Bottles of champagne in an ice bucket on a bar with colorful lights in the background

Bottle Service Cost (Per Person Calculator & Real Prices)

Bottle Service Cost (Per Person Calculator & Real Prices)

Bottle service pricing can be confusing, especially when you’re splitting the bill with a group. Between bottle prices, table minimums, tax, and gratuity, the final cost per person often ends up higher than expected.

This guide walks through how bottle service cost really works, what typically goes into the final bill, and how much bottle service costs per person in real nightlife settings. Below, you’ll find real-world price ranges, common minimums and fees, Vegas-specific notes, FAQs, and a calculator to help you estimate your total and split it accurately with your group.


How Much Does Bottle Service Cost?

Most U.S. nightlife venues charge around $300–$1,500+ per table depending on the club, night, and bottle selection. High-demand clubs and major event weekends can push table minimums to $2,000–$10,000+.

These prices usually don’t include tax and gratuity, which means the actual total, and what each person pays; depends on group size and how the bill is split.

Important: Bottle menu prices aren’t the final total. Real costs usually include tax, gratuity, and sometimes minimums or extra fees.

To make this easier, you can use the bottle service cost calculator below to estimate your total and see what it comes out to per person.


Bottle Service Cost Calculator

Estimate your total bottle service cost and cost per person. Optional: compare it to buying drinks individually.

Bottle service details 🥂

Your Estimate 🎉

Bottle service total
$0
Includes tax + tip + fees
Cost per person
$0
Split across your group
Chargeable subtotal $0
Tax $0
Tip / gratuity $0
Extra fees $0
Total $0

Note: estimates vary by club, city, date, and table location. Tip/gratuity is calculated on the subtotal (not tax).


How to Use the Calculator

Step 1: Enter your group details 👥
Add your group size, average bottle price, and number of bottles. If the club has a minimum spend, enter it to avoid surprises.
Step 2: Add tax & gratuity 💸
Many clubs apply automatic gratuity plus sales tax. This is where totals increase fast.
Step 3: Review cost per person ✅
You’ll see the full group total and the cost per person. Use the comparison option to see if buying drinks is cheaper.

Real Bottle Service Price Ranges

Scenario Typical Table / Minimum Cost Per Person
Local lounge (slow night) $300–$800 $50–$150
Popular club (weekend) $800–$2,500 $120–$350
Big-city hotspot $2,000–$6,000+ $250–$800+
Major events / holidays $3,000–$10,000+ $400–$1,500+

How Much Is Bottle Service in Las Vegas?

Bottle service in Las Vegas typically starts around $500–$1,500 for tables at smaller venues or on slower nights. At popular Las Vegas nightclubs, weekend pricing and high-demand events often push table minimums into the $2,000–$5,000+ range. For top-tier venues, celebrity DJ nights, holiday weekends, or major events, minimums can reach $10,000 or more.

Pricing in Las Vegas changes constantly based on the DJ lineup, day of the week, season, and overall demand. Well-known venues such as XS Nightclub, Omnia, Hakkasan, Marquee, Tao Nightclub, Encore Beach Club, and LIV Las Vegas are known for dynamic pricing, where the table minimum is only the starting point.

In most cases, the final bottle service total also includes sales tax and automatic gratuity, which significantly affects the cost per person once the bill is split among your group. Because of this, knowing the minimum alone doesn’t always reflect what you’ll actually pay by the end of the night.

Vegas tip: If you only know the minimum, use that number in the calculator first.

Bottle Service FAQs

Does bottle service include the tip?
Sometimes. Many clubs add automatic gratuity. Always confirm whether pricing is quoted as minimum + tax + gratuity.
Is the minimum spend the same as bottle prices?
Not always. If your bottles don’t reach the minimum, you usually pay the minimum anyway.
How many bottles do you need for a table?
A common rule is one bottle per 4–6 people, depending on how heavily the group drinks.
Is bottle service worth it?
It’s often worth it for groups who want seating, faster service, and a VIP experience. Smaller groups or light drinkers may save by buying drinks.

Note: estimates vary by club, city, date, and table location. Tip/gratuity is calculated on the subtotal (not tax).