$32 for a Hop-On, Hop-Off Day Tour and Three-Hour Night Tour from Big Bus Tours (Up to $64 Value)
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London-styled double-decker busses rove to sites such as the Las Vegas Strip and the Fremont Street Experience
Easily getting from one place to another is a great benefit of living in the modern age—much like the Internet or those silica gel packets you can keep in your shoes to make you look taller. Go as you please with this Groupon.
$32 for a Hop-On, Hop-Off Day Tour Pass and Three-Hour Night Tour (Up to $64 Value)
The day tour lets guests begin their journey at any of 20 locations where the bus makes regular stops throughout daylight hours. Travelers can get on and off as many times as they like while they explore the city and learn about its history and notable landmarks from one of Big Bus Tours' informative and entertaining guides. The Strip route features a glimpse of the world-famous Welcome to Las Vegas sign and the iconic Bellagio fountains, and the downtown route heads to Fremont Street and the exciting Mob Museum. The first bus departs Circus Circus Hotel and Casino at 10 a.m., and regular departures follow throughout the day; one full circuit of each route lasts roughly 90 minutes.
Leaving from Circus Circus at 7 p.m. or Excalibur at 7:30 p.m., three-hour night tours surround riders in the neon jungle of Vegas's strip. Guides narrate the history of the Entertainment Capital of the World while busses travel to the famous Las Vegas sign and back, giving riders time to explore the Fremont Street Experience's fun-filled open-air mall before the tour's end.
Need To Know Info
About Big Bus Tours - Las Vegas
From the faux Eiffel Tower in Las Vegas to the real Eiffel Tower in Paris, Big Bus Tours provides a smooth ride to some of the most famous landmarks in the world. Live guides and recorded commentary provide insight into historic places such as the Tower of London and the Man Mo Temple in Hong Kong, and popular attractions such as Miami's Art Deco district. The hop-on, hop-off system allows travelers to enter and exit the open double-decker buses at their leisure, stopping at restaurants to sample the local cuisine, at local boutiques to pick up souvenirs, and at shopping malls to observe the interactions of teenagers and their natural enemy: the security guard.