
Billion-Dollar Towers Are Going Vertical in Henderson — The Luxury Market Just Got a New Ceiling
Henderson has always been the safe, family-friendly suburb of Las Vegas — great schools, great restaurants, MacDonald Highlands and Anthem on the high end. But the city's luxury ceiling is being raised in a very literal way.
Four Seasons Private Residences Rise Above Black Mountain
*Fox 5 Vegas* reported in April 2026 that the Four Seasons Private Residences of Las Vegas are now going vertical above Henderson, with two towers planned to house 171 luxury homes and Strip-style amenities including a Wolfgang Puck restaurant.
In the report, Craig H. Eddins, executive vice president of the project, said the towers sit at "600 feet above the airport, the valley floor." That's not a metaphor — they're physically the tallest residential structures Henderson has ever had, and the views from the upper floors are unlike anything else in the valley: the Strip skyline to the north, Lake Las Vegas to the east, and Black Mountain in the foreground.
Why This Project Matters
For years, Henderson luxury meant single-family homes — 8,000-square-foot estates in MacDonald Highlands, custom builds in The Ridges, MacDonald Ranch trophy properties. Vertical luxury was a Strip story, not a Henderson story.
Four Seasons changes that calculus:
- Lock-and-leave luxury for relocators. Buyers from California, New York, and Chicago who want a Las Vegas presence without managing a 10,000-square-foot home now have an option that didn't exist before. - A new comp set for Henderson. Per-square-foot pricing in the Four Seasons towers will reset what "top of market" means in this submarket. - Amenities at scale. Wolfgang Puck on-site dining, concierge services, and Four Seasons-branded hospitality bring a tier of service that custom-home buyers historically had to assemble themselves.
What It Means for Existing Henderson Owners
If you already own a luxury home in MacDonald Highlands, Anthem Country Club, Lake Las Vegas, or Seven Hills, the Four Seasons launch is mostly good news:
- A new high-end project nearby raises the perceived ceiling for the entire submarket. - The amenity package and brand recognition draw out-of-state attention back to Henderson, which historically gets less national press than Summerlin and the Strip. - The buyers who consider Four Seasons but ultimately want a private estate often spill into the surrounding luxury neighborhoods. That's incremental demand.
What It Means for Buyers Considering the Move
For buyers shopping luxury in the valley, you now have a real "high-rise vs. estate" choice in Henderson that didn't exist before:
Choose the high-rise if: - You want a Las Vegas presence without full-time maintenance. - Lock-and-leave matters to you for travel or seasonal living. - The view, brand, and on-site dining are core to your lifestyle.
Choose the estate if: - Privacy, custom design, and outdoor space are non-negotiable. - You want to build long-term equity in dirt as much as in the home itself. - A family compound feel matters more than amenities.
The Bigger Story
For a long time, the Las Vegas luxury narrative was Strip-centered. Henderson played a different role — quieter, more residential, more value-per-square-foot. The Four Seasons towers don't change Henderson's character, but they do prove that the city now supports a vertical luxury product at the highest tier.
If you're trying to decide between Strip-adjacent condo living, a custom estate in Henderson, or one of the new Four Seasons units when they hit the market, I can walk you through every option and help you figure out which one actually fits your life. Reach out anytime.
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