
Nevada is the seventh largest state by area and the most urbanized state in the country by percentage of population living in metropolitan areas, a paradox that reflects the reality of its geography: most of the state is high desert, rugged mountain ranges, and empty basin-and-range country so vast and inhospitable that it contains entire mountain ranges that have never been named. The Great Basin, which covers most of Nevada, is one of the great wild places left in the American West, a landscape of sagebrush valleys, pinyon-juniper forests, and snow-capped mountain ranges that receives almost no attention from the tens of millions of visitors who fly into Las Vegas each year and rarely venture beyond the neon.
This is Nevada’s great secret and its great opportunity for the traveler willing to look past the obvious. The state contains a national park of extraordinary beauty, hot springs in the middle of open desert, ghost towns that froze in time when their silver ran out, petroglyphs left by people who lived here thousands of years before Europeans arrived, a lake so blue it stops conversation, and a highway so straight and empty that driving it feels like moving through a dream.
Nevada is, above all, a state of freedom: freedom to gamble, freedom to drive fast on open roads, freedom to be eccentric, freedom to disappear into a landscape so large that the human scale is temporarily lost. That freedom is its most consistent and enduring attraction, and it draws people of every kind from every corner of the world.
GETTING TO AND AROUND NEVADA
Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas is one of the busiest airports in the United States, served by virtually every major domestic and international carrier. It sits just south of the Strip and is remarkably convenient, with the first casino visible within the terminal itself. Reno-Tahoe International Airport in northern Nevada serves the Reno and Lake Tahoe region with a solid selection of domestic flights, primarily from western cities.
The interstate highway system serves Nevada’s urban centers well. I-15 connects Las Vegas to Los Angeles in the southwest and to Salt Lake City in the northeast. I-80 crosses the northern part of the state east to west, connecting Reno to Elko and on toward Salt Lake City. US-95 runs roughly north-south through the western part of the state, connecting Las Vegas to Reno through the Amargosa Valley and Tonopah. Amtrak’s California Zephyr crosses the northern part of the state through Winnemucca and Elko, though service is limited and schedules are not always convenient.
A car is absolutely essential for exploring Nevada beyond the two major cities. The distances between destinations are enormous, gas stations can be separated by 50 or more miles on some routes, and the landscapes between them are part of the experience. Nevada’s roads are among the straightest and emptiest in the country, and driving them at the legal speed limit with a good playlist and an eye on the gas gauge is one of the great American road trip experiences.
The Extraterrestrial Highway, officially designated Nevada State Route 375, is one of the most celebrated drives in the state, running through the remote desert past the restricted boundary of Area 51 toward the small town of Rachel and on to Tonopah. It is not the fastest route between any two places, but as a destination in itself it captures something essential about Nevada’s character: empty, strange, vast, and quietly magnificent.
LAS VEGAS
Las Vegas is one of the genuine wonders of the modern world, a city that should not exist and does so in the most flamboyant manner imaginable. Built on a desert valley with almost no natural water, it has become one of the most visited cities on Earth, drawing more than 40 million visitors annually to a strip of hotel-casino towers that represent the concentrated ambitions of multiple generations of entrepreneurs, entertainers, and visionaries who believed that people will travel anywhere if you give them sufficient reason to want to be there.
They were right. The Las Vegas Strip, a stretch of Las Vegas Boulevard running roughly four miles through the unincorporated communities of Paradise and Winchester, is the most densely spectacular urban streetscape in the world. No other place concentrates so much spectacle, entertainment, dining, and sheer architectural bravado in so compact an area. Walking the Strip at night, when the neon and LED displays are in full operation and the sidewalks are thick with visitors from every country, is an experience that operates on a sensory level beyond normal description.
The hotels themselves are the primary attractions, each one an entertainment complex of staggering scale. The Bellagio, perhaps the most iconic hotel on the Strip, features the choreographed fountain show in its eight-acre lake that fires every 30 minutes in the evening, set to music ranging from opera to pop, and sends jets of water 460 feet into the desert air. The Bellagio Conservatory and Botanical Gardens, free to enter, features elaborate seasonal floral displays that are changed five times a year and represent some of the most ambitious horticultural design in the country. The Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art presents rotating exhibitions of works borrowed from major international museums and collections.
The Venetian and the Palazzo, connected complexes totaling more than 7,000 suites, recreate the architecture of Venice with a thoroughness and expense that is either impressive or absurd depending on your perspective, including actual gondola rides on indoor canals beneath painted ceilings of Italian sky. The Forum Shops at Caesars Palace, built to resemble an ancient Roman street with a ceiling that cycles through dawn and dusk, has been one of the highest-grossing retail environments per square foot in the world. New York-New York Hotel and Casino reproduces the Manhattan skyline in compressed form and includes a roller coaster that wraps around the exterior of the building.
