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Stay at Desert Paradise Resort in Las Vegas, NV

Desert Paradise Resort
4.5
5.0

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Monika
3 years ago
Great accomodations. Exellent service. I would visit again with my family.

Off-the-Strip hotel close to outdoor activities; family-friendly amenities including a game room, pools and barbecue area

What You Get

View local health guidelines for travel here

  • Stay for four in a one-bedroom suite or six in a two-bedroom suite

$24.95 Daily Resort Fee Includes

  • WiFi
  • Pool and hot tub
  • Gaming room
  • Barbecue area
  • Business center services
  • Fitness center
  • Local & toll free phone calls

Family-Friendly, Off-the-Strip Hotel in Desert Landscape

Desert Paradise Resort is set amid the rugged mountains north of the Las Vegas Strip. Because the hotel is only a short drive from Las Vegas Boulevard and Fremont Street, guests are close enough to sample the glitz and excitement of Sin City or withdraw to enjoy some peace and quiet away from the clamor of the casinos.

  • Swim a few laps in the heated outdoor pool, or feel the warm sun as you lounge by the pool.
  • Pump some iron in the on-site fitness center, with free weights and cardio machines for any type of workout.
  • Enjoy a home-cooked meal with full kitchens inside each suite that include a refrigerator, oven and silverware.
  • Surf the web using the hotel's complimentary Wi-Fi.

Beyond the Las Vegas Strip: Old Vegas and Red Rock Canyon

It can feel like the entire city of Las Vegas revolves around the Strip if you never venture beyond that neon-lit corridor. But there’s plenty to see and do once you step off Las Vegas Boulevard. You can find a taste of Old Vegas on Fremont Street, where vintage signs and showgirls crowned with headdresses recall the days of Sinatra and Martin. Beginning at dusk, a canopy of more than 12 million LED lights erupts in a psychedelic light-and-music show every hour. For an aerial view, zoom down the center of Fremont Street on a zipline.

Nature puts on its own show at Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area, a landscape of fiery-red sandstone formations and limestone cliffs just 17 miles outside the city. Motor down the 13-mile scenic drive or ditch the car and strike out on any of more than 20 hiking trails that course through the region’s otherworldly topography.

Safety Awareness:

Strict social distancing measures have been placed and the property encourages guests to remain at least six feet from other groups when using an amenity, such as the pool, spas, fitness center and business center.

  • Signs have been posted to make guests aware of reduced occupancy numbers and to remind everyone to practice social distancing in all common areas of the resort.
  • Pool is open daily from 9:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m. with capacity restrictions.
  • Mandatory mask policy: All team members and guests indoors are required to wear face masks. Anyone who refuses to wear a mask, after being asked, will be directed to leave the property.
  • To help keep space between groups and prevent crowding at the property, they ask that all guests please limit the number of people coming into the lobby for check-in to only the primary guest on the reservation

Other Details

Room Details

One-Bedroom Suite

  • One king bed and one sofa bed
  • Standard occupancy: 4
  • Maximum occupancy: 4

Two-Bedroom Suite

  • One king bed, one queen bed, and one sofa bed
  • Standard occupancy: 6
  • Maximum occupancy: 6

Hotel Policies

  • Check in: 4 p.m.
  • Check out: 10 a.m.
  • $24.95 resort fee includes:
    • WiFi
    • Pool and hot tub
    • Gaming room
    • Barbecue area
    • Business center services
    • Fitness center
    • Local & toll free phone calls
  • Parking: free
  • Smoking policy: designated smoking areas are located on the property.
  • Pet policy: pets are not allowed inside the property.
  • Accessibility: please contact property for handicap accessibility requests or options.
  • Room upgrades: upgrades may be available during booking or at check-in for an additional cost.

