Inequality ${n \choose k} \leq \left(\frac{en}{ k}\right)^k$

First of all, note that $n!/(n-k)! \le n^k$. Use Stirling only for $k!$.

${n \choose k} \le \frac{n^k}{k!} \le \frac{n^k}{(\sqrt{2\pi k}(k/e)^k)} \le \frac{n^k}{(k/e)^k} = (\frac{en}{k})^k$


$$\begin{align*} \binom{n}k&=\frac{n!}{k!(n-k)!}\\ &\le\frac{e^{1/12n} \sqrt{2\pi n} (n/e)^n}{\sqrt{2\pi k}(k/e)^k\sqrt{2\pi(n-k)}((n-k)/e)^{n-k}}\\ &=\frac{e^{1/12n}\sqrt{n}}{\sqrt{2\pi k(n-k)}}\left(\frac{n/e}{k/e}\right)^k\left(\frac{n/e}{(n-k)/e}\right)^{n-k}\\ &\le\frac{e^{1/12n}\sqrt{n}}{\sqrt{2\pi k(n-k)}}\left(\frac{n}{k/e}\right)^k\\ &\le\frac{e^{1/12n}\sqrt{n}}{\sqrt{2\pi(n-1)}}\left(\frac{en}k\right)^k\\ &\le\left(\frac{en}k\right)^k \end{align*}$$


I found a different proof of this fact avoiding Stirling.

Note $f(x) = (\frac{ex}{k})^k$ is a $C^2$ strictly convex function.
So $f(x) + f'(x)h < f(x+h)$ for $0 < h$

In particular, letting $h = 1$ we get

$$f'(x-1)+ f(x-1) < f(x)$$ $$(\frac{e(x-1)}{k})^{k-1}e + (\frac{e(x-1)}{k})^k< (\frac{ex}{k})^k$$ Noting that $(\frac{k}{k-1})^{k-1} < e$ since the ratio limits to $e$ from below. Substituting in the LHS for the second $e$, we get $$(\frac{e(x-1)}{k})^{k-1}(\frac{k}{k-1})^{k-1} + (\frac{e(x-1)}{k})^k< (\frac{ex}{k})^k$$ $$(\frac{e(x-1)}{k-1})^{k-1} + (\frac{e(x-1)}{k})^k< (\frac{ex}{k})^k$$

Now the result follows by induction on $n+k$ for $k\lt n$, and Pascal's formula.

$\binom {n-1}{k} + \binom {n-1}{k-1} = \binom {n}{k}$
$ \binom {n-1}{k} \le (\frac{e(n-1)}{k})^k$ and $\binom {n-1}{k-1} \le (\frac{e(n-1)}{k-1})^{k-1}$ imply $\binom{n}{k} \le (\frac{en}{k})^k$

The base case $\binom{n}{n}$ and $\binom{n}{0}$ and $\binom{n}{1}$ are trivial so we can avoid the technicality where $k=1$ and $k=0$.