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Various hotels on the Las Vegas Strip, representing the Las Vegas hotels class action.
(Photo Credit: Kobby Dagan/Shutterstock)

Update:

  • A lawsuit alleging that Las Vegas Strip hotel operators collaborated to fix prices failed to advance in a federal court in Nevada because the judge says it missed key specifics to justify the claims.
  • U.S. District Judge Miranda M. Du says the lawsuit claimed the named hotel operators, including MGM, Wynn, Caesars and Treasure Island, used software from the Rainmaker Group or Cendyn but did not state which specific software each resort uses and therefore did not allege the resorts used the same software.
  • Judge Du also says the lawsuit did not state when the hotels began using the software or when they would have entered into an agreement to use noncompetitive prices and did not provide the necessary details to assert the claims of unfair business practices.
  • Du will allow the plaintiffs to amend the complaint and potentially add details to state the case and charges more clearly, especially a claim called a “rule of reason” theory that allows for a measurement to see if a deal is non-competitive. 

Las Vegas hotel prices class action overview: 

  • Who: Two hotel customers are suing a number of hotel operators on the Las Vega Strip.
  • Why: The plaintiffs allege the companies have an unlawful agreement to artificially inflate the prices of their hotel rooms.
  • Where: The Las Vegas hotel prices class action was filed in a Nevada federal court.

(Jan 30, 2023)

A group of major hotel operators on the Las Vegas Strip have an unlawful agreement to artificially inflate the prices of hotel rooms above competitive levels, a new class action lawsuit alleges.

Plaintiffs Richard Gibson and Heriberto Valiente filed the class action lawsuit against Caesars Entertainment Inc., Treasure Island LLC, Wynn Resorts Holdings LLC, Rainmaker Group Unlimited Inc. and MGM Resorts International on Jan. 25 in a Nevada federal court, alleging violations of fair competition laws.

According to the lawsuit, the defendants are responsible for operating the vast majority of the hotels on the Las Vegas Strip, including well-known hotels such as the Bellagio, Wynn, Caesars Palace, MGM Grand and Mandalay Bay.

Instead of competing with one another, the hotel operators have replaced their independent pricing and supply decisions with a shared set of pricing algorithms that allow them to collect supracompetitive prices for their hotel rooms, the lawsuit alleges. 

Tech company provides hotel operators with pricing algorithms, lawsuit alleges

The company that provides the pricing algorithms for Hotel Operators is Rainmaker Group; it is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit. 

According to the plaintiffs, the vast majority of hotels on the Las Vegas Strip now use Rainmaker Group’s pricing algorithms. 

The hotels provide real-time pricing and supply information to the Rainmaker Group, which the company feeds through its algorithms and then generates forward-looking, room-specific pricing recommendations to send back to the hotels, the lawsuit alleges.

“In a competitive market, any empty hotel room is lost revenue, so a hotel operator would try to fill each hotel room by granting concessions or lowering prices,” the lawsuit says. 

“By contrast, on Rainmaker Group’s recommendations and as an integral part of the conspiracy, Hotel Operators kept prices high and some rooms empty, knowing their co-conspirators would not undercut these supracompetitive prices,” the class action alleges.

The plaintiffs seek to represent anyone who rented a room from one of the operators participating in Rainmaker from Jan. 24, 2019, to now. 

They’re suing under the Sherman Act and seek certification of the class action, damages, fees, costs, an order blocking the companies from engaging in the alleged scheme, and a jury trial.

Meanwhile, a former MGM Resorts International employee is suing the company he worked for, alleging he was discriminated against and fired for not getting the COVID-19 vaccine due to his religious beliefs.

Did you book a room on the Las Vegas Strip in the last four years? Let us know your thoughts on this lawsuit in the comments.

The plaintiffs are represented by Brian J. Panish, Rahul Ravipudi and Ian Samson of Panish Shea Boyle Ravipudi LLP and Adam Ellis, Steve W. Berman, Stephanie A. Verdoia, Rio S. Pierce and Hannah K. Song of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP.

The Las Vegas Strip hotels price-fixing class action lawsuit is Richard Gibson, et al. v. MGM Resorts International, et al., Case No. 2:23-cv-00140, in the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada. 


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97 thoughts onJudge dismisses class action over Vegas hotel price-fixing

  1. Melissa Cuevas says:

    I have stayed at hotels on the Las Vegas strip over the last five years. Various ones please add me

  2. Christina says:

    This will be hard to prove. In Las Vegas there are owners of the properties such as REITs that own the physical property. Then you have another entity that leases the property. Caesars Entertainment is a big one. They actually own and run: Planet Hollywood, The Cromwell, Paris, Horseshoe, Flamingo and the LINQ. Harrah’s and Caesars Palace are owned by VICI, and run by Caesars. You have 1 property owned by a Native American Tribe from California, The Mirage that is re branding under the Hard rock Hotel. I know this as my family invests in REITs.

  3. Rodney Shier says:

    If this lawsuit is what they say it is, I would like to be added to it. I spend most of my time at Caesars Entertainment.

  4. Loree Thomas says:

    I would like to be added to the class action lawsuit I visit vegas several times a year and also have family there. Have stayed at several different places.

  5. Loree Thomas says:

    Please add me I visit vegas several times a year and also have family there. Have stayed at several different places.

  6. Sherry L Linman says:

    I routinely go to the Strip multiple times a year.

  7. Scott K Linman says:

    Please add me as we go there 6-10 times per year.

  8. Anisah says:

    This is for comments not to add you to a class action. That is done through the class action website when the class action opens for claims.

  9. Kenitra Arnold says:

    Add me pls

    1. Surques shackelford says:

      Yes me

  10. Michelle Mccalister says:

    Add me we got screwed when bwe stayed at the Wynn for 4 days 2 years ago

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