
Delta has opened a branded SKY360° Club inside the Sphere in Las Vegas, expanding its lounge concept beyond airport security checkpoints. The club brings Delta’s airport-style hospitality to the Strip venue and links entry to Sphere event tickets rather than airline boarding passes.
Delta is calling the arrangement a multi-year partnership and has crowned itself Sphere’s Official Airline. CMO Alicia Tillman said the deal "allows us to bring that same spirit of connection and innovation to one of the most iconic venues in the world," according to Delta News Hub. The airline says the Delta SKY360° Club sits on Sphere’s event level and is already open during shows, with plans to fold it into a broader lineup of SkyMiles Experiences starting in 2026.
Sphere’s own announcement notes that Delta branding will light up the venue’s Exosphere and appear across on-site signage, while the club itself is designed as an intimate lounge experience for live concerts and Sphere Experiences such as The Wizard of Oz. According to Sphere Entertainment Co., this is the venue’s first official airline partnership and its first branded hospitality space of any kind.
Who Can Use the Delta SKY360° Club
Access is all about where you sit, not how many miles you have. As reported by Travel Weekly, floor-seat ticket holders get the longest window, with roughly 90 minutes of pre-show time that carries through the performance itself. VIP options, including packages like the "Bad Witch" offer, trim that to about 45 minutes before showtime and cut off access once the performance starts, with no re-entry.
Delta’s Las Vegas Play And Airport Plan
This splashy Strip move runs alongside a more traditional lounge build-out at the airport. Delta plans to open a Delta Sky Club at Harry Reid International Airport by 2029, as part of a nationwide slate of new and refreshed clubs, according to the Las Vegas Review-Journal. The Las Vegas project sits next to similar upgrades and relocations the airline has announced in other major U.S. cities.
Industry observers see the Sphere play as a deliberate step to pull the lounge concept out of terminals and into the destination itself. Coverage notes that SKY360° locations are already in place at several arenas, and that the Sphere version leans into the idea of a lounge as an experience booster rather than just a pre-flight perk. Business Traveller argues the move is as much about brand theatre and orchestrated access as it is about traditional airport comforts.
For fans, the bottom line is straightforward: the club is open during events now, but your access lives and dies with your ticket type, so check your seat details and Sphere’s policies before you head over. SkyMiles members who like curated extras should keep an eye on the SkyMiles Experiences platform for offers rolling out through 2026, with Delta and Sphere saying full details will land on their official sites.









