USA Skating Rinks

Skating Rinks in Nevada

13 rinks across 4 cities

Nevada has 13 skating rinks in our directory spread across 4 cities, offering both roller skating and ice skating year-round. The bulk of the activity is concentrated in Las Vegas, which accounts for 9 of the state's rinks, while Fallon hosts 2 and Reno rounds out the northern part of the list. Given that summer temperatures in southern Nevada routinely exceed 100 degrees from June through September, nearly every facility here is climate-controlled indoor space rather than open-air. The most-reviewed venue in our directory is Crystal Palace Skating Center 1 in Las Vegas, which holds a 4.3-star average across 1,666 reviews — a useful starting point if you are new to skating rinks in Nevada and want a well-established roller floor.

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Skating culture in Nevada is shaped almost entirely by the desert climate, which is why traditional outdoor pond hockey and natural ice surfaces are essentially nonexistent here. Instead, the state developed a strong indoor scene tied to the rapid growth of the Las Vegas Valley, which is now home to well over two million residents in the Clark County metro area. The arrival of a Las Vegas NHL franchise in 2017 has been widely credited with raising the local profile of hockey and learn-to-skate programs, and several Las Vegas-area rinks emphasize youth hockey, figure skating, and recreational adult leagues. Reno and the smaller northern population centers, which sit at higher elevation and see colder winters than the south, support a quieter scene weighted toward figure skating and recreational hockey, along with seasonal holiday rinks that pop up downtown during the winter months.

Most skating rinks in Nevada open by 10 or 11 a.m. on weekends for public sessions, with Friday and Saturday evening sessions typically running until 10 or 11 p.m. — a schedule that fits Las Vegas's later-night rhythm. Expect public skate admission to fall in the $10–$15 range, with skate rental usually $4–$6 extra; ice rinks tend to charge a few dollars more than roller floors. Family features are common, including birthday party packages, glow nights, and cheaper weekday matinee sessions during summer when parents are looking for indoor activities away from the heat. Group lessons in both figure skating and basic hockey are widely available, and larger rinks generally offer adult learn-to-skate classes alongside the standard youth tracks.

Scroll down to browse the full list of skating rinks in Nevada, or use the city filter to narrow results to Las Vegas, Fallon, Pahrump, or Reno. Each listing links through to a detail page with the rink's address, phone number, current ratings, and recent visitor reviews. Because public skate windows, lesson schedules, and private rental blocks change frequently — especially around hockey league seasons and Las Vegas convention weeks — checking the rink's official website or calling ahead before driving out is strongly recommended, particularly for visitors traveling from out of state.