The Sphere, which opened in 2023 on the eastern edge of the Strip, is the largest and highest-resolution LED display ever built, a 366-foot-tall ball covered in 580,000 square feet of programmable exterior LED panels that can display any image, animation, or live video with extraordinary clarity, visible from miles away. Its interior holds a 17,600-seat concert and event venue with an immersive screen covering every surface of the dome, creating experiences that have no precedent in entertainment history. The Sphere represents Las Vegas’s ongoing commitment to outdoing itself, and it has set a new standard for spectacle in a city with very high standards for spectacle.
Beyond the Strip’s casino hotels, the Fremont Street Experience in downtown Las Vegas is a covered pedestrian mall beneath a 1,500-foot LED canopy that displays free light and music shows hourly in the evening. The downtown district, known as Glitter Gulch, is older and more historically rooted than the Strip, with a gritty authenticity that appeals to visitors who find the Strip’s corporate polish overwhelming. The El Cortez, operating continuously since 1941, is the oldest continuously operating hotel-casino in Las Vegas and maintains a decidedly old-school Nevada gambling atmosphere.
The entertainment in Las Vegas is extraordinary and varied. Residencies by major pop artists at the large arenas and theaters on and near the Strip have been a defining feature of the entertainment landscape for decades, with performers including Celine Dion, Elton John, Britney Spears, Lady Gaga, and Adele all having made Las Vegas a long-term home for extended performance runs. Cirque du Soleil operates multiple permanent shows at Strip hotels. The Blue Man Group, Penn and Teller, and dozens of other acts maintain permanent residencies that visitors can see any night of the week. Comedy clubs, burlesque revues, magic shows, and celebrity impersonator acts fill the smaller rooms throughout the city.
The restaurant scene in Las Vegas is among the most concentrated and diverse in the world, reflecting the city’s ability to draw talent and investment from everywhere. Virtually every major celebrity chef in America has at least one Las Vegas outpost. Joel Robuchon, Gordon Ramsay, Wolfgang Puck, Guy Savoy, Thomas Keller, Masaharu Morimoto, and dozens of others have established restaurants here, creating a dining environment where world-class cuisine is available at almost any hour of the day or night. The all-you-can-eat buffets that were once the defining culinary experience of Las Vegas have declined in number but those that remain, particularly the Bacchanal Buffet at Caesars Palace, still represent extraordinary value and variety.
The Las Vegas arts and cultural scene, often overlooked by visitors focused on the Strip experience, is genuine and growing. The Smith Center for the Performing Arts, a stunning Art Deco-inspired complex in downtown Las Vegas, presents Broadway touring productions, performances by the Las Vegas Philharmonic, and visiting artists of international caliber. The Nevada Museum of Art in Reno is the more established institution, but Las Vegas is catching up. The Neon Museum, located in downtown Las Vegas on a lot known as the Neon Boneyard, preserves more than 200 historic neon signs from closed hotels, casinos, and businesses, offering tours that are simultaneously a history of sign art and a requiem for a vanished Las Vegas. The Mob Museum, formally the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, is a thoroughly researched and engagingly presented institution devoted to the history of organized crime and its relationship with law enforcement, with obvious and deep connections to Las Vegas history.
Shopping in Las Vegas ranges from luxury to outlet, with the Forum Shops, Miracle Mile Shops at Planet Hollywood, the Grand Canal Shoppes at the Venetian, and the Las Vegas North Premium Outlets all catering to different ends of the market. The Arts District, centered on Charleston Boulevard south of downtown, is a walkable neighborhood of galleries, independent restaurants, vintage shops, and creative businesses that offers an alternative to the Strip’s scale and uniformity.
Sports have come to Las Vegas with considerable force in recent years. The Vegas Golden Knights NHL franchise, established in 2017, won the Stanley Cup in its sixth season and has established a passionate and enthusiastic fan base. The Las Vegas Raiders NFL franchise relocated from Oakland in 2020 and plays at Allegiant Stadium, a futuristic domed facility visible from the southern end of the Strip. The Las Vegas Aces WNBA franchise is one of the league’s most successful and visible franchises. Formula One’s Las Vegas Grand Prix, established in 2023, runs through the streets of the Strip in November and has become one of the most spectacular events on the racing calendar, with the circuit passing directly in front of the major hotels in a display that combines automotive sport with the existing spectacle of the environment.