Amenities

  • Outdoor hot tubs and heated pools (outdoor hot tubs are temporarily closed)
  • Game room
  • Barbecue area
  • Fitness center
  • Pool table
  • WiFi (included in resort fee)
  • Concierge services
  • Complimentary parking

Getting There

  • Nearest airport: Harry Reid International Airport (LAS; 4 mi)
  • Cab fare: about $35 from LAS, including a 15% tip

Need To Know Info

  • 72-hour cancellation notice required prior to check-in or reservation is non-refundable; reservations made within cancellation window are non-refundable
  • No-shows will be charged total Groupon rate
  • Traveler name must match ID at time of check-in
  • No refunds will be processed by Groupon after check-in
  • Must be 21+ to check in
  • Credit card required at check-in
  • $24.95 daily resort fee plus tax paid at check-in
  • $250 refundable security deposit on major credit card paid at check-in
  • Rates may vary by date and are subject to availability
  • Dates cannot be changed once booked; valid only for night(s) purchased
  • Final price at checkout may include an additional Groupon service fee, which Groupon retains as compensation for facilitating your reservation; this fee will not exceed 6% of the nightly cost of the reservation
  • Total price is inclusive of all taxes and fees.
  • Merchant is solely responsible to purchasers for the care and quality of the advertised goods and services.
  • Learn about Strike-Through Pricing and Savings

