Paid parking is back for guests of this Las Vegas Strip hotel-casino
Summary
Resorts World Las Vegas has ended its summer-long free-parking promotion and reinstated paid parking for hotel guests. The property will charge a flat $21 fee for guest parking. Vehicles with Nevada licence plates and high-tier Genting Rewards members (Elite, Honors, Prime, Monarch and Imperial) will continue to receive complimentary parking.
The resort also launched Metropolis Parking’s electronic licence plate reader system, removing paper tickets and gates. Guests who don’t qualify for free parking can register via the Metropolis app by linking their Genting Rewards account and vehicle licence plate. Resorts World had earlier waived resort fees and offered free self-parking through the end of August. Self-parking on the Strip typically ranges from $20 to $40, with only a few properties still offering free parking for all.
Key Points
- Resorts World Las Vegas will charge hotel guests a flat $21 parking fee.
- Nevada-registered vehicles and high-tier Genting Rewards members keep complimentary parking.
- The resort implemented Metropolis Parking’s electronic licence plate reader system (no paper tickets or gates).
- Guests who must pay can register vehicles in the Metropolis app by linking their Genting Rewards account and licence plate; multiple vehicles may be added but only one can be parked at a time.
- The move follows summer promotions (free self-parking and no resort fees) and reflects typical Strip self-parking rates of about $20–40, higher during special events.
Why should I read this?
Short and blunt: if you’re staying at Resorts World, expect a $21 parking charge unless you’ve got a Nevada plate or are a top Genting Rewards member. It’s a smallish but immediate cost that changes travel budgets and arrival plans — and you’ll need the Metropolis app if you want to register a car. We read the fine print so you don’t have to.