
Zero Bond, the New York members-only club known for its discretion and celebrity clientele, is bringing a more-than-15,000-square-foot outpost to the Strip inside Wynn Las Vegas this March. Founders Scott Sartiano and Will Makris have wrapped the club around a terrace that overlooks Wynn Golf Club’s 18th hole, with an indoor-outdoor cigar lounge, a wine cellar and a members-only grill built into the footprint. The club is scheduled to open on March 10 and will roll out membership tiers with initiation fees starting at $1,000 and climbing to $50,000, with annual dues reaching as high as $7,500.
What's inside Zero Bond at Wynn
Behind the members-only doors, the Las Vegas outpost will feature private gaming rooms, a salon, the Fairway Grill, and terraces that spill into sculpture gardens, elements teased in early renderings and coverage from WWD. That reporting notes that the Vegas footprint exceeds 15,000 square feet and leans into a series of smaller indoor-outdoor rooms, laid out to encourage privacy, quieter conversations and less of the usual Strip spectacle.
Membership, prices and perks
Zero Bond is offering a general membership tier that carries a $1,000 initiation fee and $2,750 in annual dues, while a limited founding tier comes with a $50,000 initiation charge and $7,500 in yearly dues, according to Eater Vegas. The club’s application materials and information on Zero Bond’s site detail perks that include wine lockers, cigar humidors, a private valet and a complimentary annual round of golf at Wynn Golf Club for select tiers, in case the terrace view of the 18th hole is not quite close enough.
Design, dining and the privacy rules
The interiors were created by Wynn Design & Development in collaboration with Tihany Design principal Alessia Genova, with the membership complex tucked next to Sartiano’s Italian Steakhouse. That restaurant, Observer reports, will feature menus overseen by Alfred Portale. Founders and designers continue to emphasize discretion inside the club: “You can’t take pictures, you can’t talk about what happens inside of the club outside of the club,” the team told WWD. Sartiano also told the Review-Journal that he “jumped at the chance” to partner with Wynn on the project, signaling that the Las Vegas version is meant as a custom fit rather than a carbon copy of New York.
What this means for the Strip
Zero Bond’s debut at Wynn is part of a broader wave of celebrity-backed hospitality outfits staking out members-first spaces in destination markets, a move Wynn framed as an expansion of its food-and-beverage and membership offerings in a company release. Both Wynn Resorts and industry coverage describe the club as a way to cultivate a steady base of members within the resort environment while giving Zero Bond a national footprint that operators say could eventually stretch to additional cities.









