1 / 2Pinball Hall of Fame
📍 Las Vegas, NV
Non-profit museum housing one of the world's largest pinball collections, with machines spanning the 1950s–1990s. No entry fee — pay per play with quarters. Located directly across from the Welcome to Las Vegas sign.
Some amazing machines with fun concepts. Not just pinball! Talk to them right away if a machine doesnt register your quarters. 2hrs of play for less than $20. To quote the lady playing next to me "Kids today can't appreciate the sound of a good bell" 😆
🏆 Family Action Verdict
Best for school-age kids and up who can handle coin-op mechanics independently. Younger children will need adult guidance per machine. Teens and nostalgic adults get the most from the deep catalog of classic titles. Budget-conscious families appreciate the pay-as-you-go model — a few dollars stretches a long visit.
ℹ️ What to Know Before You Go
💬 What Families Are Saying
View all reviews →13,507 Google reviews
Katie Ross
“Some amazing machines with fun concepts. Not just pinball! Talk to them right away if a machine doesnt register your quarters. 2hrs of play for less than $20. To quote the lady playing next to me "Kids today can't appreciate the sound of a good bell" 😆”
zen altruism
“As an adult with fibromyalgia and depression, I didn't even think I was capable of having fun any more, but I had fun here. I played probably 15 different pinball machines and other games. The wack a mole quarter slot was jammed, the SF2 left player buttons didn't work, and the Zoltar machine failed to dispense a card, lol, but otherwise had no issues. I didn't bother asking for my quarters back because I'm a grown man lol. Best arcade for adults. Has the old school arcade vibe here. If you are looking for an arcade for kids with the newest technology and luxury send them to the one with the bowling alley, Round1 or whatever at the mall. It costs a fortune there but they have the most advanced new games for kids. As an adult I didn't have any fun at that one, bright lights, noisey, costs wayyy too much. But here at Pinball hall of fame, $10 lasted me 2 hours, and I plan to come back again. I estimate around 250 pinball machines here, plus a handful of miscellanceous standard arcade machines, skiball, air hockey. Some machines are only for looking at, like the ones from the 30s, but most can be played, even the very old ones from my dad's childhood era. Thank you to the volunteers running the joint. It brings back memories of childhood. I remember a lot of those games from pizza joints and arcades back in the 80s and 90s. They had most of the games I remember, but they did not have Skate Or Die.”
Rene' Purvine
“Lots of fun. Used muscles i did know I had. Loved the history of all the old machines.”
ron fuji
“遊べるピンボールの博物館。アメリカーナを味わえる RTCでラスベガスサインまで行き、そこから徒歩で行ける。なのでラスベガスサインとセットで観光が良い。 入場料はない、ゲームは当然有料だが昔と変わらない値段、両替機があるのでそこでクォーターに変え遊ぶ。 ピンボールは台にもよるが75セントぐらいから なんで10ドルもあれば結構楽しめる。”
Reviews from Google
Overview
Tim Arnold's Pinball Hall of Fame fills 25,000 square feet on the Strip with coin-operated pinball machines from the 1950s through 1990s. Every machine is playable, quarters are the currency, and change machines are on-site. There are no redemption tickets or prize counters — just pure electromechanical and solid-state pinball. As a non-profit, excess revenue goes to charity. Newer arcade novelty games appear alongside the classics.





