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Whole Foods at Downtown Summerlin has the largest dedicated vegan selection in the valley, and Natural Grocers in Henderson is the best value for organic and plant-based staples. The sleeper pick is 168 Market on Spring Mountain Road: massive tofu, tempeh, and mock meat selection at prices that make Whole Foods look criminal. Trader Joe's covers affordable packaged vegan across multiple locations. Most neighborhoods have solid options within a 15-minute drive.

Vegan grocery shopping in Las Vegas depends on where you live

This vegan grocery guide to Las Vegas is organized by neighborhood because vegan shopping here depends almost entirely on where you live. The valley is 25 miles across in every direction, and the difference between having three great options within a mile and driving 30 minutes to the nearest store with decent tofu comes down to your zip code. This is not a city where you casually pop into the corner health food shop on foot.

The good news: the vegan grocery landscape in Las Vegas has improved dramatically over the past few years. The chains have caught up, the Asian grocery stores were always ahead, and a few dedicated natural grocers have filled the gaps. The bad news: the options are unevenly distributed. If you're choosing where to live and vegan grocery access matters to you, this vegan grocery guide will save you from signing a lease in the wrong part of town.

Here's every neighborhood in the valley, what's available, and the honest trade-offs at each store.

Summerlin

Summerlin has the strongest overall vegan grocery infrastructure in the valley. Three solid options within a few miles of each other, all anchored by the Downtown Summerlin retail corridor.

Whole Foods Market: Downtown Summerlin

Whole Foods Market storefront in Summerlin, Las Vegas

Address: 7250 W Lake Mead Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89128

Type: Natural/Organic Grocery | Rating: 4.3 stars | Price: $$$$

This is the flagship vegan shopping destination in Las Vegas. The largest Whole Foods in the valley, with dedicated vegan endcaps, a plant-based deli section, and a hot bar that usually has 4-5 clearly labeled vegan options. The produce section is excellent and the bulk bins are well-stocked with grains, nuts, and legumes.

The honest problem: it's expensive. A week of vegan groceries here will cost 30-50% more than the same haul from Trader Joe's or 168 Market. The store-brand 365 line helps, but you will still feel the markup on specialty items like vegan cheese, plant-based meats, and organic produce. Shop the sales, use the app for digital coupons, and supplement with a cheaper store for staples.

Trader Joe's: Summerlin

Trader Joe's storefront in Summerlin, Las Vegas

Address: 7575 S Durango Dr, Las Vegas, NV 89113

Type: Specialty Grocery | Rating: 4.5 stars | Price: $$

Trader Joe's is the best value in the valley for packaged vegan products. Their house-brand vegan line keeps expanding: the soy chorizo, cauliflower gnocchi, vegan tikka masala, and cashew fiesta dip are staples for a reason. The frozen section is where TJ's really shines for plant-based shoppers: vegan mandarin orange chicken, meatless meatballs, and a rotating seasonal lineup that consistently delivers.

The limitation: produce selection is small and not always great quality. You're not doing a full weekly shop here for fresh vegetables. Think of Trader Joe's as the packaged goods and frozen run, then hit Sprouts or Whole Foods for produce.

Sprouts Farmers Market: Summerlin

Sprouts Farmers Market storefront in Summerlin, Las Vegas

Address: 7530 W Lake Mead Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89128

Type: Natural Grocery | Rating: 4.4 stars | Price: $$$

Sprouts fills the gap between Whole Foods prices and Trader Joe's produce limitations. The bulk bin section is genuinely excellent: lentils, quinoa, nutritional yeast, dried beans, and specialty flours at reasonable prices. The produce department is large and competitively priced, especially on organic items. The vegan deli and packaged section is smaller than Whole Foods but carries most major brands: Gardein, Beyond, Violife, Miyoko's.

A strong all-around store for vegan shoppers, especially if you cook from scratch and want good produce without Whole Foods markup.

Henderson and Green Valley

Henderson is arguably the best neighborhood in the valley for vegan grocery shopping when you factor in variety, quality, and price together. Three strong options that cover different needs.

Natural Grocers: Henderson

Natural Grocers storefront in Henderson, Nevada

Address: 560 N Stephanie St, Henderson, NV 89014

Type: Natural/Organic Grocery | Rating: 4.6 stars | Price: $$$

Natural Grocers is the store most vegan shoppers don't know about until someone tells them. It's a dedicated natural and organic grocer: smaller footprint than Whole Foods but with a tighter, more curated selection. Every product in the store meets their quality standards (no artificial colors, flavors, sweeteners, or preservatives). The supplement aisle is extensive and the staff actually knows what they're talking about.

