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Day Pass Coworking in Las Vegas: How It Works at Muze Office

Muze Office Team·April 18, 2026·7 min read
Day Pass Coworking in Las Vegas: How It Works at Muze Office

If you've landed in Las Vegas for a few days — a convention, a client meeting, a long layover that's turned into a work afternoon — the hotel lobby is not going to cut it. Slot machine chatter, patchy WiFi, a table that's six inches too low, and a $9 coffee that's mostly ice.

A day pass at a real coworking space fixes all of that. You walk in, pay a flat rate, and get a desk, fast internet, free parking, and a quiet room that was actually designed for work. This post walks through how a day pass works at Muze Office in Las Vegas, how to plan your visit, and who it's the right call for.

What a Day Pass Includes

A day pass at Muze Office is $25 and gets you:

  • An open desk in the shared coworking workspace
  • High-speed WiFi
  • Unlimited coffee and water
  • Free parking
  • Access to phone booths for calls
  • Printing available on-site
  • Business-hours access (Monday–Friday, 10 a.m. – 7 p.m.)

No membership, no long-term commitment, no setup. You pay for the day, you work the day, you leave.

A person working at a modern desk in a coworking space with a laptop and coffee

If you need a meeting room for a client call or interview, you can add one starting at $25/hour for a huddle room (2–4 people), $50/hour for a conference room (6–8), or $75/hour for the boardroom (10–14). All meeting rooms include AV equipment, video conferencing, whiteboards, and a real conference-room door — not a booth between slot machines.

Where It Is — and Why That Matters

Muze Office is at 6860 Bermuda Rd, Suite 200, Las Vegas, NV 89119. A few specifics make the location worth pointing out:

  • 10 minutes from Harry Reid International Airport (LAS). If you're flying in, it's a short ride from the terminal. If you've got a long layover, you can work an afternoon and be back at the gate without cutting it close.
  • Off I-215, away from Strip traffic. You're not stuck behind rideshare queues on Las Vegas Boulevard. The highway exit is two minutes from the door.
  • Free parking on-site. Not a $40 valet charge. Not a self-park garage three blocks away. Parking at the building, included in the day pass.
  • 89119 business corridor, not the Strip. This matters more than it sounds. Strip-area workspaces are built around events, entertainment, and high foot traffic. Ours is built around people trying to get work done — quieter, lower-stimulus, no casino-floor energy.

If you're staying on the Strip, a rideshare to the door is usually 10–15 minutes depending on traffic. If you're at a hotel near the airport or in Summerlin, it's often faster.

A Typical Day

Here's what the visit actually looks like, start to finish.

10:00 a.m. — Arrive. Park in the free lot. Come in through the main entrance. Check in at the front desk. If you're a first-time visitor, a team member will walk you through the space — desks, phone booths, coffee bar, restrooms, printer, meeting rooms.

10:15 a.m. — Pick a desk. The shared coworking room has open seating. Take any desk that's available. Most visitors land somewhere with good natural light and a clear sightline to the window or the cafe area, depending on preference. Near the phone booths is useful if you take calls; away from them is useful if you need deep focus.

10:30 a.m. — Start working. WiFi comes up instantly — no captive portal, no flaky hotspot. Coffee is self-serve. Water too. Bring a laptop, headphones, whatever charger you use. Everything else is there.

12:30 p.m. — Lunch. There are several options near the building, and you can take calls from the phone booths without worrying about background noise. If you brought food, the cafe area has seating.

2:00 p.m. — Afternoon block. Maybe a client call from a phone booth. Maybe an hour in a huddle room if you booked one for a video interview. Maybe just a long stretch of heads-down work at the desk.

6:45 p.m. — Wrap up. The space closes at 7 p.m. weekdays. Most day-pass visitors pack up by 6:30 or 6:45 so they're not rushed. Print anything you need to take with you. Grab a last coffee for the road.

7:00 p.m. — Leave. Pull your stuff, head out. The day's done, you've put in a real block of work, and you're back at your hotel — or the airport, or dinner on Fremont — within minutes.

Who Day Passes Are Built For

A few profiles come through often enough that the day pass is essentially tailored to them.

Convention and event attendees. If you're in town for CES, SEMA, NAB, MAGIC, World of Concrete, or any of the other major Vegas shows, a day pass is the antidote to working from the convention-center food court. We also run a dedicated convention coworking tier for multi-day visits — same $25/day, with weekly passes for people staying the full convention week.

Digital nomads and remote workers passing through. You're in town for a few days, you want to keep the rhythm going. Hotel lobbies and coffee shops are fine for an hour. For an actual half-day of work, a real desk is dramatically better.

Business travelers between meetings. A three-hour gap between a morning meeting on the Strip and an evening flight is enough time to get real work done — if you have somewhere to do it. A day pass turns that dead time into a productive afternoon.

Locals testing the space. If you're weighing whether a full coworking membership makes sense, a day pass is the low-commitment way to try the space before paying for a month. Most people who become Hot Desk or Dedicated Desk members did a day pass first.

Home-based Vegas workers with a noisy week. The contractors are in the house. A kid is home sick. The neighbor is doing yard work. Pay $25, get out of the chaos, get your deadline done.

🏢 Related: Coworking Near Las Vegas Airport — more detail on the airport-adjacent setup if you're flying in.

Day Pass vs. Hotel Lobby vs. Coffee Shop

A quick side-by-side for anyone still debating:

  • Hotel lobby. Free, but loud. WiFi is usually rationed. Seating is built for cocktails, not laptops. Calls happen within earshot of a dozen strangers. Fine for 20 minutes between meetings, rough for a half-day of work.
  • Coffee shop. Table for 90 minutes before you feel obligated to move. WiFi varies wildly. No phone booths. No real printing. Background noise makes calls difficult. Good for a single focused hour, not much more.
  • Hotel business center. Usually two aging PCs and a printer that charges per page. Not a workspace — a kiosk.
  • Day pass at a real coworking space. Flat $25. Real desk. Fast WiFi. Phone booths for calls. Printer on-site. Free parking. Built explicitly for working.

For anything longer than an hour, the math doesn't really favor the others.

What It's Not

A few things to set expectations honestly:

  • It's not 24/7. Day passes run during business hours, 10 a.m. – 7 p.m. Monday through Friday. If you need after-hours or weekend access, a Dedicated Desk membership is what you want.
  • It's not a private office. You're in the shared coworking room. Good for most work. If you need to take back-to-back confidential calls, book a meeting room for the hour you need it.
  • It's not an event venue. If you're planning a gathering for 20+ people, our event space is the right fit — not the day pass.

Ready to Visit?

You can walk in during business hours and pay at the front desk, or call ahead if you want to confirm availability on a busy convention week.

Muze Office is at 6860 Bermuda Rd, Suite 200, Las Vegas, NV 89119. Ten minutes from the airport, off I-215, free parking, real desks, fast WiFi. Not a casino. Not a hotel lobby. A real workspace.

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