Day trips from Las Vegas are numerous and significant. The Hoover Dam, 35 miles southeast via US-93, is one of the great engineering achievements of the 20th century, a 726-foot concrete arch-gravity dam that impounds Lake Mead, the largest reservoir in the United States by water volume when full. The dam tour, descending through the structure to the generator room deep in the canyon wall, is fascinating, and the views from the Mike O’Callaghan-Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge above the dam are spectacular. Valley of Fire State Park, 50 miles northeast of Las Vegas, contains dramatic red and orange sandstone formations, ancient petroglyphs, and some of the finest desert scenery in the region, all within a 90-minute drive of the Strip.
RENO AND NORTHERN NEVADA
Reno sits at the western edge of the Great Basin where the Sierra Nevada begins its dramatic rise toward Lake Tahoe, and it has long occupied an identity somewhere between Las Vegas-lite and genuine Western city. It calls itself the Biggest Little City in the World, a slogan that has been on its downtown arch since 1929, and the characterization is more accurate than it might seem. Reno has real substance beneath its casino economy: a state university, a genuine arts community, a food scene that has improved dramatically, and a setting of exceptional natural beauty.
The casinos along the Truckee River in downtown Reno are the core of the city’s entertainment economy, led by the Peppermill, the Grand Sierra Resort, and the Atlantis, all of which offer gaming, entertainment, restaurants, and hotels in a more intimate and affordable package than their Las Vegas counterparts. The Eldorado-Caesars complex downtown has been a Reno institution for generations.
The Nevada Museum of Art is the finest art museum in the state, housed in a striking building designed by architect Will Bruder to evoke the geological formations of the Black Rock Desert to the north. Its collection ranges from 19th-century American landscape paintings to major works of contemporary art, and its Center for Art and Environment, devoted to land art and artists who engage with the natural and built environment, is a genuinely distinctive focus that makes the museum nationally significant.
The National Automobile Museum, housing the Harold’s Club and William Harrah collections of antique and historic automobiles, is one of the finest car museums in the country, presenting more than 200 vehicles in period street settings that recreate different eras of American motoring history. The Fleischmann Planetarium at the University of Nevada is a classic mid-century dome theater still showing programs and public sky viewing nights.
The Truckee River Walk, a pleasant riverside promenade through downtown, connects the casino district to the arts district and provides a welcome counterpoint to the interior environments of the gambling halls. The area around the river has been developed with restaurants, bars, and galleries that give Reno a walkable urban character it lacked a generation ago.
The Great Reno Balloon Race each September is one of the largest free hot-air balloon events in the world, filling the sky above the city with color in the early morning hours. The Reno Air Races, held at the Reno Stead Airport in September, is the last major closed-course air racing event in the world and draws aviation enthusiasts from around the globe. The National Championship Air Races feature propeller-driven aircraft racing at speeds exceeding 500 miles per hour around a pyloned course, and the sound and spectacle of these races is unlike anything in mainstream sporting events. The Burning Man festival, held each August in the Black Rock Desert north of Reno, transforms the remote playa into a temporary city of 70,000 participants devoted to radical self-expression, art installation, and community, and has become one of the most written-about cultural events in the world.
Elko, in the northeastern corner of the state on I-80, is the cultural capital of the Great Basin cowboy tradition, a working ranching town that hosts the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering each January, a week-long celebration of the oral and written traditions of the American West that draws performers and audiences from across the country. The Western Folklife Center in Elko is the permanent home of this tradition and mounts exhibitions and programs throughout the year. Elko’s restaurants, particularly its several excellent Basque establishments reflecting the region’s Basque sheepherding history, are among the best reasons to stop in northeastern Nevada.
The Basque presence throughout northern Nevada is a distinctive and underappreciated cultural thread. Basque immigrants came to Nevada in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to herd sheep in the vast rangelands of the Great Basin and established communities in Elko, Winnemucca, Reno, and other towns that maintain their cultural identity to this day. The Basque restaurants of northern Nevada, typically serving fixed-price family-style meals that begin with soup and proceed through multiple courses ending with lamb chops or lamb stew, are one of the great culinary traditions of the American West.
LAKE TAHOE
Lake Tahoe straddles the Nevada-California border in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and is one of the most beautiful lakes in the world, a body of water so large, so deep, and so extraordinarily clear that it has no close comparison in North America. At 22 miles long, 12 miles wide, and with a maximum depth of 1,645 feet, it is the second deepest lake in the country and one of the clearest large lakes on Earth, with visibility extending to depths of 70 feet or more in some areas and water so blue it seems artificial.
