Las Vegas, Nevada
Sacred Pools Ocean Club clothing optional SPa resort and NUDE couples Resort
Sacred Pools Ocean Club sits in a converted commercial space just east of the Las Vegas Strip, operating as a clothing-optional pool and spa venue that blurs the line between wellness center and adult nightclub.
- Night Club
- Swimming Pool
- Live Music Venue
- Association Or Organization
- Event Venue
About this place
Sacred Pools Ocean Club sits in a converted commercial space just east of the Las Vegas Strip, operating as a clothing-optional pool and spa venue that blurs the line between wellness center and adult nightclub. This isn't a naturist resort in the traditional sense—there's no lodging, no hiking trails, no family-friendly volleyball courts. Instead, you're looking at an indoor heated pool environment with a heavy emphasis on nightlife, live music events, and a social scene that caters primarily to the swinger community rather than mainstream naturism. The facility runs on a reservation and ticketed-event model, hosting themed parties and private gatherings that lean toward couples seeking an adult entertainment experience. The setup reflects Las Vegas's broader tolerance for adult-oriented venues rather than the family-centric naturist tradition you'd find at AANR clubs in other states. Pool access isn't casual drop-in; you'll typically need to book ahead or purchase event tickets. The downtown location puts you within walking distance of casinos, restaurants, and the Strip's neon chaos, but the indoor-only format means you won't find desert sunshine or natural surroundings. If you're researching naturist options in Nevada, understand that Sacred Pools occupies a specific niche—it's lifestyle-oriented entertainment with social nudity as one component, not a place where families unpack picnic baskets by the water.
Visitor notes
Contributed by ClothingOptional.org Editorial Team
Who visits
The crowd skews heavily toward couples in the swinger and adult lifestyle communities, typically 30s-50s. This isn't a venue that draws traditional naturist families, solo first-timers exploring social nudity, or retirees from AANR clubs. The ticketed-event model and nightclub atmosphere attract visitors looking for a party scene with an adult edge rather than low-key nude recreation.
How to find it
The venue sits on East Harmon Avenue, roughly half a mile east of the Strip and just south of the Hard Rock Hotel site. If you're driving, you're looking for a commercial building in a neighborhood of mid-rise hotels and retail—parking details aren't publicly documented, but street and lot parking are typical for the area. The address is easy to GPS.
Things to watch out for
Reservations or event tickets are generally required—this isn't a drop-in day-use facility. Pricing and specific event schedules aren't consistently published online, so contact ahead to confirm access and any membership or cover charges. The venue's lifestyle orientation means the social dynamic differs sharply from traditional naturist clubs; if you're expecting AANR-style family naturism, this won't match.
Last updated
Etiquette & ground rules
This venue operates more like a private event space than a traditional naturist club, so etiquette varies by event. Photography policies change depending on the party — always ask. Consent culture is emphasized but enforcement varies. The atmosphere is explicitly adult-oriented and couples-focused for most events. Single males often face restrictions or higher admission fees. Towels required on seating. This isn't a family venue — expect a sexually charged social scene rather than body-positive naturism.
Know this spot?
Report an update
Beach closed? Parking price changed? Section moved? Send a short note and we'll check it.
Also in Nevada
More places nearby
Nevada, USA
Secret Cove Nude Beach
Secret Cove sits on the northeast shore of Lake Tahoe, about three miles south of Incline Village, straddling the Nevada-California border in one of the most scenic stretches of alpine shoreline in the United States. The name is unofficial — you won't find signs — but clothing-optional use here has been tolerated for decades, making it one of the West's better-known naturist beaches despite having no legal designation. The setting is classic Tahoe: deep cobalt water, towering pines on the slopes above, and smooth granite boulders tumbling down to the lake. You'll find a cluster of small pocket coves separated by rock outcrops, each offering a bit of privacy. Most people spread towels on sun-warmed granite rather than sand. The water stays bracingly cold year-round, reaching only the mid-60s Fahrenheit at peak summer. Access requires a short but steep scramble down a rough trail from Highway 28, dropping about 150 feet over roots and rocks. It's not long, but it's enough to keep crowds lighter than the developed beaches nearby. The vibe is low-key and unmanaged — no facilities, no lifeguards, no vendor selling you a Coke. Pack in everything you need and pack it all out. On summer weekends you'll find a mix of naturists and textile beachgoers sharing the coves without much fuss.
Nevada, USA
Arizona Hot Spring
Arizona Hot Spring sits in a narrow slot canyon where warm mineral water cascades down a wooden ladder and pools at the base before draining into the Colorado River — one of the most visually dramatic hot spring settings in the American Southwest. Despite the name, the springs are in Nevada, within Lake Mead National Recreation Area on the Nevada side of the river, about 40 miles southeast of Las Vegas. The 3.5-mile round-trip hike from White Rock Canyon trailhead descends through desert wash terrain before narrowing into the slot canyon approach. The main soaking pool sits inside the slot, shaded and sheltered, with water emerging around 105°F before it cools as it flows toward the river. A longer upper pool offers views up the canyon. Clothing-optional nudity is well-established here — most visitors strip, and it's understood as part of the spot's culture. This is a completely different location from Goldstrike Hot Springs, which is about 8 miles to the north on the same side of the river. Arizona Hot Spring has a more dramatic slot-canyon approach, slightly cooler water, and a more reliably nude atmosphere. Both are worth making the trip for, but they're separate hikes.
Nevada, USA
Goldstrike Hot Springs
Goldstrike Hot Springs is a series of natural pools in a slot canyon at the edge of Lake Mead National Recreation Area, just south of Hoover Dam in Nevada. The pools cascade down the canyon from a hot source near the top to cooler pools and finally a connection to the Colorado River at the bottom. The setting is striking — a narrow desert canyon with high walls, cottonwood trees clinging to the water, and the river at canyon's mouth. Access is a moderately strenuous out-and-back hike from a parking area off Highway 93 near the Hoover Dam approach. The route descends roughly 1,000 feet over about three miles, with rope-assisted scrambles down dryfalls in several places. The climb back out is the hard part — desert sun, real elevation gain, and limited shade. Clothing-optional culture at the pools is established and consistent; the canyon's remoteness keeps the community small. Goldstrike is dangerous in summer. Boulder City summer highs regularly exceed 110°F, and the canyon traps heat. Multiple deaths have occurred from heat exhaustion and dehydration on the return hike. The springs are closed by the National Park Service in summer (typically May through September) for this reason — verify current closures before traveling. Winter and early spring are the safe seasons, with cooler hiking conditions and reliably-open access. Flash flood risk is the other major hazard. The slot canyon section can fill rapidly during desert storms even if the storm is dozens of miles upstream. Never enter the canyon when storms are forecast anywhere in the watershed.