Calabasas to Las Vegas Car Service
From a guard gate in The Oaks or a driveway off Las Virgenes Road to your hotel lobby on the Strip — one chauffeur, one flat rate, the whole group together. We handle the US-101 to I-15 run so you can work, rest, or celebrate the entire way.
Calabasas to the Strip Without Setting Foot in an Airport
A Calabasas-to-Las-Vegas trip rarely starts near an airport. You are already deep in the western San Fernando Valley — at a home off Mulholland Highway, a meeting near The Commons at Calabasas, or a gated estate in Hidden Hills — so flying out of LAX or Burbank means a transfer in the wrong direction before you have even begun. A private car skips all of that. We meet you at your door, load the bags (and the golf clubs, and the case of wine), and point the vehicle east. The cleanest run is US-101 out of Calabasas to the I-405, over to the I-5, and onto the I-15 North, which carries you through the Cajon Pass and across the open Mojave straight to the Strip. Door to door it is roughly 290 miles and, depending on Valley traffic and any stops you build in, about four and a half to five hours of driving. For two people it is pure comfort; for a group of four or more it is often the better deal outright — a single flat rate instead of several airfares plus rideshares on both ends. You travel together, keep your luggage with you, and arrive on your own schedule rather than an airline's.
The Route: US-101 to the I-15, ~290 Miles East
From Calabasas the drive begins on US-101, the spine of the Valley, before connecting to the I-405 and the I-5 to reach the I-15 North — the single highway that does the real work to Las Vegas. The I-15 climbs the Cajon Pass above San Bernardino, then opens into the high desert past Victorville and Barstow before the long, quiet run through the Mojave to the Nevada state line at Primm. There are no tolls on the route. Your chauffeur has driven it many times and knows its rhythm: where the Valley bottlenecks in the morning, where the desert stretches invite a stop, and how to time the final approach so you land at your hotel lobby rather than a rideshare queue. Heading the other way first? See our Calabasas to LAX car service for early-morning airport departures.
Why People Make This Specific Trip
Calabasas runs on entertainment, business, and family, and the Vegas drive serves all three. We carry executives and production crews to conferences and shoots, couples to a long weekend on the Strip, and extended families to weddings and milestone birthdays who would rather stay together in one vehicle than split across flights. Bachelor and bachelorette groups like that a Sprinter keeps the party in one place from the first mile. Because Calabasas is full of gated communities — The Oaks, Mountain View Estates, Hidden Hills — a private car also solves the part rideshares handle badly: a confirmed pickup time, a chauffeur who can clear a guard gate, and a vehicle that waits rather than cancels.
Optional Stops Along the I-15
Your chauffeur, your itinerary. Roughly halfway, Barstow and the Tanger Outlets make a natural stretch-and-meal break before the desert run to the state line. Just above it, the restored 1880s silver-mining town of Calico is an only-in-the-Mojave detour the kids remember. Farther on, Baker is home to the world's tallest thermometer and the gateway to the Mojave National Preserve. Primm, right at the California-Nevada line, offers outlets and a quick bite minutes before the Strip comes into view. Add a stop or two and the drive becomes part of the trip rather than something to endure.
Drive or Fly? The Honest Version
We will be straight with you: in pure air time, the flight is faster — it is about an hour in the sky. But Calabasas has no commercial airport of its own, so flying means a transfer to LAX or Burbank, a trip through security, gate time, baggage, and a rideshare on the Strip at the far end. Once you add the airport buffer on both ends, the door-to-door gap narrows sharply — and the private car keeps the whole group together, with no bag limits, no TSA, and no surge pricing. For four or more travelers, the math often tips toward the drive outright.
Choose your vehicle
Tell us your passenger and luggage count and we’ll recommend the right vehicle — every car late-model, immaculate, and driven by a pre-selected professional chauffeur.
Executive Sedan
Mercedes S-Class class. Quiet, business-ready comfort for 1–3 passengers with luggage.
Luxury SUV
Cadillac Escalade / Suburban for families, extra luggage, and a higher, statelier ride.
Sprinter Van
Mercedes Sprinter for groups, crews, and events with plenty of cargo room.
A better ride starts with a better-treated chauffeur
Lux4Rides was built by CEO Sam Altabbaa on a simple idea: pay professional chauffeurs fairly and you get calmer, safer, more gracious rides. Cut-rate apps squeeze drivers — and you feel it in the car. We don’t.
Chauffeurs paid fairly
Our drivers earn a real, respectful wage — so they’re relaxed, professional, and genuinely glad to take care of you.
Hand-selected & VIP-trained
Every chauffeur is pre-selected, background-checked, TCP-licensed, and trained to a discreet VIP standard — no random gig drivers.
Flat rates, no surge
The price you see is the price you pay — no peak-hour surge, no hidden fees, and 24/7 dispatch that watches your flight.
Related Los Angeles car service
Calabasas to Las Vegas Car Service FAQ
It is roughly 290 miles door to door — US-101 out of the Valley to the I-405 and I-5, then the I-15 North across the Mojave to the Strip. Plan on about four and a half to five hours depending on Valley traffic and any stops you add along the way.
We start on US-101, connect to the I-405 and the I-5, and pick up the I-15 North, which climbs the Cajon Pass and runs through Victorville, Barstow, Baker, and Primm before reaching Las Vegas. There are no tolls anywhere on the route.
Because this is a long desert haul, fares sit at the upper end of our intercity bands: from about $595 in an executive Mercedes sedan, from about $825 in a Cadillac Escalade or Suburban, and from roughly $1,095 in a Mercedes Sprinter van. You see one all-inclusive price for the whole vehicle and the fuel before you book, and it does not change with traffic or time of day.
Yes. We regularly coordinate guard-gate pickups in The Oaks, Mountain View Estates, and Hidden Hills, as well as homes off Mulholland Highway and Las Virgenes Road and the area around The Commons. We confirm your pickup time ahead and the chauffeur clears the gate so you are not left waiting.
We do. Book a one-way drive to Vegas, a full round trip, or schedule your return for whenever your stay ends — same vehicle class and the same flat-rate certainty in both directions.
Absolutely. The I-15 passes the Tanger Outlets at Barstow, the Calico ghost town nearby, Baker's giant thermometer, and the outlets at Primm on the state line. Tell us what you would like to see and your chauffeur builds the stops into the drive.
A Mercedes S-Class sedan is ideal for one or two travelers, a Cadillac Escalade or Suburban suits families and heavier luggage, and a Mercedes Sprinter keeps a larger group or production crew together with room for every bag across the full 290 miles.
Planning more than a single ride?
Calabasas is largely gated estates and guard-gated communities (The Oaks, Mountain View Estates, Hidden Hills), so confirm the exact pickup point and any guard-gate access details when booking. For weddings, conferences, or group celebrations heading to a specific Strip resort, share the hotel and arrival window so the chauffeur can time the final approach and avoid the porte-cochere crush. Email vip@lux4rides.com or call (424) 209-2006.
Book Your Calabasas to Las Vegas Chauffeur
One chauffeur, one flat rate, your Calabasas driveway to the Strip — and the return trip on your schedule. No TSA, no bag limits, no surge, just about 290 easy miles up the I-15. Reserve online or call our VIP desk at (424) 209-2006, available 24/7.