The Nevada side of Lake Tahoe, centered on the communities of Incline Village and Crystal Bay in the north and Stateline in the south, offers the full Tahoe experience with the addition of casino gaming. Incline Village is the most affluent and carefully maintained of the lake communities, with excellent beaches, hiking trails in the surrounding national forest, the fine Diamond Peak ski resort, and a general atmosphere of understated mountain luxury. Crystal Bay marks the border crossing from California and has several small casino-hotels that capture something of old Tahoe’s gambling heritage.
The south shore, anchored by Stateline on the Nevada side and South Lake Tahoe on the California side, is the more developed end of the lake, with larger hotels, more restaurants, active nightlife, and Heavenly Mountain Resort, which offers some of the finest and most dramatically situated skiing in the region. The Heavenly gondola rises from the Nevada-California border and provides year-round mountain access and views across the lake that are genuinely breathtaking.
Lake Tahoe’s beaches, particularly Sand Harbor State Park on the Nevada side, are among the finest freshwater beaches in the country, with clear, blue water, white granite boulders, and the Sierra Nevada rising behind. Sand Harbor hosts the Lake Tahoe Shakespeare Festival each summer, performing under the stars with the lake as a backdrop, which must rank among the more spectacular outdoor theater settings in America. The East Shore Trail, running along the Nevada side of the lake, is one of the finest lake-view hiking and cycling routes in the region.
Emerald Bay on the California side, visible from several Nevada viewpoints, is one of the most photographed landscapes in the Sierra Nevada, a small island-dotted cove with color so vivid it strains credulity. The Tahoe Rim Trail, a 165-mile trail circling the entire lake on the ridgeline above it, is one of the great long-distance hiking trails in the West and offers sustained views of the lake and surrounding mountains throughout its length.
GREAT BASIN NATIONAL PARK
Great Basin National Park, in the Snake Range near the Nevada-Utah border, is one of the least visited national parks in the country and one of the most rewarding for those who make the effort to reach it. The park encompasses nearly 78,000 acres of basin-and-range landscape, including Wheeler Peak, Nevada’s second highest mountain at 13,063 feet, extensive groves of ancient bristlecone pine, a living glacier, and Lehman Caves, a limestone cavern of exceptional quality and beauty.
Lehman Caves, named for Absalom Lehman who promoted the caverns in the 1880s, is a single large cave with multiple chambers filled with an extraordinary variety of speleothem formations. Stalactites, stalagmites, columns, cave popcorn, and the rare shield formations — circular plates of calcite that project horizontally from cave walls and ceilings — are all present in abundance. The cave maintains a constant temperature of 50 degrees Fahrenheit, making it a cool refuge in summer. Ranger-guided tours of varying length are available and are the only way to enter the cave.
Wheeler Peak rises dramatically above the surrounding basins and its summit is accessible by a strenuous but non-technical hiking trail. The Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive climbs 12 miles from the visitor center to a campground and trailhead at over 10,000 feet, with views across the Snake Valley to Utah’s mountains on the east and the vast Great Basin to the west. The Alpine Lakes Loop near the end of the scenic drive passes Teresa and Stella lakes, glacially carved basins filled with cold, clear water, and offers some of the finest subalpine scenery in Nevada.
The bristlecone pine grove near Wheeler Peak contains trees that are among the oldest living organisms on Earth. Bristlecone pines thrive in the harsh conditions of high-elevation rocky soils where other trees cannot compete, and their growth rings have been used to calibrate radiocarbon dating. Walking among trees that were alive when the Egyptian pyramids were being built is one of those experiences that imposes a genuinely useful sense of temporal proportion.
Great Basin National Park is a certified International Dark Sky Park, and its remote location far from any significant light pollution makes it one of the best places in the country for astronomical observation. The Milky Way is visible with extraordinary clarity on moonless nights, and the park offers ranger-led astronomy programs during summer months. The nearest town, Baker, is tiny but has a modest selection of accommodations and restaurants catering to park visitors.
THE BLACK ROCK DESERT
The Black Rock Desert is one of the most alien landscapes in North America, a vast playa of dried lake bed stretching more than 100 miles across northwestern Nevada in absolute flatness, the remnant of an arm of the ancient Lake Lahontan that covered much of the Great Basin during the last ice age. The surface, hard-packed clay so smooth it functions as a natural runway, is where land speed records have been set and attempted for over a century.
