Long gone are the days when Las Vegas was known as the home of $.99 steak and eggs. It’s now one of the world’s great food cities, with Michelin-starred eateries at every turn… and prices to match the elevated offerings. Much has been made lately about Vegas’ notoriously sky-high costs — and one visitor’s breakfast bill has become the internet’s new favorite example of how extreme the city’s add-on fees have become.
The receipt — posted on Reddit by a traveler who ordered basic French toast, pancakes, and an American breakfast — showed a subtotal of $89 for the food items. But by the time they reached the bottom line, the total had climbed to $142.05. The culprit was four separate mandatory fees, all tacked onto a single room-service order at a major Strip resort.
The bill included an automatic gratuity, a service charge, a 22 percent pre-added tip, plus a separate “room service upgrade” fee — all on top of regular sales tax. Travelers were stunned.
“That’s itemized greed,” one person wrote, summing up a sentiment shared across thousands of comments. Many said they would have disputed the charge entirely. Others joked that Las Vegas has become as notorious as a company well known (and loathed) for its mandatory fees: “If Ticketmaster were a city,” one wrote.
And while this specific receipt came from the Cosmopolitan, it also reflects a bigger trend that is turning some people away from Sin City. The Strip has quietly shifted from cheap shrimp cocktails and loss-leader buffets to stacked resort fees, parking surcharges, convenience fees, mandatory tips, and auto-gratuities that often overlap — and aren’t always clearly disclosed.
Some commenters reported that hotels automatically waive certain fees when guests complain. But critics argue that only reinforces a system where the “penalty” falls on polite customers who don’t push back.
“It’s a shame too, because you used to be able to do Vegas cheaply,” one commenter wrote.
The frustration mirrors recent travel-industry data showing visitors increasingly view Las Vegas as just too expensive to be fun — or even feasible — anymore.

