HoHo Routes & Paths: How to Navigate the Las Vegas HoHo Network

This post is a route-first walkthrough: think of the HoHo as a set of colored paths that stitch major attractions together. Knowing the paths lets you plan efficient hops and avoid backtracking.
At-a-glance: the path types
- Strip Spine (Main Path): The longest, most frequent line running the length of the Strip — ideal for moving north↔south without rideshares.
- Downtown Connector: Short shuttle or circular path linking Fremont Street, the Neon Museum area, and lower-Strip transfer points.
- Night Loop: A trimmed route optimized for illuminated façades and evening shows — fewer stops, better photo windows.
- Special Connectors: Event or attraction shuttles (e.g., to Raiders Allegiant Stadium or festival grounds) that run on-demand or seasonally.
Reading the map (a quick legend)
- Solid lines: full-service hourly routes.
- Dashed lines: limited-run connectors or seasonal links.
- Circles: major transfer hubs where multiple paths meet (Bellagio, Fashion Show, Fremont).
Typical smart paths (routing recipes)
- Classic Strip Afternoon (short hops): Board at Mandalay Bay → hop to Luxor → The Venetian → Bellagio → Paris. Use this to see fountains, gondolas, and a skyline stretch in one loop.
- Strip→Downtown Transfer: Take the Strip Spine to a transfer hub (e.g., Fashion Show or The Strat), then use the Downtown Connector to reach Fremont without multiple rideshares.
- Golden Hour Photo Path: Start midday on the north end, ride south on the upper-deck for sunset light, hop off at Bellagio for fountains at dusk, then continue to Paris for tower views.
Timing & frequency notes
- Main Spine: every 15–30 minutes depending on the operator and time of day.
- Connectors: every 30–60 minutes; some operate only during peak hours.
- Night Loop: typically starts after sunset and can be less frequent — check night-specific timetables.
Transfer tips
- Always note the next two departure times at transfer hubs — buses can clump and leave two close together or have a longer gap.
- Use the Downtown Connector for Neon Museum visits; it saves a rideshare and often drops you near the museum entrance.
- If a connector is listed as seasonal on the map, assume limited runs during conventions or holidays.
Practical path-planning checklist
- Choose a primary hub for each day (e.g., Bellagio hub for Strip highlights).
- Plan one long hop and then multiple short hops — limits wasted time.
- Reserve timed attractions (e.g., Neon Museum) and work bus hops around those bookings.