REVIEW · LAS VEGAS
Las Vegas: Museum of Illusions Entry Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Museum of Illusions Las Vegas · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Your brain will argue with your eyes here. I love the 50+ hands-on exhibits and the way the illusion rooms and holograms turn perception into a puzzle you can physically play with. It is a fun fit for family time, friend groups, and date nights because you can share the wow as you move from installation to installation. One consideration: it is not a traditional museum with quiet galleries, so the $44 ticket can feel like a lot if you expected a classic educational walkthrough.
You’ll find Museum of Illusions on the Strip at 63 CityCenter, between the Cosmopolitan and The Shops at Crystals (address: 3716 S. Las Vegas Blvd, Suite 1.02). With a 1-day entry ticket, you can focus on the parts that catch your eye and skip the ones that do not, which is great in a city where you are likely juggling other plans.
In This Review
- Key things that make this a good (or mixed) bet
- Museum of Illusions at 63 CityCenter: what you actually get
- Finding it fast on the Las Vegas Strip
- How the 50+ interactive exhibits shape your visit
- Illusion rooms, holograms, and scale tricks you can test
- The life-size kaleidoscope and why it feels different
- The brain-science angle: learning without a lecture
- Building a one-day Las Vegas plan around this stop
- Who should book Museum of Illusions Las Vegas entry
- Should you book this Las Vegas entry ticket?
- FAQ
- What is the price of the Museum of Illusions entry ticket?
- How long is the ticket valid?
- What is included with the ticket?
- Where is the Museum of Illusions located?
- What kinds of exhibits can I expect?
- Are there specific illusion features mentioned?
- Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
- Is the ticket refundable?
- How do I choose a starting time?
- Is this activity good for groups?
Key things that make this a good (or mixed) bet
- 50+ interactive exhibits built for hands-on play, not just looking
- Illusion rooms where you can experience tricks like scale changes
- Holograms and installations that mess with what your eyes think is real
- Defy gravity moments and body-transforming illusions like grow and shrink effects
- A life-size kaleidoscope you can actually walk into
- Strip location at 63 CityCenter, easy to pair with other Las Vegas stops
Museum of Illusions at 63 CityCenter: what you actually get

This is a ticketed attraction that leans hard into optical illusions as a mix of entertainment and basic brain science. Instead of standing in front of glass cases, you’re meant to interact—touch, pose, walk, and see how your brain interprets what it thinks it sees.
The value question here is simple: do you want a playful, interactive experience, or do you want a standard museum format? If you like hands-on exhibits that reward curiosity fast, you’ll probably have a great time. If you want slow, museum-style presentation with lots of factual depth, you may feel the ticket is asking for more “show” than “museum.”
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Las Vegas
Finding it fast on the Las Vegas Strip

Museum of Illusions is located at 63 CityCenter, 3716 S. Las Vegas Blvd, Suite 1.02. It sits on the Strip between the Cosmopolitan and The Shops at Crystals—one of those locations that is easy to anchor your plans around.
Practical tip: give yourself a little buffer. Strip foot traffic can be slow, and you do not want to stress about being in the right place at the right time slot. Once you’re there, the attraction is designed for quick movement between exhibits, so you can turn the stop into a smooth “one-day highlight” rather than a logistical headache.
How the 50+ interactive exhibits shape your visit

The big promise is 50+ interactive exhibits. That number matters because it changes the rhythm of your day. You are not likely to spend all your time on one single big room. Instead, you’ll get a stream of smaller installations that keep resetting your expectations.
Here’s what that means in real life:
- You can follow your curiosity instead of sticking to a single forced path.
- You’ll probably find a few favorite illusions, then skim the rest based on what grabs you.
- If you go with more than one person, everyone can have a “turn” in what feels like a photo-friendly and hands-on environment.
At $44 per person, the ticket is best viewed as paying for time in interactive play plus the chance to do lots of memorable illusions in one place. If you only plan to tolerate a couple exhibits, it may not feel fair. But if you’re the type who enjoys trying things and getting a little silly on purpose, the price starts to make sense.
Illusion rooms, holograms, and scale tricks you can test

A core part of the attraction is the set of illusion rooms, installations, and holograms. The whole point is to show how your brain makes assumptions about size, motion, and space—then you watch those assumptions get contradicted.
Based on what the museum advertises, you can expect illusions such as:
- Grow and shrink effects that make your body look different than it is
- Defy gravity moments that challenge what your eyes expect to happen
- A range of installations designed to trick perception step by step
I like this style of design because it turns you from observer into participant. You don’t need special knowledge. You just need eyes, a willingness to stand where the exhibit asks you to stand, and a sense of humor when the effect hits.
One small consideration: because many illusions are interactive and visual, the experience is likely more satisfying if you’re comfortable moving through rooms and taking your time to test what you see.
The life-size kaleidoscope and why it feels different

