Quick Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|
| Address | 300 Stewart Avenue, Downtown Las Vegas |
| Admission | $34.95 adult |
| Speakeasy add-on | $29 (or $39 combo) |
| Hours | 9am-9pm daily |
| Time needed | 2.5-3 hours |
| Year opened | 2012 |
| Building | 1933 Las Vegas Post Office & Federal Courthouse |
Officially the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, the Mob Museum opened in 2012 inside the restored 1933 federal courthouse — the same building where the Kefauver Committee hearings into organised crime were held in 1950. Three floors, more than 1,000 artefacts, and one of the highest-rated visitor experiences in Las Vegas.
🧮
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Calculate now →Is the Mob Museum Worth It?
Yes — and it surprises people. Visitors expecting a cheesy Strip-style "mob experience" find instead a genuinely rigorous museum with artefacts from the FBI, DEA, and private collections that track organised crime from Prohibition through Whitey Bulger and the present-day Russian and Mexican cartels.
It consistently ranks in the top 3 Las Vegas attractions on every major review site. Plan 2.5 to 3 hours to do it justice; longer if you add the speakeasy.
- Three floors, roughly chronological top-down
- Most exhibits are interactive or include original video footage
- Free audio guide via your phone
- Gift shop has the best mob-related books in the US
- The coat check is free and useful — many exhibits need both hands
The 1933 Courthouse Setting
The building itself is a primary exhibit. It was Las Vegas's original federal post office and courthouse, designed in Neoclassical style in 1933 and one of the few surviving pre-war civic buildings downtown.
The third-floor Kefauver Hearings Room is a full restoration of the 1950 Senate courtroom where Senator Estes Kefauver dragged mob figures before televised hearings. Sit in the gallery seats, watch the original black-and-white footage on the screens, and the room maps to the frame you are looking at. It is quietly one of the best museum rooms in the country.
The Kefauver hearings were the first major event in US history carried live on nationwide television — 30 million Americans watched mob bosses pleading the Fifth in 1950, and the coverage helped define the new medium.
Must-See Exhibits
On a single visit, prioritise these:
| Exhibit | Floor | Why |
|---|
| St Valentine's Day Massacre Wall | 3rd | Actual brick wall from 1929 Chicago — bullet holes visible |
| Kefauver Hearings Room | 3rd | Restored Senate courtroom |
| Mob on Film | 2nd | Hollywood's relationship with the real mob |
| Tommy Guns & Weapons | 2nd | Functional Thompson submachine guns on display |
| Use of Force Experience | 1st | $15 extra — firearms simulator |
| Crime Lab | 1st | Hands-on forensics for kids 11+ |
| Nevada Gaming Control | 2nd | How Vegas was cleaned up from Siegel to Wynn |
The Massacre Wall is the museum's most famous artefact — the actual garage wall from 2122 North Clark Street in Chicago, where seven members of Bugs Moran's gang were machine-gunned on February 14, 1929. The wall was dismantled in 1967 and eventually donated to the museum.
Several exhibits include autopsy photos and crime-scene footage. Parents with younger children should preview the content or skip certain galleries.
The Underground Speakeasy
The Underground is the basement speakeasy — a functioning Prohibition-era bar and distillery that opened in 2018. It is both a themed experience and an actual cocktail bar with its own moonshine distillery producing corn whiskey on-site.
- Separate ticket: $29 with general admission ($39 combo)
- Includes: speakeasy entry, one moonshine tasting flight
- Password required — printed on your ticket
- Hidden door inside the museum
- Full bar with Prohibition-era cocktails ($14-18)
- 21+ only for alcohol tastings; minors can enter for the distillery tour
The Underground can also be accessed in the evening without a museum ticket — walk-in cocktails after 5pm, separate street entrance. The "Shine Tasting Experience" at $29 is good value if you like moonshine or have never tried it.
Book The Underground tasting for 4pm and finish the museum with it. The moonshine flight is a strong sendoff.
Tickets and Pricing
Tickets are sold on mobmuseum.org, at the door, or via GetYourGuide. Advance booking saves a few dollars and skips the queue.
| Ticket | Price | Notes |
|---|
| Adult general admission | $34.95 | Ages 18-64 |
| Senior 65+ | $31.95 | ID required |
| Young adult 11-17 | $24.95 | — |
| Child under 11 | Free | Must be with paid adult |
| The Underground add-on | $29 | Includes moonshine flight |
| Combo (museum + Underground) | $39-59 | Best value if you're doing both |
| Nevada resident | $26 adult | State ID required |
| Military | $27 | Active & veteran |
Last entry is one hour before close (8pm). Plan to arrive by 5pm at latest on a full-museum visit.
Getting There and Pairings
The Mob Museum is in downtown Las Vegas, not on the Strip. That is actually a feature — you combine it with the other best non-Strip attractions into one excellent half-day.
- From Strip: 10-15 min drive, $12-20 Uber
- Deuce bus (24-hour pass $8): runs Strip to Downtown, 30-45 min
- Parking: $10 lot next to the museum
- Walk: 2 blocks from Fremont Street Experience (free light show after dark)
Pair the Mob Museum with: the Neon Museum (15 minutes away — see our separate guide), Fremont Street Experience, and dinner at an old-school Vegas joint like Hugo's Cellar at Four Queens or Carson Kitchen. That is a complete downtown Vegas day.
The best Vegas day for culture fans: Mob Museum 10am-1pm, lunch on Fremont, Neon Museum day tour 2pm-3pm, return after dark for the Neon night show and Fremont light show. Two museums, one Uber loop.
