The Stadium

Sports Bar Arts District $$ ★ 4.6

For years the Arts District could pour you a hazy IPA, a natural wine, or a mezcal flight, but it could not show you the fourth quarter with the sound on. The Stadium, opened on Main Street in September 2025, fixed the neighborhood's one missing room.

1508 S Main St, on the Arts District's main run between Wyoming and Utah avenues. Ten minutes from the Strip by car. Parking: street and nearby lots, free after 6pm in most of the district.

Las Vegas Weekly covered the launch just in time for football season, and KTNV called it the first and only sports bar in the Arts District. The premise is deliberately local: 23 televisions with sound on for every major game, local pricing, an all ages welcome until evening, and a back patio that fills on Raiders Sundays.

"The Arts District finally has a room where the game outranks the playlist."

The room

It is a compact, locally owned build, not a casino floor plan. The 23 screens wrap a single open room, so sightlines survive from every table, and the sound on policy means you watch the broadcast instead of reading captions over someone's shoulder. The back patio adds overflow space and a quieter angle on the night.

Time it around the neighborhood's own calendar. On First Friday, the Arts District's monthly art walk, the surrounding blocks flood with foot traffic and the bar rides the wave. Daytime hours stay family friendly, which makes it one of the few rooms in this guide that works for a multigenerational game day.

Newness shows in the best way. The Google rating sits at 4.6, and the room still runs on first year energy, with owners on the floor most nights.

The location bet is smart. The Arts District has spent a decade filling with breweries, cocktail rooms, and wine bars, and its drinkers skew local and loyal. What the neighborhood lacked was a room those same locals could walk to for a Raiders or Golden Knights game without crossing the freeway. The Stadium slots into that gap exactly, and KTNV's launch coverage leaned on that point: all ages welcome, no casino floor, no resort markup.

Against the Strip rooms on this list it competes on intimacy rather than scale. Twenty three screens is a fraction of what the casino operations run, but every one of them is close, audible, and surrounded by people who ordered the same thing you did at the same price.

What to order

The food menu, posted at thestadiumlvnv.com, is elevated ballpark: flatbread pizzas, loaded nachos, and shareable game day plates. Drafts lean local, in keeping with the neighborhood. Happy hour runs 4pm to 6pm on weekdays and is priced for locals rather than tourists.

Who it is for

Arts District regulars who used to drive to the Strip for games, families catching a Saturday matinee window before the evening crowd, and anyone who grades a sports bar on whether the staff actually changes the channel when asked. Here they do.

Best time to go

Saturday and Sunday from the 10am open, when early windows meet the brunch crowd. Weekday happy hour, 4pm to 6pm, is the value play. Big fight nights fill the room fast given its size, so arrive an hour ahead.

It enters our ranking of the best sports bars in Las Vegas as the neighborhood pick. For the blocks around it, see our Arts District guide, or start from the full Las Vegas bar guide.

Sources

Verified against thestadiumlvnv.com, Las Vegas Weekly, KTNV, and Yelp. Rating and hours pulled June 11, 2026.

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