The Black Rock itself is a dramatic dark volcanic formation rising abruptly from the flat playa, giving the desert its name and providing a visual anchor to the otherwise featureless expanse. Emigrants on the Applegate-Lassen cutoff of the Oregon and California trails crossed this desert in the 1840s, and their desperate accounts of the waterless crossing give some sense of the landscape’s harshness. Hot springs bubble up at the edge of the playa in several locations, creating surreal oases of hot, mineral-rich water in the middle of the desert.
High Rock Canyon, accessible by dirt road from the playa, is a dramatic volcanic gorge carved through the high desert terrain northwest of the Black Rock that sees remarkably few visitors despite its dramatic scenery. Emigrant trails ran through the canyon, and the wagon ruts of those parties are still visible in places along the canyon walls.
The Burning Man festival, held on the Black Rock playa each year in late August and early September, has transformed the playa’s global reputation from remote wilderness to one of the world’s most famous temporary gathering places. Black Rock City, the temporary municipality erected for Burning Man, has at its peak had a population larger than many Nevada towns, complete with streets, infrastructure, a post office, and an airport. The art installations created for Burning Man, many of enormous scale, have pushed the boundaries of large-scale environmental art, and the festival’s culture of radical self-reliance, gifting, and communal participation has influenced communities worldwide.
NEVADA’S GHOST TOWNS AND MINING HERITAGE
Nevada was built on silver and gold, and when those metals ran out, entire cities were abandoned almost overnight, left to the desert and the decades. The state contains dozens of ghost towns in various stages of preservation and decay, each one a capsule of a particular moment in the frantic boom-and-bust cycle of western mining history.
Rhyolite, near the California border outside Death Valley, is among the most dramatically preserved ghost towns in the West. At its peak in 1908, Rhyolite had a population of 10,000, a three-story bank building with polished granite columns, a train station, a red light district, and every amenity of a modern city. By 1920 it was essentially empty, and today the ruins of its bank and station stand in the desert silence as monuments to how quickly fortunes turned. The Goldwell Open Air Museum adjacent to Rhyolite adds an unexpected contemporary dimension, with large-scale sculptures by Belgian artists installed in the desert landscape in the 1980s.
Tonopah, in the middle of the state on US-95, is not quite a ghost town but captures the atmosphere of Nevada’s mining past more authentically than almost anywhere else. The Mizpah Hotel, restored to its 1907 grandeur, is the finest historic hotel in the state, with pressed tin ceilings, period furniture, and a restaurant serving surprisingly ambitious food in a town of 2,500 people. Tonopah is also one of the best stargazing destinations in the country, recognized as an International Dark Sky Community, and the Tonopah Stargazing Park provides infrastructure and programming for serious astronomical observation.
Virginia City, northeast of Carson City on the slope of Mount Davidson, is the most visited of Nevada’s historic mining towns and one of the best-preserved Victorian mining towns in the American West. The Comstock Lode, discovered beneath Virginia City in 1859, was one of the richest silver deposits ever found, and the wealth it generated was so enormous it helped finance the Union cause in the Civil War and built much of San Francisco. Virginia City at its peak in the 1870s had a population of 25,000 and boasted opera houses, churches, newspapers, and a sophistication remarkable for a mountain mining camp. Mark Twain worked as a reporter for the Territorial Enterprise in Virginia City, and the newspaper’s office is preserved as a museum. The town’s main street, C Street, preserves its Victorian architecture remarkably intact and is lined with museums, saloons, and shops catering to visitors. Underground mine tours give a vivid sense of the conditions under which the Comstock’s wealth was extracted.
Austin, in the center of the state on US-50, the highway nicknamed the Loneliest Road in America, is a quiet former silver mining town with a handful of Victorian buildings, a small museum, and the remarkable Stokes Castle, a three-story granite tower built by a mining entrepreneur in 1897 and used for only a few months before being abandoned, now standing alone on the hillside above town.
The International Car Forest of the Last Church outside Goldfield is one of Nevada’s more eccentric roadside attractions, a field in which two dozen automobiles have been buried nose-first in the ground and painted by various artists, creating a monument to both the automobile age and the Nevada tradition of doing exactly what you want with your land.
THE LONELIEST ROAD IN AMERICA
US Highway 50, which crosses Nevada from Lake Tahoe in the west to the Utah border in the east, was named the Loneliest Road in America by Life magazine in 1986 in an article suggesting that only those with a special sense of adventure should drive it. The Nevada Commission on Tourism immediately adopted the slogan and began issuing survival guides and passport books for drivers who complete the crossing, turning an insult into a marketing triumph.
