Recording studios in Las Vegas, Nevada are no longer a niche corner of the production scene. The city has dedicated podcast and video studios, full-service music rooms, voiceover booths, and live-streaming facilities, all within a 20-minute radius of the Strip. The catch: most are built for one specific kind of work. Walk into the wrong type of room and you pay for gear you do not need and miss the gear you do.
This buyer's guide breaks down how to choose a recording studio in Las Vegas by what you are actually recording. We cover the four main categories (podcast and video, music, voiceover, livestream), 2026 pricing ranges, and 2 to 4 named picks per category. If your show is podcast or video based, you can book a free in-person tour of our rooms at any point.
HOW TO CHOOSE A RECORDING STUDIO IN LAS VEGAS
Get clear on these six criteria before you compare facilities. They matter more than brand names or hourly rates.
1. Match the room to your format. Music tracking, podcast and video, and voiceover rooms are not interchangeable. The closer the room is to your format, the better your finished product looks and sounds.
2. Confirm what is included in the hourly rate. Some studios quote a low room rate and charge separately for the engineer, mic rental, camera operators, editing, and file delivery. The cheap room with five add-ons is often more expensive than the all-inclusive room once the invoice lands.
3. Engineer included, or DIY? Cheaper hourly rentals are often unmanned. A pro engineer riding levels in real time is the difference between a clean master and hours of post-production cleanup.
4. Camera count and video capability. For podcast and video work, two cameras is a minimum, three to six is a real production. One fixed camera or a webcam is effectively audio-only.
5. Deliverables and turnaround. Raw multi-track audio, live-cut video, isolated camera files, and an edited highlight reel are all different deliverables. Get this in writing.
6. Location and access. Factor in parking, freight access, and ground-floor entry. A studio 45 minutes away on a fight weekend is a different commitment than one ten minutes from the Strip. Las Vegas traffic varies wildly by week. CES, NAB, MAGIC, and major fight weekends can double drive times in and around the Strip corridor, so a studio that is technically closer on a map may take longer to reach during peak weeks. If you record on a recurring schedule, prioritize a room you can reach reliably regardless of what is happening at the convention center.
One more thing the best Las Vegas recording studios all have in common: they publish their pricing. If a facility will not put an hourly rate on its website or share a clear rate card by email before a tour, treat that as a yellow flag. Transparent pricing is a leading indicator of a transparent invoice. The local studios that built reputations over the last decade share their rates openly, walk you through what is included before you book, and send a written estimate so there is no ambiguity once you arrive. The rooms that win in Las Vegas are not always the cheapest, but they are almost always the clearest.
CATEGORY 1: PODCAST AND VIDEO RECORDING STUDIOS LAS VEGAS
Podcast and video recording studios are built for multi-camera, multi-mic, sit-down conversational content. The best rooms bundle broadcast cameras, an LED wall, podcast-grade microphones at every seat, an audio engineer, a technical director, and a production manager into the hourly rate.
Typical Las Vegas pricing: roughly $400 to $800 per hour for a fully-staffed, all-inclusive studio. Cheaper hourly rentals exist (often $150 to $300 per hour) but usually strip out the production team and the LED wall.
Sin City Podcast Studios
We are biased, and we will tell you why anyway. Sin City Podcast Studios runs three custom rooms at 4005 W Reno Ave Suite F. Studio 5 is a 6-camera setup with a 14-ft LED wall and an anchor desk for four hosts plus two guests, ideal for news-style and panel shows. The Roundtable is podcast-optimized for 2 to 4 people with multi-camera video and an optional 12-ft LED wall. The Lounge is a couch-and-chair setup with mood lighting and an optional 12-ft LED wall, built for lifestyle and long-form interviews. Every booking includes a dedicated audio engineer, technical director, and production manager. Book a free studio tour to see the rooms.
Other podcast and video options in Las Vegas:
- Plot Twist Podcast Studio. A long-standing local option oriented toward 2 to 3 person shows with a fixed branded set and basic multi-camera coverage. A reasonable fit if your format never changes and you do not need an LED wall.
- HUSTLE Podcast Studio. Compact rentable room focused on first-time and one-off podcast creators, with a simpler camera setup and a smaller production footprint.
- Agency-attached production studios. A handful of marketing agencies in town rent out their in-house video sets between client shoots, useful if you also want production help packaged in.
For a side-by-side rundown of the podcast-specific rooms in town, our best podcast studios in Las Vegas roundup goes deeper.
CATEGORY 2: MUSIC RECORDING STUDIOS LAS VEGAS
Music recording studios are designed for tracking instruments and vocals, mixing, and mastering. They are not the right call for podcast or video work, because they typically have no camera infrastructure and no on-camera lighting.
Typical Las Vegas pricing: around $75 to $250 per hour for tracking depending on the room's size and reputation, with full-day lockouts ranging from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars. Mixing day rates are usually quoted separately.
Well-known music rooms in the Las Vegas area:
- The Hideout Recording Studio. Long-running multi-room facility, well-regarded for tracking and mixing across rock, hip-hop, and pop.
- Odds On Recording Studios (Henderson area). Larger live-room setup, historically used for full-band sessions and post-production work.
- 11th Street Studios. Independent room with a loyal following in the local hip-hop and R&B scene.
- Independent producer rooms. Several producers in the Vegas market also rent out their personal studios by the day for vocal tracking and pre-production.
Match the engineer, not just the room
Pick the room based on the resident engineer's discography and whether they have tracked your genre. Tour at least two music studios in person, listen to recent reference mixes the engineer made there, and confirm whether the day rate covers tracking only or includes a rough mix.
