Orbitz
  • Quick Search
  • Vacations
  • Hotels
  • Flights
  • Cars and Rail
  • Cruises
  • Activities
  • Deals

Welcome to Orbitz.

Sign in | Register now
Site feedback
Search (beach, Atlantis, Broadway, ...)
  • My Trips
  • My Account
OrbitzTLC
  • TLC Home
  • Traveler Update
  • Customer Service


deals
  Home / Flights on America West Arilines / America West Arilines Flights from Seattle (SEA) to Las Vegas (LAS)

America West Arilines Flights from Seattle (SEA) to Las Vegas (LAS)

Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on America West Arilines, which operates 2 non-stop flights from Seattle (SEA) to Las Vegas (LAS) departing between 2:44pm and 5:30pm on select days of the week. Usually an Airbus A319 or Boeing 737-300 is flown for this route. The average travel time from Seattle, WA to Las Vegas, NV is 2 hours and 18 minutes.

Quick Flight Searches

Weekend Trips - Search
 

Upcoming weekend flight specials and airline deals on flights to Las Vegas (LAS) from Seattle (SEA)

Weekend travel in January 2008 from SEA to LAS
Weekend travel in February 2008 from SEA to LAS
Weekend travel in March 2008 from SEA to LAS


Vice versa? Search for last minute deals on airline tickets from Las Vegas (LAS) to Seattle (SEA)

Weekend travel in January 2008 from LAS to SEA
Weekend travel in February 2008 from LAS to SEA
Weekend travel in March 2008 from LAS to SEA

 

Great Travel Deals Anytime - Search  
 

Save money when you book a Las Vegas Vacation Package here

Need a discount hotel room in Las Vegas? Click here

Find airport hotel rooms near Las Vegas -- click here

Reserve your rental car in Las Vegas -- click here

Let DealDetector watch for deals from Seattle to Las Vegas

 

Regularly Scheduled Flights to Las Vegas (LAS) from Seattle (SEA)
Daily
Non-Stops
Select
Non-Stop
Earliest
Flight
Last
Flight
 
America West Arilines
-
2
2:44pm
5:30pm
-
1
8:05am
8:05am
1
1
12:15pm
4:40pm
-
5
8:15am
2:51pm
 


During your Las Vegas vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:

Fremont Hotel & Casino
This 32,000-square-foot casino -- it's much bigger than it initially looks -- offers a relaxed atmosphere. In some ways, it's more comfortable gambling here than on the Strip, possibly in part because the beautiful people don't bother with places like this. Though lots of other people do, and so it can be more crowded than other Downtown casinos, even during the day. Low gambling limits ($2 blackjack, 25¢ roulette, though not as many tables with these as we would like) help. It's also surprisingly open and bright for a Downtown casino. Just 50¢ could win you a Cadillac or Ford Mustang here, plus a progressive cash jackpot. Casino guests can accumulate bonus points redeemable for cash by joining the players club, and take part in frequent slot and keno tournaments. No giant slot machine, though.

Sam's Town
On its two immense floors of gaming action (153,083 sq. ft., second only to the MGM Grand in size), Sam's Town maintains the friendly, just-folks ambience that characterizes the entire property. The casino is adorned with Old West paraphernalia (horseshoes, Winchester rifles, holsters, and saddlebags) and is looking a bit less dated thanks to some recent sprucing up (it's subtle, but believe us, it's better). Sam's Town claims its friendliness extends to looser slots. Join the Sam's Town Slot Club to earn points toward rooms, meals, and cash rebates. Free gaming lessons are offered weekdays from 11am to 4pm, with poker lessons at other times.

Sahara
This is one place where there seem to be more tables than slots and video-poker machines. It's also one of the few Strip casinos that offers low rollers good deals such as $1 craps and blackjack. But belligerent drunks and other fun-killing folks are often found at these $1 tables. Still, on a recent visit, the high ceilings and the unexpected Arabian Nights touches over the tables were nicer than we remembered from previous visits (maybe it all got dusted recently) and we made a killing at blackjack, so now we love this place again. (What? We told you it was entirely arbitrary!) The Sahara runs frequent slot tournaments and other events, and its slot club, Club Sahara, offers cash rebates and other perks. Note: This is the only Strip casino that offers pan, a card game.


