Friends enjoy a lively St. Patrick's Day celebration indoors at a cozy bar, dressed in green attire.

Reno’s St. Patrick’s Day lineup mixes bar crawls, a 5K, a Virginia City food festival and casino promotions — each with set prices, entry rules and safety implications. Verify tickets, registration deadlines and any wagering or withdrawal terms before you go.

What each headline event actually offers

The Reno Leprechaun Crawl takes place downtown on March 14 and spans 20 venues; organizers advertise exclusive drink deals, commemorative cups and ticket tiers that run roughly $7–$15. The crawl has drawn more than 7,000 participants since 2013, so expect crowds and limited-capacity venues.

The Reno Leprechaun Race is a 5K run/walk on March 15 starting and finishing at City Plaza. Registration is $50 for adults and $25 for youth; the race includes prizes for anyone who beats a leprechaun’s time, and competitors are asked to wear themed attire. Virginia City’s Rocky Mountain Oyster Fry (March 14) pairs a parade and live Irish music with an unusual local specialty — bull and sheep testicle cook-offs — plus a saloon crawl and food contests.

Dining and casino offerings round out the calendar: The Shore runs a $28 St. Patrick’s dinner special (braised corned beef and cabbage) and themed cocktails priced $8–$15; reservations are recommended. Grand Sierra Resort is running a $30,000 Shamrock Sweepstakes across March with weekly drawings and a grand-prize finale on March 28 — note that entries, drawings and any prize redemptions are subject to wagering and withdrawal conditions.

Fees, registration mechanics and casino fine print

Costs here are explicit rather than optional: crawl tickets ($7–$15) control access and drink promos, race registration ($50/$25) secures bibs and timing, and The Shore’s $28 special requires a reservation to guarantee seating. If you’re deciding between events for a group, the race’s tiered pricing makes families more expensive than attending a single meal or the crawl per person.

Casino promotions add another layer of rules. Grand Sierra’s sweepstakes runs through March with weekly drawings and a March 28 grand finale; entries are often earned through play or tracked activity, and prize payouts can be limited by wagering requirements, maximum cashout rules or documentation checks for large wins. Before participating, read the sweepstakes’ official rules — check dates in the Grand Sierra’s March postings, ask at the cashier about withdrawal hold periods, and confirm whether any promotional funds have playthrough conditions that block immediate cashout.

Deciding which events match your risk, budget and tolerance

Choose the Leprechaun Crawl if you want a low-cost nightlife circuit and can manage crowds and alcohol exposure; choose the 5K if you prefer a structured, family-friendly activity and can cover registration costs by March 15. The Rocky Mountain Oyster Fry suits adventurous eaters comfortable with niche local cuisine and an outdoor-festival setting in Virginia City. The Shore’s plated special is the lowest-uncertainty option for a controlled dinner experience.

Use these thresholds: if you need guaranteed seating, book The Shore now; if you need a race bib, register before posted deadlines (race day availability is uncommon); if you expect to claim sweepstakes winnings over roughly $500, contact Grand Sierra for anticipated verification and withdrawal timing. Stop signals: sold-out notices, race registration cutoffs, age-restriction rules (bars and casinos are 21+), or any last-minute health advisories from local authorities.

Event-at-a-glance comparison

EventDateTypical costRegistration / reservationNotable conditions
Reno Leprechaun CrawlMarch 14$7–$15Tickets required; limited capacity20 venues, drink deals, commemorative cups; crowded
Reno Leprechaun Race (5K)March 15$50 adults / $25 youthRegistration required; likely nonrefundableStarts at City Plaza; prizes for beating leprechaun time
Rocky Mountain Oyster Fry (Virginia City)March 14Varies by vendor / contestNo central ticketing; saloon crawl may have feesUnusual cuisine, parade, live music; not for all tastes
The Shore — St. Patrick’s dinnerMarch 17 (holiday service)$28 meal; cocktails $8–$15Reservations recommendedControlled dining; age restrictions for alcohol
Grand Sierra Shamrock SweepstakesThroughout March; finale March 28Entry via play or promotion (no fixed ticket price)Follow Grand Sierra rules; verify eligibilityWagering and withdrawal conditions may apply to prizes

Short Q&A: confirm before you go

a group of people that are standing in the street

Are tickets refundable or transferable?

Check each event’s policy: race registrations are commonly nonrefundable; crawl tickets may be transferable but verify with the organizer before re-selling or gifting.

Do age limits apply?

Yes — bar crawls and casino promotions require 21+ for alcohol and gambling. Youth pricing ($25) is available for the 5K, but accompanying adult supervision and race rules still apply.

What to check about the Grand Sierra Sweepstakes?

Read the official rules for entry mechanics, weekly drawing dates and March 28 finale details; ask the casino about wagering requirements, documentation for payouts and any hold periods on withdrawals.