The Loneliest Road does earn its name. For stretches of 50 to 100 miles, the road crosses one basin after another, with a small mountain range in between, and passes through virtually no development. The towns along the route — Fallon, Austin, Eureka, Ely — are separated by distances that require attention to the fuel gauge and provide experiences of genuine remoteness and silence increasingly rare in the modern world.
Fallon, at the western end of the Nevada stretch, is a small agricultural city in the Lahontan Valley surrounded by irrigated fields and wetlands fed by the Carson River. The Fallon Naval Air Station, home of the Navy’s Top Gun program, gives the area a military character, and the sound of jet fighters conducting training exercises over the desert is a feature of the local soundscape.
Eureka, roughly at the midpoint of the state, is a small town with a beautifully preserved Victorian commercial district and the outstanding Eureka Opera House, a restored 1880 stone building that serves as the county’s cultural center and hosts performances and events throughout the year. The Eureka Sentinel Museum, in the old newspaper building, tells the story of the town’s silver mining past with exceptional photographs and artifacts.
Ely, near the eastern end of the Nevada stretch, is larger and has more visitor services, including the Nevada Northern Railway Museum, where a perfectly preserved early 20th-century railroad depot, roundhouse, and collection of steam locomotives allow visitors to experience and in some cases actually ride historic trains through the surrounding copper mining country. The Ward Charcoal Ovens State Historic Park outside Ely preserves six perfectly intact beehive-shaped stone ovens built in 1876 to produce charcoal for the local smelters, their scale and construction quality remarkable for their utilitarian purpose.
VALLEY OF FIRE STATE PARK
Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada’s oldest and largest state park, sits 50 miles northeast of Las Vegas in the Mojave Desert and contains some of the most spectacular desert scenery in the Southwest. The park takes its name from the red Aztec sandstone formations that dominate its landscape, ancient sand dunes compressed into rock over 150 million years ago and subsequently sculpted by erosion into domes, arches, narrow canyons, and bizarre formations that glow deep red and orange in the light of late afternoon.
The park’s petroglyphs, left by the Ancestral Puebloan people and earlier desert cultures, are among the most extensive and accessible in Nevada, concentrated at Atlatl Rock and Petroglyph Canyon. The Mouse’s Tank trail, named for a Paiute outlaw who used the natural water catchment as a hideout, passes through a canyon lined with petroglyphs on both walls.
The Wave formation in the park, a natural structure of swirling, layered sandstone that resembles a frozen ocean wave, is one of the most photographed geological formations in Nevada. The Elephant Rock and the Beehives are other memorable formations accessible by short walks from the road.
Valley of Fire is manageable as a day trip from Las Vegas, though the visitor center offers information on camping within the park for those who want to experience the landscape at dawn and dusk when the light is most dramatic and the crowds are thinnest.
NEVADA’S HOT SPRINGS
Nevada has more hot springs than any other state in the contiguous United States, a consequence of its geologically active basin-and-range terrain where the Earth’s crust is being pulled apart and heat rises close to the surface in hundreds of locations. Many of these hot springs are in remote desert locations, accessible only by dirt road and known primarily to locals and dedicated hot spring enthusiasts.
The hot springs near Winnemucca, outside Lovelock, and in the Black Rock Desert region are among the most dramatic, rising from the desert floor in pools that range from warm soaking temperatures to scalding. Diana’s Punch Bowl near Austin is a remarkable geological feature, a sunken crater filled with boiling, mineral-rich water. Bog Hot Springs near Denio in the far north of the state is one of the largest and most accessible, flowing into a series of concrete pools that allow soaking in water of varying temperatures.
Spencer Hot Springs near Austin is perhaps the most accessible of the state’s backcountry hot springs, reached by a short dirt road and offering bathtub-style soaking pools fed by naturally warm water with views across the monitor valley. The experience of soaking in hot spring water in the middle of the Nevada desert, with the stars overhead and silence extending for miles in every direction, is one of the more unusual and restorative pleasures the state has to offer.
LAKE MEAD AND HOOVER DAM
Lake Mead National Recreation Area, straddling the Nevada-Arizona border, encompasses the reservoir created by Hoover Dam and the downstream Lake Mohave, together forming the largest recreation area managed by the National Park Service by acreage. At full capacity, Lake Mead is the largest reservoir in the United States by water volume, though prolonged drought and increased water demand have reduced its levels dramatically in recent years, exposing ghostly remnants of submerged communities and geological formations not seen in decades.
