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Is the Las Vegas City Pass Worth It? 7 Things to Know

Is the Las Vegas City Pass Worth It? 7 Things to Know

The quick version

Is the Go City Las Vegas All-Inclusive Pass worth the money? See our 2026 cost breakdown, break-even analysis, and review of top attractions like Ka.

12 min readBy Megan Hartley
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Is the Las Vegas City Pass Worth It? An Honest 2026 Review

Short answer: yes — but only if you hit 3+ attractions per day on the All-Inclusive Pass, or pick 3–4 high-ticket items on the Explorer Pass. If your Vegas trip is 80% casino floor and pool, skip the pass and buy individual tickets. We priced every major included attraction against the 2026 pass prices so you don't have to.

Go City runs three Las Vegas products (All-Inclusive, Explorer, and Essentials) — and they work very differently. The wrong pick costs you money. This review breaks down the math for each, names when the pass loses, and gives you a direct buy-it-if / skip-it-if verdict. Reviewed June 2026.

Las Vegas skyline
Las Vegas skyline (CC BY · Adrien_Bouteille / Flickr)

Free guide: Is the City Pass Worth It?

Our quick-decision checklist for US city passes — the value math, what to watch for in the fine print, and when paying per attraction beats the pass.

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Las Vegas Passes at a Glance: 2026 Comparison

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Go City is the only multi-attraction pass operator in Las Vegas — there is no CityPASS or C3 product for this city. Go City runs three structural tiers, and the worth-it math is completely different for each. We priced these in June 2026 from the official Go City site.

Pass Price (2026) Validity Type Attractions Premium Included? Skip-the-Line? Our Rating Buy
Go City All-Inclusive 1-Day $89 adult 1 consecutive day Unlimited time-based 45+ No Yes, most venues 3/5 — only worthwhile if you pack 4+ sights Buy at Go City
Go City All-Inclusive 2-Day $149 adult 2 consecutive days Unlimited time-based 45+ No Yes, most venues 4/5 — sweet spot for active sightseers Buy at Go City
Go City All-Inclusive 3-Day $189 adult 3 consecutive days Unlimited time-based 45+ 1 premium (helicopter or Ka) Yes, most venues 5/5 — best total value with premium pick Buy at Go City
Go City All-Inclusive 5-Day $249 adult 5 consecutive days Unlimited time-based 45+ 1 premium (helicopter or Ka) Yes, most venues 3/5 — most visitors can't fill 5 days of sightseeing Buy at Go City
Go City Explorer 2-Choice ~$89 adult 60 days from activation Choose-N attractions Choose 2 of 30+ Depends on picks Yes 3/5 — only beats à-la-carte if you pick the priciest two Buy at Go City
Go City Explorer 5-Choice ~$149 adult 60 days from activation Choose-N attractions Choose 5 of 30+ Depends on picks Yes 4/5 — solid if you want flexibility without the daily rush Buy at Go City

Note: The Sightseeing Pass ceased operations in June 2025. We no longer recommend or list it.

For a deeper dive on how these two pass types compare structurally, see our Go City All-Inclusive vs. Explorer guide.

The Worth-It Math: 2026 À-La-Carte Prices vs. Pass Cost

We priced every major Go City Las Vegas inclusion against their 2026 gate prices. The 3-Day All-Inclusive at $189 is the clearest win — here's the arithmetic:

Scenario 1: Two Busy Sightseeing Days (All-Inclusive 2-Day at $149)

Day 1:

  • High Roller at The LINQ (anytime ticket): $40
  • Mob Museum general admission: $34.95
  • Madame Tussauds Las Vegas: $34.99

Day 2:

  • Big Bus Las Vegas Hop-On Hop-Off tour: ~$49
  • Natural History Museum of Las Vegas: ~$15
  • SlotZilla zip line: ~$25

À-la-carte total: ~$199 vs. 2-Day Pass: $149 → saves ~$50 (25%)

The math works, but the margin is thin. You need to actually visit 3+ paid attractions per day. Drop to 2 attractions and you break even or lose.

