
Las Vegas's Family Swap Meet · Since 1992
180 booths. Three generations.
One air-conditioned roof.
A converted aircraft hangar on Boulder Highway, a family that's been here longer than half the strip, and the best tamales in Henderson — give or take.

It started with 22 vendors and one tamale cart.
In June 1992, Hector Reyes Sr. signed a five-year lease on a former aircraft maintenance hangar at 4521 Boulder Highway. He’d been selling silver jewelry out of the trunk of his Buick on weekends for nine years. His mother Maria — everyone called her Abuela — had been making tamales in her kitchen the whole time, packing them in coolers, walking them up and down the line of cars at the old Henderson swap on Saturday mornings.
The hangar had concrete floors, two roll-up doors, and one window-mount A/C unit that didn’t work. Hector knocked on every booth at the old swap and asked who’d come inside if there was a roof and a fan. Twenty-one people said yes. Plus Abuela and her cart. They opened the first Saturday in June. Three hundred and twelve people came through the door. Sabor Latino sold out of tamales by 11:30.
Thirty-plus years on Boulder Highway
- 1992 — Saguaro Sands opens with 22 vendors and Sabor Latino’s tamale cart. First Saturday: 312 visitors.
- 1996 — The hangar’s south wall comes down. Booth count doubles. The food court gets its first dedicated corner.
- 2001 — The outdoor lot opens with 40 stalls. Saturday becomes a two-shift day for the staff.
- 2008 — Recession hits. Hector cuts booth rent 20% across the board for six months. Nobody leaves.
- 2012 — 20th anniversary. Mayor Andy Hafen cuts a ribbon. The food court adds a churro cart and an aguas frescas stand.
- 2018 — Abuela Maria passes at 89. The Sabor Latino booth gets renamed in her honor. Her granddaughter Esme takes it over the same week.
- 2020 — Three-month closure. We deliver to long-time customers and run a vendor relief fund. We reopen with mask checks and twelve-foot aisles.
- 2024 — Outdoor stalls expanded to 60. Floor-plan app goes live so shoppers can find their booth on a phone.
- 2025 — 240 booths, 33 years, four Reyes grandkids old enough to bag jewelry. Still here.
“My mother used to say a swap meet is just the neighborhood with a roof on it. We sell what your kids need, what your grandmother used to make, and what you forgot you wanted until you saw it. We’ve never been a mall. We’re never going to be a mall.”
Hector Reyes Jr., owner