CATEGORY 3: VOICEOVER AND AUDIOBOOK STUDIOS LAS VEGAS
Voiceover work, audiobook narration, commercial reads, e-learning, and ADR live in a different kind of room. A voiceover booth is small, deeply treated, isolated, and built around one or two large-diaphragm condenser microphones. Source-connect or ipDTL support is a plus if a client in another city needs to listen in live.
Typical Las Vegas pricing: roughly $40 to $150 per hour. Source-connect sessions are quoted at a slight premium.
Where to record voiceover in Las Vegas:
- The Hideout Recording Studio. Includes a side-room VO booth as part of its larger music facility, with an engineer included.
- Odds On Recording Studios. Offers voiceover bookings inside their treated rooms, suitable for longer narration sessions.
- Independent VO engineers. Working voiceover talent in Las Vegas typically operates a home booth and rents it (with their engineer time) to outside narrators by the hour.
- Audiobook-specialist producers. A small number of local producers focus specifically on long-form audiobook work and price per finished hour rather than per studio hour.
CATEGORY 4: LIVE STREAMING AND BROADCAST STUDIOS LAS VEGAS
Live streaming is its own category now. A real live streaming studio integrates encoding hardware, a streaming control room, chat monitoring, remote caller integration, and the ability to push one feed to multiple platforms at once.
Typical Las Vegas pricing: roughly $400 to $900 per hour. Live streaming carries a small premium because of the additional engineer and the technical risk of a live broadcast.
Live-stream-capable rooms in Las Vegas:
- Sin City Podcast Studios. All three rooms are wired for simultaneous multiplatform streaming with chat monitoring and remote caller integration, included in the standard hourly rate. Book a free tour.
- Plot Twist Podcast Studio. Offers basic single-platform live streaming for hosts who only need a YouTube or Twitch push without multi-camera switching.
- Esports and gaming-focused rooms. A small number of esports-adjacent studios in town are built around Twitch and YouTube Gaming workflows with gaming PCs already racked.
- Convention and event broadcast rentals. During CES, NAB, and major fight weeks, several Strip venues offer short-term broadcast packages with on-site engineers, for event-specific use rather than ongoing shows.
WHAT TO BUDGET
A rough rule of thumb for 2026 Las Vegas recording: a one-hour podcast episode with broadcast video usually lands between roughly $500 and $750 once everything is included. A four-hour music tracking session in a mid-tier room is typically $600 to $1,000. A one-hour voiceover session for a commercial spot is usually $75 to $200 with the engineer. For a deeper breakdown, see our podcast studio cost in Las Vegas guide and the pricing page.
The biggest budgeting mistake is comparing the headline hourly rate of two studios without comparing what is included. A $250 per hour video room with a $150 per hour engineer add-on, a $200 lighting fee, and a $300 editing fee for one hour comes out close to $900 by the time you walk out. An all-inclusive rate from a full-service room is often lower and more predictable.
A SIMPLE DECISION FRAMEWORK
If you are still on the fence between two or three rooms, run them through a quick decision framework before you book. First, write down your format in one sentence (for example, "a weekly two-host video podcast with one remote guest"). Second, list the deliverables you actually need to publish (edited episode video, audio podcast file, vertical clips for social, a live stream). Third, ask each studio in writing what is included in the hourly rate, what the per-episode all-in cost looks like for your format, and how fast files come back. Fourth, book a free tour at the two finalists, sit in the chair, and listen. The room that feels right and matches your written format is almost always the right call. The room that requires three caveats to justify is the wrong one.
FINAL TAKE
The right recording studio in Las Vegas, Nevada is the one purpose-built for what you are recording, with a transparent rate, a real production team, and deliverables you can use the same week. Start with category, then compare full delivered cost. If your category is podcast and video or live streaming, see our three rooms and grab a free tour slot.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
What is the best recording studio in Las Vegas, Nevada?
It depends on what you are recording. For podcast and video, Sin City Podcast Studios. For music, the Hideout or Odds On. For voiceover, a dedicated VO booth.
How much does it cost to rent a recording studio in Las Vegas?
Roughly $50/hr for a small voiceover booth, $100 to $250/hr for a basic music tracking room, and $400 to $800/hr for a full-service podcast and video studio.
What is the difference between a podcast studio and a music studio in Las Vegas?
A podcast studio is built for multi-person video and audio with cameras and on-camera lighting. A music studio is built for tracking instruments and vocals with isolation booths and a curated mic locker.
Do Las Vegas recording studios include an engineer?
Music studios usually do. Many cheap podcast rooms are unmanned. Full-service podcast and video studios such as Sin City include an audio engineer, technical director, and production manager.
Can I record both video and audio at a Las Vegas recording studio?
Only at video-capable studios. Music studios typically have no cameras or on-camera lighting. Podcast and video studios capture both.
How far in advance should I book a Las Vegas recording studio?
Two to three weeks for a normal week. Four to six weeks for CES, NAB, MAGIC, and big fight or residency weekends.
What should I look for when choosing a recording studio in Las Vegas?
Match the room to your format, confirm what is included in the hourly rate, check the gear list and camera count, ask how files are delivered, and read recent reviews.
READY TO TOUR A LAS VEGAS RECORDING STUDIO?
Book a free in-person tour of our three custom-built rooms. We will walk you through the gear and help you pick the right studio for your show.
BOOK YOUR FREE TOUR