On the ground
Staying safe in Las Vegas
Las Vegas is a major tourist city, and most trips are trouble-free with ordinary big-city awareness. The two things visitors most often underestimate are the desert environment — heat, sun, and dehydration in and out of the city — and the ordinary pickpocket-and-distraction risks of a crowded, late-night resort corridor.
On the Strip and downtown
Use the same care you would in any busy nightlife district: keep an eye on drinks and belongings, be wary of street distractions and unsolicited offers, and cross the Strip using the pedestrian bridges rather than the road, which is busy and not designed for jaywalking. The Strip and Fremont Street are heavily trafficked late into the night, so you are rarely alone, but crowds are also where opportunistic theft happens.
Drink water alongside alcohol — the dry desert air dehydrates you faster than you notice, and heat plus alcohol is a common cause of visitors feeling unwell. Pace yourself, especially in summer.
Desert heat and sun
From late spring through early fall, the heat is a real hazard, not a backdrop. Carry and drink more water than feels necessary, wear sun protection, and move outdoor activity to the early morning or evening. The National Weather Service issues excessive-heat warnings for the valley in summer; heat illness can come on quickly, so recognise the warning signs and get to shade and air conditioning.
This applies inside the city as much as on trails — a long midday walk between resorts in July is genuinely taxing. Treat the pool and air-conditioned interiors as part of your heat plan.
Desert day trips
For Red Rock Canyon, Hoover Dam and Lake Mead, and Mount Charleston, plan for the environment: carry plenty of water, tell someone your route, keep the fuel tank full, and check the land manager's conditions and any timed-entry or reservation rules before you leave. Cell coverage can be patchy once you leave the highway.
Flash flooding is a real risk in the desert during summer monsoon storms — never enter a flooded wash or drive across running water. In winter, Mount Charleston can require chains or see road closures, so check conditions with the Forest Service and the Nevada Department of Transportation before driving up.
Sources
Reviewed source trail
- National Weather Service — Las Vegas (heat safety) — checked 2026-07-12
- BLM — Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area — checked 2026-07-12
- National Park Service — Lake Mead National Recreation Area safety — checked 2026-07-12
- USDA Forest Service — Spring Mountains National Recreation Area — checked 2026-07-12