For vegans specifically, the frozen section punches above its weight with brands you won't find at mainstream stores. Prices are comparable to Sprouts, meaningfully cheaper than Whole Foods on most items. The store is smaller, so the selection isn't as broad, but what they carry is consistently good. This is the store Henderson vegans build their routine around.

Sprouts Farmers Market: Green Valley

Sprouts Farmers Market storefront in Henderson, Nevada

Address: 9771 S Eastern Ave, Henderson, NV 89052

Type: Natural Grocery | Rating: 4.3 stars | Price: $$$

Same strengths as the Summerlin Sprouts: great bulk bins, solid produce, reasonable pricing on organic. The Green Valley location is well-stocked and less crowded than the Summerlin store. If you live in southern Henderson, this is your go-to for weekly produce runs.

Whole Foods Market: Henderson

Whole Foods Market storefront in Henderson, Nevada

Address: 100 S Green Valley Pkwy, Henderson, NV 89012

Type: Natural/Organic Grocery | Rating: 4.2 stars | Price: $$$$

Smaller than the Downtown Summerlin location but still carries the full Whole Foods vegan range. Located at The District at Green Valley Ranch, so you can combine a grocery run with other errands. Same pricing caveat as above: use it for specialty items and stock up on staples elsewhere.

Between Natural Grocers, Sprouts, and Whole Foods all within a 10-minute drive, Henderson gives vegan shoppers the most complete set of options in the valley without needing to leave the neighborhood.

Spring Valley and Chinatown

This is where the guide gets interesting. Spring Valley and the Chinatown corridor along Spring Mountain Road have options that blow away the health food stores on price, if you know where to look.

168 Market: Spring Mountain Road

168 Market produce section with Asian vegetables in Las Vegas Chinatown

Address: 5765 Spring Mountain Rd, Las Vegas, NV 89146

Type: Asian Supermarket | Rating: 4.1 stars | Price: $

168 Market is the single best vegan grocery value in Las Vegas and it isn't close. This is a full-size Asian supermarket, not a health food store, and that's exactly the point. The tofu section alone has 15-20 varieties: silken, firm, extra firm, pressed, fried, smoked, five-spice. The mock meat aisle is enormous: vegetarian duck, vegan char siu, soy chicken, wheat gluten in every form. Tempeh varieties you've never seen at Whole Foods. All of it at prices that will make you wonder what you've been doing at the other stores.

The produce section is massive and cheap. Bok choy, Chinese broccoli, daikon, fresh herbs, mushroom varieties; the selection of Asian produce dwarfs anything in the conventional stores. Fresh rice noodles, dumpling wrappers (check ingredients, some have egg and many don't), and a dried goods aisle with every bean, grain, and noodle you could want.

168 Market is not a health food store. The aisles aren't organized by dietary preference. You need to read labels. Not everything is vegan. But if you're willing to spend 20 minutes exploring, you'll walk out with a cart full of vegan staples for a fraction of what Whole Foods charges. This is the store that locals who've been vegan in Vegas for years swear by.

Greenland Supermarket

Greenland Supermarket storefront on Spring Mountain Road, Las Vegas

Address: 3285 W Spring Mountain Rd, Las Vegas, NV 89102

Type: Asian Supermarket | Rating: 4.0 stars | Price: $

Similar concept to 168 Market, slightly smaller but with an even larger produce section relative to store size. The tofu and mock meat selection is comparable. Greenland also carries a wider range of Southeast Asian products: Indonesian tempeh, Thai curry pastes, coconut cream brands you won't find elsewhere.

Between 168 Market and Greenland, the Spring Mountain Road corridor is vegan staple paradise at rock-bottom prices. If you live in Spring Valley, you have a genuine advantage here.

North Las Vegas

Let's be honest: North Las Vegas has more limited vegan grocery options than the rest of the valley. The population is growing fast but the specialty grocery infrastructure hasn't caught up yet.

Smith's: North Las Vegas

Smith's grocery store in North Las Vegas

Address: 3995 W Craig Rd, North Las Vegas, NV 89032

Type: Conventional Grocery | Rating: 3.9 stars | Price: $$

Smith's (Kroger-owned) has expanded its natural and organic section significantly over the past two years. The Simple Truth plant-based line is surprisingly solid: vegan cream cheese, plant milks, meatless patties, and frozen meals at grocery-store prices. You won't find the specialty brands, but for everyday vegan shopping, Smith's covers the basics. The produce section is standard, not great and not terrible.