Scenario 2: Three Days + One Premium (All-Inclusive 3-Day at $189)

The 3-Day pass includes one premium attraction. Choosing a Las Vegas Strip helicopter night flight (retails ~$129–$159) or Ka by Cirque du Soleil (~$126) makes the math decisive:

  • Helicopter Strip night flight: $129
  • High Roller (anytime): $40
  • Mob Museum: $34.95
  • Madame Tussauds: $34.99
  • Big Bus tour: $49
  • SlotZilla: $25

À-la-carte total: ~$313 vs. 3-Day Pass: $189 → saves ~$124 (40%)

This is the strongest case for the pass. The helicopter or Ka ticket alone is worth $126–$159 at retail; the pass includes it for free at the 3-day tier. We priced these in June 2026.

Scenario 3: When the Pass Loses (1-Day at $89)

Can you realistically do 4–5 attractions in one Vegas day? On paper, yes. In practice: Strip traffic is brutal, most shows require advance reservations, and you're likely spending 30–45 minutes moving between massive hotel-casinos. If you manage only 2 sights on your day — High Roller ($40) + Mob Museum ($34.95) = $74.95 à-la-carte — the $89 1-Day Pass is a net loss of $14. The 1-Day pass only pays off for genuinely packed, agenda-first days.

Downtown Las Vegas
Downtown Las Vegas (CC BY · patimbeau / Flickr)

Explorer Pass Math (5-Choice at ~$149)

If you pick five mid-range attractions averaging $30 each, à-la-carte cost is $150 — essentially break-even. The Explorer earns its keep when you cherry-pick the most expensive items. Pick Ka ($126) + helicopter ($129) = $255 à-la-carte vs. a 2-choice Explorer (~$89) → saves $166. That said, not every Explorer tier includes premium options — confirm on Go City's site before purchasing. See the full breakdown in our Las Vegas city pass price guide.

Buy It If / Skip It If

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Buy It If:

  • You're a first-time visitor with 2–3 full sightseeing days planned
  • You can commit to 3+ attractions per day on the All-Inclusive
  • You want the helicopter flight or Ka — the 3-Day premium inclusion alone covers a large share of the pass price
  • You're traveling with family and want to lock in predictable costs (see our Las Vegas city pass for families breakdown for child pricing)
  • You want skip-the-line access at popular venues during peak season

Skip It If:

  • Your trip is primarily gambling, pool time, or shows not included in the pass
  • You're only visiting 1–2 attractions — individual tickets will be cheaper
  • Your schedule is loose — the All-Inclusive's consecutive-day clock punishes slow pacers
  • You're visiting for a single day and won't realistically hit 4+ paid sights
  • You've been to Vegas before and have a short hit-list of 2–3 specific places

Break-even rule of thumb: All-Inclusive pays off at roughly 3 standard attractions per day. Explorer pays off when you pre-select at least 2 high-ticket items ($80+ each at retail).

What's Included — and What's Not

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The Go City Las Vegas All-Inclusive covers 45+ experiences. The highest-value standard inclusions we priced in 2026:

  • High Roller at The LINQ — $40 anytime adult gate price
  • The Mob Museum — $34.95 adult general admission
  • Madame Tussauds Las Vegas — ~$34.99 adult at door
  • Big Bus Las Vegas Hop-On Hop-Off — ~$49
  • SlotZilla Zip Line — ~$25–$45 depending on level
  • Natural History Museum of Las Vegas — ~$15
  • The Neon Museum — ~$25 (nighttime tours more)

Premium inclusions (3-Day and 5-Day pass only — you pick one):

  • Las Vegas Strip night helicopter flight (~$129–$159 retail)
  • Ka by Cirque du Soleil at MGM Grand (~$126+ retail)
  • Valley of Fire or Red Rock Canyon guided tour (~$89–$120 retail)

Not included: food and drinks, gratuities, transportation between venues, parking at hotels (can be $15–$30/day), Fremont Street Experience paid shows, and most Grand Canyon tours. For the full current attraction list, see what is included in the Las Vegas pass.

Advance booking required: Ka and helicopter tours book up fast — reserve both within 24 hours of purchasing the pass, especially on weekends and during conventions (CES, NAB, SHOT Show). Spontaneous same-day booking often fails for these two.