The recreation opportunities on Lake Mead are extensive, including boating, water skiing, fishing, kayaking, and swimming from several developed marinas and beach areas. Las Vegas Boat Harbor and Boulder Beach are the most developed and accessible from Las Vegas. Fishing for striped bass, largemouth bass, and rainbow trout draws anglers from across the region.
The Hoover Dam itself, standing between the recreation area and the state of Arizona in Black Canyon, is one of the most impressive achievements of 20th-century engineering and a monument to the ambitions of the New Deal era. Built between 1931 and 1936 during the Great Depression, it employed at its peak 5,251 workers under brutal desert conditions and was completed two years ahead of schedule. The dam stands 726 feet tall, contains enough concrete to pave a highway from San Francisco to New York City, and generates enough electricity to serve approximately 1.3 million people. The tours through the interior of the dam, descending by elevator to the generator room in the canyon floor, convey the scale and ambition of the project in ways the exterior view cannot fully communicate.
RED ROCK CANYON NATIONAL CONSERVATION AREA
Red Rock Canyon, 17 miles west of Las Vegas on Charleston Boulevard, is one of the most accessible and spectacular natural landscapes in Nevada, a dramatic escarpment of red and cream Aztec sandstone rising 3,000 feet above the Mojave Desert floor in a series of walls, domes, and canyons that provide world-class rock climbing, excellent hiking, and some of the finest scenic driving in the state.
The 13-mile Scenic Loop Drive circles the most dramatic formations of the escarpment and provides access to major trailheads. Calico Hills, at the beginning of the loop, offers vivid red and white sandstone scrambling that is accessible to hikers of all levels. Turtlehead Peak provides one of the finest summit hikes in the conservation area, climbing 2,000 feet to broad views across the Las Vegas Valley and surrounding desert ranges. The Ice Box Canyon trail descends into a narrow gorge where a seasonal waterfall and persistent shade create temperatures noticeably cooler than the surrounding desert.
Rock climbing in Red Rock Canyon is among the finest in the United States, with hundreds of routes ranging from beginner to expert on the sandstone walls of the escarpment. The area around Calico Hills and the Sandstone Quarry is particularly popular, and the longer routes on Rainbow Wall and the Solar Slab provide serious multi-pitch climbing comparable to the best desert rock climbing anywhere.
The Springs Preserve, at the edge of Las Vegas near the springs that originally made the valley habitable, combines botanical gardens, natural history exhibits, and sustainability programming in an attractive campus that provides context for the landscape and water history that shaped Las Vegas’s existence.
NEVADA’S FOOD AND DRINK SCENE
Las Vegas’s restaurant scene is so dominant that it tends to overshadow the genuine food culture developing in Reno and throughout the state, but Nevada’s culinary landscape is more varied than the casino buffet stereotype suggests.
In Las Vegas, the concentration of celebrity chef restaurants at Strip hotels has created a market for genuinely excellent food at prices that rival any major city. Joël Robuchon at the MGM Grand has held multiple Michelin stars. Guy Savoy at Caesars Palace is among the finest French restaurants in the United States. Carbone at Aria brings the celebrated Italian-American restaurant of New York’s Greenwich Village to the desert with its full theatrical ambitions intact. The Bazaar by José Andrés at Sahara has brought Spanish avant-garde cuisine to the Strip with characteristic wit and technical brilliance. Beyond the celebrity establishments, the ethnic food available in Las Vegas’s residential neighborhoods and the area around the Strip is exceptional, reflecting the diversity of the city’s workforce: excellent Vietnamese, Chinese, Filipino, Korean, and Mexican restaurants serve communities that have made Las Vegas home.
Reno’s restaurant scene has genuinely improved in recent years, driven by an influx of residents from the San Francisco Bay Area and a growing tech economy. The area around the Midtown district and along the Truckee River has attracted chef-driven establishments alongside excellent ethnic restaurants. The Basque restaurants of northern Nevada remain a distinctive regional tradition: the Star Hotel in Elko and Louis’ Basque Corner in Reno are institutions that serve family-style meals in the immigrant tradition of communal dining.
Nevada’s craft brewery scene is led by Great Basin Brewing Company, founded in Reno in 1993 and now the largest craft brewery in the state, with locations in Reno, Sparks, and Las Vegas. Its Ichthyosaur IPA, named for the state fossil, is a reliable and well-crafted standard. Nevada Nanobrewery in Carson City and Brasserie Saint James in Reno are among the more notable smaller operations. Las Vegas has seen a significant growth in craft brewery and cocktail bar culture, particularly in the Arts District neighborhood.