WinCo Foods: North Las Vegas

WinCo Foods store in North Las Vegas

Address: 3051 E Lake Mead Blvd, North Las Vegas, NV 89030

Type: Discount Grocery | Rating: 4.2 stars | Price: $

WinCo is the cheapest overall grocery in the Las Vegas valley by a significant margin. The bulk bin section is the main draw for vegans: lentils, rice, oats, quinoa, dried beans, nuts, and granola at prices that make Costco look expensive by the pound. WinCo is employee-owned and passes the savings through.

The limitation: specialty vegan products are minimal. You'll find basic tofu, a few plant milks, and some frozen veggie burgers, but nothing close to the variety at Whole Foods or even Smith's natural section. WinCo is your dry goods and staples run, not your vegan cheese and specialty mock meat destination.

If you live in North Las Vegas, the practical move is a WinCo run for bulk staples supplemented with a monthly trip to 168 Market or Natural Grocers across the valley for specialty items.

Centennial Hills

Centennial Hills has solid mid-range options but no dedicated natural grocer. You'll cover most needs locally and make occasional trips south for specialty items.

Trader Joe's: Centennial Hills

Trader Joe's storefront in Centennial Hills, Las Vegas

Address: 5741 Centennial Center Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89149

Type: Specialty Grocery | Rating: 4.5 stars | Price: $$

Same TJ's strengths as everywhere: great packaged vegan selection, strong frozen section, excellent value. This location serves the entire Centennial Hills and Skye Canyon area and it gets busy on weekends. Hit it on a Tuesday evening if you want a calm shopping experience.

Sprouts Farmers Market: Centennial Hills

Sprouts Farmers Market storefront in Centennial Hills, Las Vegas

Address: 6436 N Durango Dr, Las Vegas, NV 89149

Type: Natural Grocery | Rating: 4.4 stars | Price: $$$

Good bulk bins, solid produce, reliable vegan packaged selection. Between this Sprouts and the nearby Trader Joe's, Centennial Hills residents can handle 90% of their vegan grocery needs without leaving the neighborhood.

Smith's: Centennial Hills

Smith's grocery store in Centennial Hills, Las Vegas

Address: 5765 Centennial Center Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89149

Type: Conventional Grocery | Rating: 4.0 stars | Price: $$

Fills in the gaps: the Simple Truth plant-based line covers basics, and the produce is decent. Not a destination for vegan shoppers, but serviceable for quick runs.

What Centennial Hills is missing: a Natural Grocers, a Whole Foods, or any dedicated natural food store. For specialty vegan items, you're driving south to Summerlin or the Spring Mountain corridor.

Downtown and the Arts District

Downtown Las Vegas is not where you go for grocery shopping. Full stop. But if you live here, you have a few options and a lot of driving.

The Market LV

Address: 611 Fremont St, Las Vegas, NV 89101

Type: Boutique Grocery | Rating: 4.1 stars | Price: $$$$

The Market is a small, curated grocery in the Fremont East corridor. They carry a limited but thoughtful vegan selection: local kombucha, organic produce, specialty plant milks, a few frozen items. Think of it as a convenience store with good taste rather than a full grocery. You are not doing a weekly shop here. You're grabbing what you need for tonight and paying a premium for the convenience.

The reality for most downtown residents: you're driving 15-20 minutes to Whole Foods at Downtown Summerlin or Trader Joe's for a real vegan grocery run. Downtown's rapid residential growth hasn't been matched by grocery infrastructure. This is a known pain point and unlikely to change soon.

Quick Comparison

Whole FoodsExcellent
Neighborhoods
Summerlin, Henderson
Price
$$$$
Vegan Variety
Widest selection
Natural GrocersVery Good
Neighborhoods
Henderson
Price
$$$
Vegan Variety
Curated quality
Trader Joe'sGood
Neighborhoods
Summerlin, Centennial Hills, Henderson
Price
$$
Vegan Variety
Strong packaged & frozen
SproutsGood
Neighborhoods
Summerlin, Henderson, Centennial Hills
Price
$$$
Vegan Variety
Great bulk & produce
168 MarketExcellent
Neighborhoods
Spring Valley / Chinatown
Price
$
Vegan Variety
Tofu, mock meat, produce
Greenland SupermarketVery Good
Neighborhoods
Spring Valley / Chinatown
Price
$
Vegan Variety
Asian staples
Smith'sBasic
Neighborhoods
Valley-wide
Price
$$
Vegan Variety
Covers essentials
WinCoLimited
Neighborhoods
North Las Vegas
Price
$
Vegan Variety
Bulk staples only
The Market LVLimited
Neighborhoods
Downtown
Price
$$$$
Vegan Variety
Small curated selection

Desert Shopping Tips

Produce spoils fast here. The Las Vegas heat and dry air means leafy greens, berries, and fresh herbs have a shorter shelf life than you're used to. Buy smaller quantities more often, or invest in quality food storage containers. Anything left on the counter in summer is done in hours, not days.