Make your reservations for discount hotel rooms in the Las Vegas area, including:

Orleans
The Orleans is a little out of the way, and there is virtually nothing around it, but with a 12-screen movie complex, complete with a food court and day-care center, a bowling alley (that keeps ridiculously late hours; we know more than one recent guest who found a 3-4am game just the right way to wind down after a hectic clubbing night), and a new 9,000-seat arena for a minor-league hockey team (but also available for concerts and the like), this is a reasonable alternative to staying on the hectic Strip. Plus, there is a shuttle that runs continuously to the Barbary Coast on the Strip. The facade is aggressively fake New Orleans, more reminiscent of Disneyland than the actual Big Easy. Inside it's much of the same. But a bright casino (complete with Cajun and zydeco music over the loudspeakers) and a policy of handing out Mardi Gras beads at all the restaurants and bars (ask if you haven't gotten yours) make for a pleasantly festive atmosphere.If the prices hold true (as always, they can vary), this hotel is one of the best bargains in town, despite the location, though the staff can be rotten, which can seriously sour a bargain experience. (On the other hand, room service seems fine.) The rooms are nice enough and you'll find the largest standard rooms in town, or so the hotel claims. They all have a definite New Orleans-French feel. Each is L-shaped, with a seating alcove by the windows, and comes complete with an old-fashioned, overstuffed chair and sofa. The beds have brass headboards, the lamps (including some funky iron floor lamps) look antique, and lace curtains flutter at the windows. The one drawback is that all these furnishings, and the busy floral decorating theme, make the room seem crowded (particularly down by the seating area in front of the bathrooms). Still, it's meant to evoke a cozy, warm Victorian parlor, which traditionally is very overcrowded, so maybe it's successful after all. There are 1,400 newer rooms in a recently built tower, and these hold to the same surprisingly nice standard.The hotel has your basic Vegas-type places to eat. Worth noting is the moderately priced Italian Sazio, Big Al's Oyster Bar, a not unauthentic Creole/Cajun-themed restaurant, and Don Miguel's, a basic but satisfying Mexican restaurant that makes its own tortillas while you watch. There are several bars, including one with live music at night. The Orleans Showroom is an 827-seat theater featuring live entertainment, the Orleans Arena is a 9,000-plus-seat facility for concerts and sporting events, and, of course, there's a casino.Facilities: Casino; showroom; 12 restaurants; 2 outdoor pools; health club; 70-lane bowling center; 12 movie theaters; Kids Tyme children's center offering amusements and day care for kids 12 and under; video arcade; concierge; tour desk; car-rental desk; airport shuttle; 24-hr. room service; laundry service; dry cleaning; nonsmoking rooms; executive-level rooms.

Palms Resort & Casino
One of the hottest of the newer hotels, given quite the PR boost when it was Britney's base for her wedding debacle. In keeping with the tropical-foliage name, it's more or less Miami-themed (but without the pastels), with a strange aversion toward straight lines (really, check out all those curves). Inside a bland building is a pretty nice complex -- which we say only because it's a puzzle that the place is such a hot spot (though we predict that by the time you read this, the beautiful person clientele will have shifted in large part to THEhotel). That's mostly due to the nightlife options -- both Ghost Bar and the nightclub Rain have lines of people every night the facilities are open, offering to sell their firstborn sons for a chance to go inside. Why did those two places catch on so? Not really sure (though you can read our speculations about both in chapter 10), but you need to know that the entrances to them stand right by the elevators to your hotel room, which means on a busy weekend night, there can be upwards of 4,000 gorgeous and antsy (if not angry) people standing between you and access to your hotel room. If you are a Hilton sister, or wish to see if one will date you, this could be heaven, but if encountering the beautifully dressed and coifed, with 0% body fat and sullen expressions of entitlement, and the 19-year-olds who seek to become all of that (and usually affect a thuggish demeanor) makes you, like us, itch, this might not be the most comfortable place to stay.Having said all that, note that The Palms has perhaps some of the most comfortable beds in Vegas, thanks to fluffy pillows and duvets that make one reluctant to rise, plus big TVs and huge bathrooms. The main pool is oddly cheap looking -- it's really a posing spot rather than a splash, while a second pool has a bar and mermaids swimming in the water at night. Also on the property is Alizé, in competition for the title Best Restaurant in Town (and owner of the title Most Gorgeous and Romantic Restaurant), a cheap and hearty buffet, movies theaters, a McDonald's, and other reliable cheap chain eateries.