Among the highlights is the chance to walk into a life-size kaleidoscope. That’s an important detail because it is not just a visual display behind barriers—it’s something you can physically enter. When attractions do this well, it creates a full-body shift in perspective, and that is exactly what illusion experiences are trying to do.
If your group includes people who want the most memorable photo or the most “I can’t believe this is real” moment, the life-size setting is the kind of installation that tends to deliver. It’s also a good contrast to the more body-scaling tricks, since it changes how space around you looks.
You can also read our reviews of more museum experiences in Las Vegas
The brain-science angle: learning without a lecture

Museum of Illusions positions itself as an educational experience too: it’s about the science behind optical illusions and how the brain interprets reality. That does not mean it feels like a classroom. The learning happens through repeated cause-and-effect.
What you’ll likely notice as you move through exhibits is a recurring theme: your brain tries to create a stable story from incomplete visual info. Then the exhibit disrupts the cues—through perspective, scale, light, or motion—so your perception “fails” in a controlled way. That’s the value here. You leave with new awareness of how easily your senses can be steered.
If you’re the type who likes understanding the why behind the wow, this is a strong fit. If you just want fun and photos, the educational angle still supports it, but you can experience it at your own comfort level.
Building a one-day Las Vegas plan around this stop

This is a 1-day ticket. Since the museum is on the Strip, it is easiest to use as a flexible anchor in your schedule rather than something you cram between far-apart locations.
A practical way to plan:
- Pair it with a daytime or early evening block when the Strip crowds are still manageable for walking.
- Plan to spend enough time to revisit your favorite illusions. Some exhibits are easiest to understand after you’ve done a couple others first.
- Keep your expectations realistic: you are getting a high volume of interactive scenes, not a single long guided tour.
Also, Las Vegas days can be long. You’ll likely enjoy this more if you take breaks as needed. The attraction asks you to be active with your body and attention—so stay hydrated, wear comfortable shoes, and treat it like a hands-on indoor workout for your eyes.
Who should book Museum of Illusions Las Vegas entry

This is a strong match if you want:
- Interactive, visual fun with lots of different setups
- A shared activity for friends, family, or a date night
- A break from more traditional attractions on the Strip
It may be a weaker match if you:
- Expected a classic museum with slow-moving displays and curatorial depth
- Plan to treat the visit as a quick photo stop and then move on immediately
- Are looking for a tour format with named guides and structured explanations (the data here points to self-directed exhibit exploration)
Also, the museum has an accessibility-friendly note: it is wheelchair accessible, which is helpful for anyone planning around mobility needs.
Finally, a quick reality check on value: the listing shows a 4.1 rating from 22 reviews. Mixed opinions are common for interactive attractions, especially when expectations vary. If you’re excited by optical tricks and hands-on rooms, you’re more likely to feel the ticket cost makes sense.
Should you book this Las Vegas entry ticket?

I’d book Museum of Illusions if you want an easy Strip stop that turns perception into a full afternoon of experiments. The big reasons are the 50+ interactive exhibits, the presence of illusion rooms and holograms, and the high “wow per minute” factor of rooms designed for you to try things.
I would pause before booking if you’re coming specifically for a traditional museum experience. The attraction is built around playful illusion setups, so it is best for people who enjoy interactive environments and don’t need a quiet, gallery-first vibe.
If you decide to go, plan it like you’re entering a visual playground: go in with comfortable shoes, set aside time to test what you see, and let your group be part of the fun. That is when the $44 feels most justified.
FAQ

What is the price of the Museum of Illusions entry ticket?
The entry ticket costs $44 per person.
How long is the ticket valid?
The ticket is valid for 1 day. You should check availability to see starting times.
What is included with the ticket?
The ticket includes entry to the Museum of Illusions.
Where is the Museum of Illusions located?
It is located at 63 City Center, 3716 S. Las Vegas Blvd, Suite 1.02, on the Las Vegas Strip between the Cosmopolitan and The Shops at Crystals.
What kinds of exhibits can I expect?
You can expect over 50 immersive, hands-on exhibits, including illusion rooms, installations, and holograms.
Are there specific illusion features mentioned?
Yes. The museum highlights experiences like defying gravity, grow and shrink effects, and a life-size kaleidoscope you can walk into.
Is the museum wheelchair accessible?
Yes, the museum is wheelchair accessible.
Is the ticket refundable?
No. The activity is non-refundable.
How do I choose a starting time?
Check availability to see starting times for your selected date.
Is this activity good for groups?
The activity is described as a good fit for family adventures, friend groups, date nights, and group outings.

