About Desert Paradise Resort

Customer Reviews

Reviewed on
Monika
Top reviewer
6 ratings|5 reviews
Great accomodations. Exellent service. I would visit again with my family.
Jacquise
2 ratings|1 review
Everything was perfect
Mareena
2 ratings|2 reviews
Me and my family really loved our stay and we will be back again.
Reviewed on
MaryLorrie
|1 review
Overall it was okay For the most part everyone was very helpful, the place was clean, no complaints there. My only downfall was that they didn’t have any restaurants or a place to buy drinks on property we had to walk to purchase drinks, snacks or whatever we needed. I know people come to Vegas to go out and enjoy the strip which we used Urber for that since it’s 2 miles plus away, but some of the days we just wanted to stay in and relax but had to somewhat venture out to purchase food and water. That’s my only complaint other than that the stay was pretty good.
Everett M
|1 review
Everett Property was clean and well maintained however, I reserved 2 rooms and only 1 was ready when I arrived. The other room took several hours to be ready.
BradS420
|1 review
One of the dirtiest and noisiest lodgings I've ever experienced We had high hopes for this hotel, given the positive reviews, but we were disappointed. My wife had a business trip to Las Vegas, and I decided to come along. I have a health condition that often requires the use of ice packs, and it's a virtual guarantee that I will have at least one day on any given trip where I don't feel physically up to leaving the room. So we try to stay in locations such as this that provide a full kitchen with a freezer (beats constant runs to the hotel ice machine) and sufficient seating options to be comfortable for days spent in the room. In that respect, the Desert Retreat checked the appropriate boxes. We weren't even terribly put out by the fact that the air conditioner wasn't cooling when we arrived. It was running, but not cooling; the room temperature actually increased four degrees within the first 30 minutes we were in the room. The hotel staff was responsive, and a member of the maintenance staff came by within 30 minutes of calling the front desk and addressed whatever the issue was. We had no further issues with the AC during our stay. The layout of our room was functional, with a living area, dining area and full kitchen separated by a door from the large bedroom/bathroom area with ample closet space. It was much more like an apartment than a typical hotel suite, even including an in-room washer and dryer. It appeared to be a good choice for our week in town; but looks can be deceiving. When I went to use the shower for the first time, I found grime all over the floor of the tub; it was filthy (see photo). Although there is no excuse for the tub being left in that condition by the housekeeping staff, I quickly realized how it had gotten in that condition in the first place. I had been walking around the room in my bare feet, and as I began to undress to use the shower, I saw that the soles of my feet were about as black as the filth in the tub. Clearly, the floors in the room (particularly the carpeted bedroom and the living room rug) were so dirty that the dirt was picked up by guests' feet and deposited in the tub when the guests bathed. I decided to do a little experiment. The next day, prior to getting dressed, I took a photo of the soles of my socks. I then put them on and went about my morning in the bedroom, living room, and kitchen areas. After one hour of walking around on the floors, I took off my socks and took another photo of the soles. The amount of filth picked up in that hour was so dramatic, I really don't need to note which is the before picture and which is the after. Just as there is no excuse for the tub being left in this condition, there is no excuse for the floors to be allowed to get this dirty. I don't expect the floors of my hotel to be so clean I could eat off of them, but I do expect them to be clean enough that I don't have to wonder what respiratory ailment I might be picking up simply by sharing airspace with them. The far bigger problem was the noise. Part of this stemmed from poor design in both the layout of the property and the construction of the rooms. The entire complex is centered around two pools - an adult pool and a "family" pool. This is a distinction without a difference, because the two pools are right next to one another. While someone lounging by the adult pool may not get splashed or trampled by children doing what children do at a pool (the pools are separated by a metal fence), they will still see and hear everything that goes on at the family pool. And pool noise is loud and constant. The pool opens at 9AM and closes at 10PM - the noise begins at 9AM and doesn't end until (at least) 10PM. It's not just the noise of people enjoying themselves; it's also loud music. Most of the hotel's buildings encircle the pool; those that do not encircle the buildings that encircle the pool, with parking between the concentric circles of buildings. The result of this design is that there is virtually nowhere in the complex where the noise from the pool area cannot be heard. I walked around the entire complex a couple different times. The only locations where I could not hear the noise from the pool area was a maintenance area at the back of the complex and the guest rooms near the entrance to the complex. The back area is irrelevant, since there are no guest rooms there, and the primary reason the pool noise could not be heard near the entrance was because it was drowned out by the traffic noise from the busy street. Even in our room, there was no escape from the noise. In the living area, I could hear the music and activity in the pool area over the volume of my television and air conditioner - all the time. Retreating into the bedroom (which was further from the pool area than the living room) and closing the door offered little relief, because there was so little sound insulation in the walls or windows. How little? Any time people walked by our bedroom window, I could hear their conversation. I don't mean I could hear that they were talking; rather, I could hear and clearly understand every word they were saying, just as if they were in the room with me. Because of the aforementioned layout of the property, people were frequently coming and going to get to and from the pool. But, it wasn't just the noise of the pool. All of the pathways/sidewalks at the property are concrete, with expansion joints every couple of feet. So, every time a housekeeping or maintenance cart is pushed along a sidewalk, there's the steady rhythm of ca-CHUNK, ca-CHUNK, ca-CHUNK. This wouldn't have been so bad, except for the fact that for some strange reason this process began every morning somewhere between 5:30 and 6:00. I know, because it was loud enough to wake me up, if I wasn't already awake. And this happened EVERY DAY. What on earth are they doing at that time of the morning? There was also the all too frequent serenade of gasoline powered lawn equipment. Now, I understand that at a large commercial property, the maintenance crew is likely going to use gasoline powered lawn equipment, rather than the much quieter electric variety. But this was insane. First of all, the property is in the Nevada desert. The only "lawn" on the property was artificial turf. There were trees and shrubs around, some of which were clearly shedding seed pods during our visit. While I'm sure the hotel would prefer to clean this stuff off of the sidewalks, rather than out of the pool filters, this likely does not require daily maintenance. Yet the leaf blowers were running all but one day of our stay. Furthermore, they weren't running briefly, such as an hour or so to clean up the pool area. Oh no. On two of the days of our stay, the serenade of leaf blowers went on literally all day. Again, what on earth are they doing that requires a leaf blower for ten hours? Then, there was the mystery sound. It was a very loud metal clanging sound - almost like heavy machinery, such as a pile driver, except not constant enough to be that. I thought perhaps people were slamming the lids to the trash dumpsters located at various locations around the complex. When I walked by one of those locations while walking around the complex, I noticed they had plastic lids, and the dumpsters were positioned in a way that held the lids open. They could not be closed, much less slammed. I thought perhaps the noise was people slamming the gates to the pool area, since I never heard the noise outside of pool hours. But when I visited the pool area, I discovered that although the gates could be noisy, it was impossible for them to make this particular sound. Whatever the culprit, it was frequent, but not constant, occurring throughout the day at intervals ranging from as little as 20 minutes to as much as 60. Despite a week at the property, I was never able to determine what produced this noise. As previously mentioned, the sound insulation of the guest rooms is basically non-existent, so there was no escape - whether inside our out - from the cacophony that began before sunup and did not end until after sundown. The only respite from the incessant racket was noise canceling headphones, which I used liberally. But who wants to spend every waking moment at a hotel - particularly a "vacation" property - cocooned in noise canceling headphones?

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