TI at the Mirage
Huh? What happened to Treasure Island? What happened to the pirates? Why, Vegas grew up, that's what. Or, rather, it wants the kids it once actively tried to court to grow up, or at least, not come around until they are able to drink and gamble properly.Originally the most modern family-friendly hotel, the former Treasure Island was a blown-up version of Disneyland's Pirates of the Caribbean. But that's all behind them now, and the name change is there to make sure you understand this is a grown-up, sophisticated resort. There might still be the odd pirate element here and there, but only because someone absent-mindedly missed it in a recent ruthless purging of the last remnants. The latest victim is the pirate stunt show out front; it's been revamped so that the pirates, and you have no idea how much we wish we were making this up, now "battle" scantily clad "strippers" -- er, "sirens."To be fair, none of this matters a whit, unless, like us, you got a kick out of the skulls and crossbones, and treasure chests bursting with jewels and gold, that originally decorated the place. What remains, after they stripped the pirate gilt, is such a nice place to stay that in some ways, it even outranks its older sister, The Mirage. The well-sized rooms pretty much follow the pattern of The Mirage's last phase of room decor -- modified French Regency with a mélange of patterns, but the monochromatic color (many shades of gold) tones it down, and overall, while not distinctive, per se, they are much nicer than most in their price range. Good bathrooms feature a large soaking tub -- a bather's delight. Best of all, Strip-side rooms have a view of the pirate battle -- views are best from the sixth floor on up. You know, so you can see right down the sirens' dresses.The hotel offers a premier restaurant, the Buccaneer Bay Club, a hotel buffet, and the new branch of Los Angeles's Canter's deli that just opened. The Battle Bar, in the casino near the race and sports book, is being redone as we write this, but does provide patio seating overlooking Buccaneer Bay; for the best possible view of what's now going to be called "The Sirens of TI," arrive at least 45 minutes before the show and snag a table by the railing. Treasure Island is home to Cirque du Soleil's Mystère , one of the best shows in town.A free tram travels between Treasure Island and The Mirage almost around the clock. For a good photo op, sit in the front of the first car: As you leave the loading dock, note how The Mirage, palm trees, and a bit of the New York-New York skyline are framed in an attractive, and surreal, manner.There's a full-service spa and health club with a complement of machines, plus sauna, steam, whirlpool, massage, on-site trainers, TVs and stereos with headsets, and anything else you might need (including a full line of Sebastian grooming products in the women's locker room). There's a $20-per-day fee to use the facilities.The pool is not that memorable, with none of the massive foliage and other details that make the one at The Mirage stand out (so blah is it that the staff didn't even bother to check room keys when last we swam here). It's a large, free-form swimming pool with a 230-foot loop slide and a nicely landscaped sun-deck area. It's often crawling with kids, so if that's a turn-off, go elsewhere.Facilities: Casino; showrooms; 11 restaurants; outdoor pool; fitness center and spa; concierge; tour desk; car-rental desk; business center; shopping arcade; 24-hr. room service; laundry service; dry cleaning; nonsmoking rooms; executive-level rooms.


  Quick Search

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Expand search options (Multi-city, non-stops, preferred airlines, etc.)

One-way | Flexible dates

Total guests in all rooms
Need 5+ rooms?
(US and Canada)

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Expand search options (Hotel Chain, specific hotel name, amenities, star rating, promotion code, etc.)

Please note: pick-up and drop-off are at the same location.

Please note: pick-up and drop-off are at the same location.

Expand search options (Automatic/manual transmission, discounts, air conditioning, etc.)

Select a location
Travel date range

1

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

1

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

1

Note: An infant who turns 2 before or during travel requires a child's fare.

I have a promotion code.

What's this?

Enter your promotion code, then look for hotels marked with the icon Coupon.

Need help booking your trip?

Book online or call

1-800-504-3248 (toll free)

 
 

Other direct flights to Las Vegas (LAS) on America West Arilines

Flights from Charlotte (CLT)
Flights from El Paso (ELP)
Flights from New York (JFK)
Flights from Oakland (OAK)
Flights from Ontario (ONT)
Flights from Phoenix (PHX)
Flights from Pittsburgh (PIT)
Flights from Sacramento (SMF)
Flights from Tucson (TUS)
Flights from Washington (DCA)

 

Other direct flights from Seattle (SEA) on America West Arilines

Flights to Phoenix (PHX)
 
 
 

Top hotel destinations

Top vacations

Orbitz guards your privacy and security. We're certified by TRUSTe and Verisign.
© 2001 - 2007, Orbitz, LLC. All rights reserved.
CST 2063530-50; Hawaii TAR-5627; Iowa 644; Nevada 2003-0387; Washington 602-102-724