How to Get the Most From Your Las Vegas Pass

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The biggest mistake visitors make is buying the pass and then spending half their days gambling or at the pool — and then scrambling to justify the cost on day 2. Here's how we'd approach it:

  1. Buy the 3-Day pass and lock in your premium pick immediately. Ka and helicopter tours sell out. The moment your pass is confirmed, book the premium attraction for your second or third day.
  2. Cluster venues geographically. The Strip is enormous. High Roller and Madame Tussauds are both at The LINQ / Venetian end. Mob Museum is downtown — pair it with the Neon Museum on the same day.
  3. Start mornings at museums, afternoons at the High Roller. Most museums open at 10am; the High Roller is spectacular at sunset (5–7pm) or anytime after dark. Avoid midday in summer — 108°F on the Strip is brutal.
  4. Mid-week visits. Saturday and Sunday see shorter pass windows and booked-out shows. Tuesday–Thursday is significantly less crowded.

If 3 days of back-to-back attractions sounds exhausting rather than exciting, the Explorer Pass (60-day validity, no daily pressure) is the better structural fit. See our full Las Vegas 3-day city pass itinerary for a day-by-day plan that hits the break-even point.

How Vegas Compares to Other US City Passes

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Las Vegas is a Go City-only market — there's no competing CityPASS product here, unlike Boston, Chicago, or New York where you can choose between operators. That means there's no "Go City vs. CityPASS Las Vegas" debate; the only decision is which Go City tier fits your trip. Compared to other major US cities, the Las Vegas pass math is unusually strong at the 3-Day tier because the premium inclusion (helicopter or Ka) is genuinely high-ticket — most city passes don't give you a $129+ item for free. Compare your options at our best US city passes guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Go City Las Vegas All-Inclusive Pass worth it?

Yes, for active sightseers who can hit 3+ attractions per day. The 3-Day All-Inclusive at $189 is the clearest value: it includes a premium attraction (helicopter or Ka by Cirque du Soleil, both worth $126–$159 retail), plus unlimited access to 45+ venues. If you'll only visit 1–2 attractions, buy individual tickets instead.

Go City All-Inclusive or Explorer Pass for Las Vegas — which is better?

It depends on your pace. The All-Inclusive (time-based, consecutive days) rewards a fast agenda — 3+ sights daily. The Explorer (choose 2–7 attractions, valid 60 days) rewards selective travelers who want 3–4 specific high-ticket experiences without daily pressure. If you want the helicopter flight and Ka, the 3-Day All-Inclusive is the better deal because both are bundled as the premium pick.

How much is the Go City Las Vegas pass in 2026?

The All-Inclusive starts at $89/adult for 1 day, $149 for 2 days, $189 for 3 days (includes 1 premium attraction), and $249 for 5 days. The Explorer starts around $89 for a 2-choice pass and scales to ~$209 for 7 choices. Children's pricing is lower — see the Las Vegas city pass price guide for current child rates and any active discounts.

Does the Las Vegas Go City Pass let you skip the line?

Yes — at most included venues, you scan the app and walk in without queuing at the ticket window. However, Ka and helicopter tours require advance reservations regardless of the pass; book these immediately after purchase, not on the day.

What does the Las Vegas Go City Pass include?

The All-Inclusive covers 45+ attractions including the High Roller ($40 at gate), the Mob Museum ($34.95), Madame Tussauds (~$35), Big Bus tours (~$49), SlotZilla, and more. The 3-Day and 5-Day passes add one premium choice: a Las Vegas Strip helicopter flight, Ka by Cirque du Soleil, or a guided desert tour. See the full list at what is included in the Las Vegas pass.

The Las Vegas Go City Pass earns its price at the 3-Day All-Inclusive tier — the premium inclusion alone (helicopter or Ka) covers a large share of the $189 cost, and two days of 3-attraction sightseeing seals the deal. The 1-Day pass only makes sense if you're genuinely cramming 4+ sights into a single day; most visitors can't. The Explorer Pass is the right call if you want to cherry-pick 3–4 specific high-ticket experiences without the consecutive-day clock pressure.

Book the premium attraction (helicopter or Ka) within 24 hours of purchasing — that's the single biggest mistake we see. Availability disappears fast, especially Thursday through Sunday. If you're traveling with kids or want child-pricing specifics, see our dedicated Las Vegas city pass for families review.

Plan & verify: the official pages for Visit Las Vegas carry live 2026 prices.

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Free guide: Is the City Pass Worth It?

Our quick-decision checklist for US city passes — the value math, what to watch for in the fine print, and when paying per attraction beats the pass.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

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