
Veuve Clicquot’s Sun Club has officially taken over the Legacy Pool at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, flipping the adults-only deck on the north Strip into a French Riviera-style champagne hideout. The seasonal setup leans into the house’s trademark yellow, with chilled pours of RICH and RICH Rosé, a streamlined food pairing menu and cabanas tailored for long, unhurried afternoons in the sun.
According to Casino City Times, Sun Club is back for the 2026 pool season and operates daily from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. for guests 21 and over. That report notes that daybeds start at a $400 food-and-beverage minimum, with cabanas offered at higher minimums, and that non-hotel guests can lock in day access through online reservations.
Design and the drinks
Veuve Clicquot describes its Sun Clubs as seasonal pop-ups meant to spotlight its RICH cuvées and the "Chasing The Sun" collection, per Veuve Clicquot. At Fontainebleau, the brand teamed with French design studio Marcel Poulain, dressing the Legacy Pool with yellow-and-white striped umbrellas, lifebuoy-style ice buckets and a ten-seat bar. The resort’s cabana menu pours Veuve Clicquot RICH and RICH Rosé by the glass or bottle alongside pairings like the La Côte Caesar and La Côte Double Cheeseburger, with the full cabana lineup posted on the resort’s site.
Where it sits on the Strip
Sun Club lives on the Legacy Pool at Fontainebleau’s third-floor Oasis Pool Deck, a multi-pool playground that features six separate pools, four bars, the poolside restaurant La Côte and a 2,300-square-foot gaming area, as outlined by Business Traveller. Within that bigger scene, the activation is marketed as the quieter, more controlled counterpoint to the resort’s louder dayclub action.
How it fits into Vegas pool season
On the other end of the spectrum, Fontainebleau is pushing full-throttle party energy at LIV Beach, where the resident DJ lineup includes Tiësto, John Summit and Dom Dolla. Sun Club’s slower, champagne-first pace gives the property a second, very different pool personality. Industry coverage frames that split approach as part of a broader Strip trend, with resorts building lineups that cater both to headline-DJ crowds and guests chasing softer luxury, per Forbes.
Booking, price and who can go
Non-hotel guests can book daybeds and cabanas through Fontainebleau’s online portal, and the resort notes that Nevada residents who enroll in its rewards program can tap complimentary parking and locals-only perks. Pricing lands firmly in premium territory, with daybeds starting at a $400 food-and-beverage minimum, positioning Sun Club as a reservation-focused, upscale option rather than a casual walk-up hang, as detailed by Business Traveller.
For locals and visitors who prefer a measured, champagne-forward pool day, Sun Club offers a comparatively low-key corner of the Strip this season. The pop-up is slated to remain on Fontainebleau’s Oasis Pool Deck throughout the resort’s pool schedule.









