Caesars Palace Goes Full Imperial with New Luxury Villas
Posted on: January 16, 2026, 01:07h.
Last updated on: January 16, 2026, 01:22h.
- Caesars Palace has raised the bar on opulence with two gilded Colosseum Tower presidential villas and 29 Octavius Tower sky villas
- The renovations mark a 60th-anniversary push to rival Wynn, Venetian, and Fontainebleau’s highest-end offerings
- Villas at Caesars Palace start at $25K per night
Caesars Palace reminded the Las Vegas Strip who invented excess on Friday by unveiling several transformed high-roller suites. Two presidential villas in its Colosseum Tower and 29 sky villas in its Octavius Tower — designed by renowned Hong Kong-based interior designer Peter Silling & Associates — are available now for guest stays. According to the Caesars Palace villas inquiry website, prices start at $25K nightly.

One 8,060-square-foot presidential villa features brushed gold accents and soft lighting, while the 8,370-square-foot version showcases darker tones. Each rooftop suite features a 1,700-square-foot terrace with a travertine bar and a dark timber dining ensemble. And the two villas can connect into a single, 19K square-foot residence.

Also included in each presidential villa:
- Private elevator through a grand vestibule inspired by Roman gardens
- Entertainment lounge with a bar and a midnight marble billiard table
- Formal dining room with mirror-lined ceilings and a 10-seat Calacatta Oro marble table
- Courtyard lounge with skylight and terrace views
According to a Caesars press release, “presidents, world leaders, dignitaries and renowned celebrities have enjoyed these exclusive accommodations, which offer unmatched privacy, sophisticated design and dedicated butler service with personalized amenities.”

The sky villas — occupying the 68th and 69th floors of the Octavius Tower — are hardly slumming it, either. They include marble and metal, velvet and leather, and crystal and stone, soaring ceilings, sculptural lighting, and curated art.
Though the release describes the suites as “all new,” they were rebuilt from previous high-end suites occupying the same tower space.
Part of an ongoing transformation across Caesars Palace timed to coincide with its 60th anniversary in August, the new offerings represent Caesars Entertainment’s attempt to keep its heritage property competitive with the luxurious and more modern accommodations on offer at the Wynn, Venetian Paiza, MGM Skylofts, and Fontainebleau.
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