Stock up on dry goods from WinCo and 168 Market. Lentils, rice, quinoa, dried beans, nutritional yeast, and bulk grains keep indefinitely in the desert air. Buy these in bulk at the cheapest source and reserve your Whole Foods trips for specialty items and fresh produce. Your grocery bill drops dramatically when you split shopping across stores.

Delivery fills the gaps. Whole Foods delivers through Amazon Prime (free for Prime members on orders over $35). Sprouts offers delivery through Instacart. Smith's has its own delivery and curbside pickup. If you live in a neighborhood with limited options (North Las Vegas, Downtown, outer Henderson), delivery from a better-stocked store across the valley is genuinely practical and saves an hour of driving.

Read labels at Asian grocery stores. The mock meats and tofu products at 168 Market and Greenland are overwhelmingly vegan, but some mock meat brands contain egg white or dairy-derived ingredients. Spend the extra minute checking labels, especially on anything with a sauce packet included. Once you know which brands are clean, you'll shop on autopilot.

Stock your kitchen, then eat out

If you've already explored the best vegan restaurants downtown, this guide covers the other half of the equation, stocking your kitchen. The Spring Mountain Road corridor covered above is also home to the best Chinatown dining in the valley, so plan a combined grocery and restaurant trip. If you're relocating from California and wondering how the grocery scene compares, our moving from California guide covers the full adjustment. And for deeper dives on the neighborhoods mentioned here, check out our guides to Summerlin, Henderson, and Spring Valley.


Frequently Asked Questions

Where is the best vegan grocery store in Las Vegas?

Whole Foods at Downtown Summerlin (7250 W Lake Mead Blvd) has the largest dedicated vegan selection in the valley: plant-based deli, extensive packaged section, good produce, and a hot bar with vegan options. For value, Natural Grocers in Henderson (560 N Stephanie St) offers a curated all-natural selection at lower prices. For sheer quantity of tofu, tempeh, and mock meats at the lowest prices, 168 Market on Spring Mountain Road is unbeatable. The "best" store depends on whether you prioritize selection, price, or specialty items.

Is there a Whole Foods in Las Vegas?

Yes, Las Vegas has two Whole Foods locations. The larger store is at Downtown Summerlin (7250 W Lake Mead Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89128) and carries the widest vegan selection. The second is at The District at Green Valley Ranch in Henderson (100 S Green Valley Pkwy, Henderson, NV 89012). Both are full-size stores with produce, bulk, deli, and specialty sections. The Summerlin location is generally better stocked for plant-based products.

Where can I find cheap vegan groceries in Las Vegas?

168 Market on Spring Mountain Road is the cheapest source for tofu, tempeh, mock meats, and Asian produce in the valley: prices run 50-70% less than Whole Foods for comparable products. WinCo Foods has the best bulk bin prices for dry staples like lentils, rice, oats, and beans. Trader Joe's offers the best value on packaged vegan products (frozen meals, soy chorizo, plant-based snacks). The practical strategy is splitting your shopping: WinCo or 168 Market for bulk staples, Trader Joe's for packaged goods, and Sprouts or Whole Foods only for specialty items.

Does Las Vegas have good Asian grocery stores for vegan shopping?

Yes, and they are some of the best vegan grocery resources in the valley. 168 Market (5765 Spring Mountain Rd) and Greenland Supermarket (3285 W Spring Mountain Rd) on the Spring Mountain Road Chinatown corridor carry enormous selections of tofu varieties (silken, firm, pressed, fried, smoked, five-spice), tempeh, mock meats (vegetarian duck, soy chicken, wheat gluten), fresh Asian produce, rice noodles, and dried goods, all at significantly lower prices than health food stores. The produce sections are massive, with mushroom varieties, fresh herbs, and leafy greens that conventional stores don't carry. Read labels on mock meats, as some brands contain egg white.

Can I get vegan groceries delivered in Las Vegas?

Yes. Whole Foods delivers through Amazon Prime with free delivery on orders over $35 for Prime members, which is the best option for specialty vegan products. Sprouts offers delivery through Instacart with same-day or scheduled options. Smith's has its own delivery service and curbside pickup. Trader Joe's does not deliver. 168 Market and Greenland do not offer delivery. For residents of North Las Vegas, Downtown, or other areas with limited local vegan options, Whole Foods delivery through Amazon Prime is the most practical solution for filling gaps without a 30-minute drive across the valley.

Published 2026-03-13 · Updated 2026-03-13