Quick Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|
| Address | 300 Stewart Avenue, Downtown Las Vegas |
| Admission | $34.95 adult |
| Speakeasy add-on | $29 (or $39 combo) |
| Hours | 9am-9pm daily |
| Time needed | 2.5-3 hours |
| Year opened | 2012 |
| Building | 1933 Las Vegas Post Office & Federal Courthouse |
Officially the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, the Mob Museum opened in 2012 inside the restored 1933 federal courthouse — the same building where the Kefauver Committee hearings into organised crime were held in 1950. Three floors, more than 1,000 artefacts, and one of the highest-rated visitor experiences in Las Vegas.
🧮
USA Trip Cost Calculator
Planning Vegas? Get a personalised Las Vegas budget with our free travel calculator — flights, hotels, shows and daily costs.
Calculate now →Is the Mob Museum Worth It?
Yes — and it surprises people. Visitors expecting a cheesy Strip-style "mob experience" find instead a genuinely rigorous museum with artefacts from the FBI, DEA, and private collections that track organised crime from Prohibition through Whitey Bulger and the present-day Russian and Mexican cartels.
It consistently ranks in the top 3 Las Vegas attractions on every major review site. Plan 2.5 to 3 hours to do it justice; longer if you add the speakeasy.
- Three floors, roughly chronological top-down
- Most exhibits are interactive or include original video footage
- Free audio guide via your phone
- Gift shop has the best mob-related books in the US
- The coat check is free and useful — many exhibits need both hands
The 1933 Courthouse Setting
The building itself is a primary exhibit. It was Las Vegas's original federal post office and courthouse, designed in Neoclassical style in 1933 and one of the few surviving pre-war civic buildings downtown.
The third-floor Kefauver Hearings Room is a full restoration of the 1950 Senate courtroom where Senator Estes Kefauver dragged mob figures before televised hearings. Sit in the gallery seats, watch the original black-and-white footage on the screens, and the room maps to the frame you are looking at. It is quietly one of the best museum rooms in the country.
The Kefauver hearings were the first major event in US history carried live on nationwide television — 30 million Americans watched mob bosses pleading the Fifth in 1950, and the coverage helped define the new medium.
Must-See Exhibits
On a single visit, prioritise these:
| Exhibit | Floor | Why |
|---|
| St Valentine's Day Massacre Wall | 3rd | Actual brick wall from 1929 Chicago — bullet holes visible |
| Kefauver Hearings Room | 3rd | Restored Senate courtroom |
| Mob on Film | 2nd | Hollywood's relationship with the real mob |
| Tommy Guns & Weapons | 2nd | Functional Thompson submachine guns on display |
| Use of Force Experience | 1st | $15 extra — firearms simulator |
| Crime Lab | 1st | Hands-on forensics for kids 11+ |
| Nevada Gaming Control | 2nd | How Vegas was cleaned up from Siegel to Wynn |
The Massacre Wall is the museum's most famous artefact — the actual garage wall from 2122 North Clark Street in Chicago, where seven members of Bugs Moran's gang were machine-gunned on February 14, 1929. The wall was dismantled in 1967 and eventually donated to the museum.
Several exhibits include autopsy photos and crime-scene footage. Parents with younger children should preview the content or skip certain galleries.
The Underground Speakeasy
The Underground is the basement speakeasy — a functioning Prohibition-era bar and distillery that opened in 2018. It is both a themed experience and an actual cocktail bar with its own moonshine distillery producing corn whiskey on-site.
- Separate ticket: $29 with general admission ($39 combo)
- Includes: speakeasy entry, one moonshine tasting flight
- Password required — printed on your ticket
- Hidden door inside the museum
- Full bar with Prohibition-era cocktails ($14-18)
- 21+ only for alcohol tastings; minors can enter for the distillery tour
The Underground can also be accessed in the evening without a museum ticket — walk-in cocktails after 5pm, separate street entrance. The "Shine Tasting Experience" at $29 is good value if you like moonshine or have never tried it.
Book The Underground tasting for 4pm and finish the museum with it. The moonshine flight is a strong sendoff.
Tickets and Pricing
Tickets are sold on mobmuseum.org, at the door, or via GetYourGuide. Advance booking saves a few dollars and skips the queue.
| Ticket | Price | Notes |
|---|
| Adult general admission | $34.95 | Ages 18-64 |
| Senior 65+ | $31.95 | ID required |
| Young adult 11-17 | $24.95 | — |
| Child under 11 | Free | Must be with paid adult |
| The Underground add-on | $29 | Includes moonshine flight |
| Combo (museum + Underground) | $39-59 | Best value if you're doing both |
| Nevada resident | $26 adult | State ID required |
| Military | $27 | Active & veteran |
Last entry is one hour before close (8pm). Plan to arrive by 5pm at latest on a full-museum visit.
Getting There and Pairings
The Mob Museum is in downtown Las Vegas, not on the Strip. That is actually a feature — you combine it with the other best non-Strip attractions into one excellent half-day.
- From Strip: 10-15 min drive, $12-20 Uber
- Deuce bus (24-hour pass $8): runs Strip to Downtown, 30-45 min
- Parking: $10 lot next to the museum
- Walk: 2 blocks from Fremont Street Experience (free light show after dark)
Pair the Mob Museum with: the Neon Museum (15 minutes away — see our separate guide), Fremont Street Experience, and dinner at an old-school Vegas joint like Hugo's Cellar at Four Queens or Carson Kitchen. That is a complete downtown Vegas day.
The best Vegas day for culture fans: Mob Museum 10am-1pm, lunch on Fremont, Neon Museum day tour 2pm-3pm, return after dark for the Neon night show and Fremont light show. Two museums, one Uber loop.