PRACTICAL TRAVEL INFORMATION
The best time to visit Las Vegas and the southern Nevada desert is spring (March through May) and fall (September through November), when temperatures are warm but manageable. Summer in Las Vegas and the Mojave Desert is extremely hot, with temperatures regularly exceeding 110 degrees Fahrenheit in July, which concentrates activity indoors and pool-side but does not deter tens of millions of visitors who come regardless. Winter in Las Vegas is mild and pleasant, with temperatures typically in the 50s and 60s, and it is in many respects the most comfortable season for outdoor activities in the southern part of the state.
Northern Nevada and the mountain areas around Lake Tahoe and the Wasatch range have a more conventional four-season climate, with significant snowfall in winter that is the primary attraction for skiers and a significant deterrent for those who are not.
Nevada has no state income tax, and the combination of casino tax revenues and a hospitality economy built on large-scale visitor spending means the state can offer certain services and infrastructure efficiently. Hotel and resort fees, however, are a persistent source of visitor frustration in Las Vegas; virtually every major hotel charges a mandatory daily resort fee on top of the room rate, and these fees can add $30 to $50 or more per night to the stated price. Budgeting for these fees and reading the full price rather than the advertised rate is essential for managing expectations.
Gambling is obviously legal throughout Nevada and is the activity most closely associated with the state. The mathematics of gambling favor the house in every game, and setting a firm budget before entering a casino and treating any losses as the cost of entertainment is the approach most likely to result in an enjoyable experience. Problem gambling resources are available at every Nevada casino, and the state takes its responsible gaming obligations seriously.
Nevada’s open container laws are among the most permissive in the country; alcohol can be legally consumed on the public sidewalks of Las Vegas, a fact that contributes substantially to the character of the Strip experience. Marijuana is legal for recreational use in Nevada and sold at licensed dispensaries throughout the state, though it cannot be consumed publicly or in casino hotels.
Speed limits on Nevada’s rural highways, many of them set at 80 miles per hour, are among the highest in the country, and the state’s tradition of minimal regulatory interference means that enforcement is generally light outside urban areas. However, the distances involved and the lack of services in remote areas mean that careful attention to fuel levels and vehicle condition is genuinely important. Carrying extra water when driving in desert areas is not merely recommended; it is potentially life-saving.
Cell service is absent across large portions of rural Nevada, and GPS devices or downloaded offline maps are important tools for drivers venturing beyond the interstate corridors.
SUGGESTED ITINERARIES
Three Days: Three days in Las Vegas allows thorough exploration of the Strip, including fountain shows at the Bellagio, a visit to the Neon Museum, a meal at a celebrity chef restaurant, and a show. One morning should be reserved for a day trip to the Valley of Fire or Red Rock Canyon, both within easy driving distance and providing necessary contrast to the urban experience.
Five Days: Add a drive to Hoover Dam and Lake Mead on day four, and use day five to drive north toward Valley of Fire or west to Red Rock Canyon for more extended hiking. Alternatively, dedicate day four and five to a road trip to Great Basin National Park, spending a night in Ely and taking the cave tour and an alpine hike.
One Week: Fly into Las Vegas, spend three days on the Strip and its surroundings, then drive north via US-95 through Tonopah to Reno, stopping overnight in Tonopah for stargazing at the Dark Sky Park. Spend two days in Reno and the Lake Tahoe area before flying home from Reno-Tahoe International Airport.
Two Weeks: Drive the full circuit: Las Vegas and its day trips, then north through the Extraterrestrial Highway and Tonopah, Reno and Lake Tahoe, then east on the Loneliest Road through Austin and Eureka to Ely and Great Basin National Park, returning south through Nevada’s ghost towns. This route covers the full range of Nevada’s character and landscapes and is one of the great American road trips.
CONCLUSION
Nevada defies the expectation that a state can be understood from its most famous city. Las Vegas is extraordinary, a genuine wonder of the modern world that deserves its reputation as one of the most visited and most discussed places on Earth. But Nevada is also the silence of the Black Rock Desert at dawn, the impossible blue of Lake Tahoe through a gap in the Sierra pines, the bristlecone pine that has been alive since before Rome was an empire, the neon ghost of a boom town sign rusting in the desert sun, and the specific quality of light that falls across a basin-and-range landscape in the last hour before dark, when the mountains turn purple and the sage turns silver and the sky holds every color it knows at once. To know only one of these Nevadas is to have missed most of the state. Come for the lights if you must. Stay for the darkness. It is magnificent.


