Show menu

Las Vegas All Inclusive Deal Starts at MGM Strip Hotels

Las Vegas all inclusive deal at Luxor and Excalibur on the south Strip, shown in a realistic dusk hotel scene
6 min read

MGM Resorts International is testing a more packaged version of a Las Vegas stay, with a new Las Vegas all inclusive deal at Luxor Hotel & Casino and Excalibur Hotel & Casino that starts at $330 plus tax for two guests on a two night stay. The package is bookable now for travel beginning April 6, 2026, and folds in resort fees, six meals per guest across the stay, one show for two, two rides on The Big Apple Coaster, and self parking for one vehicle. For travelers, the main consequence is not that Las Vegas has suddenly become a Caribbean style all inclusive market. It is that MGM is trying to reduce budgeting friction on the south Strip by turning several of the most common trip costs into one up front purchase.

Las Vegas All Inclusive Deal, What Is New

The new bundle covers a standard room at either Luxor or Excalibur for double occupancy, with all resort fees included. MGM says each guest receives three meals per day, breakfast, lunch, and dinner, redeemable through digital vouchers in the MGM Rewards app at participating restaurants across Luxor, Excalibur, MGM Grand Hotel & Casino, Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino, and New York, New York Hotel & Casino. The offer also includes two tickets to one eligible show per stay and two rides on The Big Apple Coaster at New York, New York. MGM says the deal uses dynamic pricing and has no blackout dates.

That structure matters because Vegas pricing usually fragments quickly once travelers add resort fees, dining, show tickets, and parking. MGM is explicitly marketing the new package as an easier budgeting tool, and its booking page says the bundle represents more than $400 in savings versus booking the components separately. That figure is company claimed, not an independently audited comparison, but it signals how MGM wants travelers to evaluate the offer, as a spend smoothing tool rather than just a room discount.

Who Benefits Most From the MGM Las Vegas Package

This offer fits best for first time Vegas visitors, short leisure trips, and travelers who want a predictable south Strip base without assembling every component separately. It also works better for drive in guests than for pure fly in travelers, because parking is part of the value stack, and for travelers who would realistically use shows and casual resort dining rather than hunt for the absolute cheapest meal off property.

It is less compelling for travelers who already have elite benefits that reduce resort fees or parking costs, people who spend most of their time at non MGM venues, or anyone who wants a luxury resort rather than a value oriented Strip stay. The package also is not fully all inclusive in the broader sense many travelers associate with beach resorts. Alcohol is limited within the meal structure, gratuities and some taxes are excluded, and the experience is anchored to a fixed two night stay rather than an open ended resort model.

The bigger fit question is how much convenience you value against flexibility. In an earlier Adept Traveler article, Las Vegas World Cup Hotel Deals and Promo Codes, the pricing logic in Las Vegas was already moving toward bundles, credits, and fee relief rather than simple headline rate cuts. MGM's new package pushes that pattern further by packaging room, food, entertainment, and parking into a single purchase instead of offering credits that still require travelers to manage spend on site.

How To Book or Plan Around It

Travelers who already know they want a two night south Strip trip should compare this offer against a standard MGM rate plus expected food, parking, and show spend on the exact dates they want. If the package price lands close to what you would spend anyway, the practical gain is budget certainty. If you are the kind of traveler who leaves the resort often, skips shows, or prefers independent dining, a regular room rate may still be the better buy.

The decision threshold is simple. Book the bundle when you are confident you will use most of the included value, especially the meals and show tickets. Wait, or book a cancellable standard rate, when your trip schedule is still fluid or when you are still comparing multiple Strip neighborhoods. Because MGM says pricing is dynamic, the right move is to price check your dates against both the bundle and an unbundled stay before you lock in.

If room quality is part of your decision, remember that the package is anchored at Luxor and Excalibur, not MGM Grand. In an earlier Adept Traveler article, MGM Grand Las Vegas Room Remodel Now Complete, MGM Grand positioned itself around refreshed accommodations and higher room quality. That creates a clear tradeoff for travelers, lower packaged trip friction at Luxor or Excalibur, versus potentially stronger in room value if you book another MGM property separately.

What This Signals for Las Vegas Hotel Pricing Next

This launch looks like a product test as much as a promotion. Las Vegas has long sold travelers on choice, but that choice often comes with fragmented pricing that makes the final trip cost harder to predict. MGM is trying to solve that with a package that feels closer to a cruise fare or resort bundle, while still keeping guests moving across several of its south Strip properties for dining and entertainment. First order, that can make booking simpler for casual visitors. Second order, it can help MGM distribute guest spend across restaurants, shows, and attractions that might otherwise depend on separate impulse purchases.

What happens next depends on uptake. If the offer converts well, MGM has room to expand the concept to other price tiers, stay lengths, or resort combinations. If it does not, it may remain a targeted south Strip value play for spring and summer demand. For travelers, the near term signal to watch is whether competing Las Vegas operators answer with more true bundles, more aggressive fee waivers, or richer credits as summer booking windows develop.

Sources