Coworking Near CES Las Vegas: Off-Site Workspace

CES — the Consumer Electronics Show — opens the Las Vegas convention calendar every January and is the single largest event the city hosts. CES 2026 runs January 6–9, 2026 (with media days January 4–5 and an opening keynote the evening of January 5), and CES 2027 is scheduled for January 6–9, 2027. It is a trade-only show: registration is restricted to qualified industry professionals working in technology, retail, media, and related fields, drawing more than 140,000 attendees and over 4,500 exhibitors from roughly 160 countries.
Unlike a single-hall show, CES sprawls. It spans three main campuses and a dozen-plus official venues — the Las Vegas Convention Center (Tech East), The Venetian Expo and Caesars Forum (Tech West), and additional programming at ARIA, Mandalay Bay, and the Sphere. Walking even one campus is a day's work, and shuttling between Tech East and Tech West eats hours. By 9am every hotel lobby is a makeshift coworking floor, every business center has a line, and every cafe within a mile of the LVCC is full.
If you're exhibiting, taking meetings, or just trying to ship real work between sessions, you need an actual desk — not a hotel couch with a dying battery on a network shared with 50,000 other guests.
Getting from Muze Office to CES venues
Muze Office sits at 6860 Bermuda Rd, Suite 200, in the Enterprise/Paradise area just south of the airport. That location is unusually convenient for CES because it's close to both the convention halls and the campus where most international exhibitors land:
| Destination | Approx. drive | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Las Vegas Convention Center (Tech East) | ~10 min | Via I-215 to Paradise Rd; free parking at our building |
| Venetian Expo / Caesars Forum (Tech West) | ~12–15 min | Strip-side; skip Strip garage rates by working off-site |
| Harry Reid International Airport (LAS) | ~10 min | Land, drop bags, work before check-in opens |
We're about two minutes from I-215, so you avoid the Strip gridlock that swallows CES week. Parking at our building is free and on-site — a real cost difference when LVCC and Strip-resort event parking runs into the tens of dollars per day during the show, often paid on top of a rideshare back to your hotel. For a four-day show, free parking plus a short, predictable drive is the kind of logistics edge that adds up.
Why CES attendees specifically benefit from off-site workspace
CES is a deal-making show. The exhibit floor is for demos and handshakes; the actual work — scoping a partnership, writing the follow-up, prepping tomorrow's investor pitch, filing the story — happens elsewhere. A few attendee profiles get the most out of a quiet off-site base:
- Startup founders and exhibitors at Eureka Park and the show floor. When a buyer or VC wants "a real conversation, not on the floor," you need a room you control — not a noisy lounge where the next badge-scan is 30 seconds away. A booked meeting room reads as far more credible than a hotel-bar table.
- Engineers and product teams running live demos. CES is notorious for saturated wireless. Our dedicated high-speed WiFi and quiet phone booths let you rehearse a demo, push a hotfix, or join a video call with the team back home on a connection that actually holds.
- Press, analysts, and content creators. With 6,000+ media on the ground, deadlines are brutal. A quiet desk to cut a video, transcribe interviews, and file copy beats a packed press room.
- Sales teams from out of town. Run your morning standup, qualify leads from yesterday, and stage same-day follow-ups from one base instead of three different hotel lobbies.
Because CES is trade-only and global, many attendees are also setting up or evaluating a U.S. presence while they're here. Nevada has no state income tax, no corporate income tax, and no franchise tax on most small businesses — one reason founders pair a CES trip with a Las Vegas virtual office for a real local business address and mail handling. If you're scoping a second market, join Houston early access for the planned Galleria-area location.
What to book: day pass vs. meeting room
For a CES attendee, the decision is simple and depends on what the day demands:
- Book a Day Pass ($25) if you mainly need a reliable desk, fast WiFi, coffee, phone booths, and free parking between sessions. It's booked online, same-day if you need it, with no membership or commitment — ideal for solo attendees, press on deadline, and engineers who just need a quiet place to work. Come the days you need; skip the days you don't.
- Book a meeting room (from $25/hr) the moment you have a scheduled conversation — a buyer meeting, a partner negotiation, an investor pitch, or a small team debrief. Rates run from a Huddle Room ($25/hr, 2–4 people) to a Conference Room ($50/hr, 6–8) to a Boardroom ($75/hr, 10–14), all with AV and video conferencing. For exhibitors with back-to-back meetings, block a half-day rather than booking hour by hour.
A practical pattern for a founder or sales lead: a Day Pass as your home base for the week, plus a meeting room reserved only for the hours you have real meetings on the calendar. You keep costs low on the quiet hours and look sharp when it counts.
Need more than a few people for a launch dinner or partner mixer? Our event space starts at $99/hr with no food-and-beverage minimum — a flexible alternative to a marked-up resort meeting room during the busiest week of the year.
Beyond CES
Las Vegas hosts conventions year-round. Whether you're in town for SEMA, NAB, MAGIC, or any of the dozens of annual trade shows, Muze Office is about 10 minutes from the LVCC with the same pricing, the same availability, and the same free parking.



