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Is the Nashville City Pass Worth It? (2026 Savings Guide)

Is the Nashville City Pass Worth It? (2026 Savings Guide)

The quick version

Compare the Nashville Sightseeing Pass, Total Access Pass, and Explorer Pass. See price breakdowns, included attractions, and find out if it is worth it.

10 min readBy Megan Hartley
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Is the Nashville City Pass Worth It? (2026 Honest Review)

Short answer: yes — if you plan to visit four or more paid attractions over your trip. Nashville has two legitimate pass options in 2026: the Go City Nashville All-Inclusive Pass (unlimited attractions, time-based) and the Go City Nashville Explorer Pass (choose 3–7 attractions, valid 60 days). CityPASS does not operate in Nashville. The Sightseeing Pass shut down in June 2025 — ignore any guide still recommending it.

I priced every major Nashville attraction individually in June 2026 to run the math for you. The verdict depends heavily on which pass type you pick and how many sites you actually plan to see. Here's everything you need to know before buying.

Nashville skyline
Nashville skyline (CC BY · joncutrer / Flickr)

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Nashville Passes at a Glance (2026)

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No CityPASS, no Sightseeing Pass — Nashville's market is simpler than most cities. Go City runs two products here, and the Music City Total Access Pass (run by the Nashville CVB) is a locally-operated alternative. Here's how they compare side by side. Prices confirmed June 2026.

Pass Price (2026) Type Validity Key Inclusions Attractions Skip-the-Line? Our Rating Buy
Go City All-Inclusive (1-day) $89 Unlimited, time-based 1 consecutive day Country Music Hall of Fame, Johnny Cash Museum, Hop-On Hop-Off bus, Madame Tussauds, Nashville Zoo 25+ Yes, most sites ★★★★☆ Buy at Go City
Go City All-Inclusive (2-day) $129 Unlimited, time-based 2 consecutive days Same 25+ attractions as 1-day 25+ Yes, most sites ★★★★☆ Buy at Go City
Go City Explorer (3 attractions) $69 Choose-N, flexible 60 days from first use Pick any 3 from 25+ options 3 (your choice) Yes, most sites ★★★★★ Buy at Go City
Go City Explorer (5 attractions) $99 Choose-N, flexible 60 days from first use Pick any 5 from 25+ options 5 (your choice) Yes, most sites ★★★★★ Buy at Go City
Music City Total Access Pass ~$99–$119 Fixed credit bundle Flexible, ~6 credits RCA Studio B, Country Music Hall of Fame, local gems; booking required ~15–20 Partial ★★★☆☆ Buy at Visit Music City

Prices verified June 2026 on gocity.com and visitmusiccity.com. Adult rates. Child pricing is typically 10–20% lower.

The Worth-It Math: Nashville Passes vs. Buying Separately (2026)

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We priced every major Nashville attraction individually in June 2026 using gate prices from each venue's official site. Here's what a typical first-timer weekend looks like.

Scenario A: Full Weekend (5 attractions) — Go City Explorer vs. à-la-carte

À-la-carte 2026 prices (adult):

  • Country Music Hall of Fame: $32
  • Johnny Cash Museum: $22
  • Hop-On Hop-Off Nashville bus (1-day): $43
  • Madame Tussauds Nashville: $28
  • Nashville Zoo: $26

Total à-la-carte: $151
Go City Explorer 5-attraction pass: $99
Savings: $52 (34%) — verdict: worth it

Scenario B: One-Day Blitz — Go City All-Inclusive (1-day) vs. à-la-carte

If you do 3 attractions in one day:

  • Country Music Hall of Fame: $32
  • Hop-On Hop-Off bus: $43
  • Johnny Cash Museum: $22

Total à-la-carte: $97
Go City All-Inclusive 1-day: $89
Savings: $8 (8%) — verdict: marginal

Add a fourth attraction (e.g. Madame Tussauds $28) and the math improves sharply: $125 à-la-carte vs. $89 pass = $36 saved (29%). The 1-day All-Inclusive only pays off if you genuinely fit 4+ sites into a single day.

Scenario C: Slow traveler (2 attractions) — Explorer Pass vs. à-la-carte

Just two big museums: Country Music Hall of Fame ($32) + Johnny Cash Museum ($22) = $54 à-la-carte

Go City Explorer 3-attraction pass: $69
Overpay by $15 if you only do 2 — verdict: skip the pass

If you're visiting fewer than 3 paid attractions, buying individual tickets is cheaper every time.

Break-even summary

  • Explorer 3-attraction ($69): break-even at ~$23/attraction average gate price — easy to hit with Nashville's mid-range museums
  • Explorer 5-attraction ($99): break-even at ~$20/attraction — very achievable with the CMHOF + HOHO combo
  • All-Inclusive 1-day ($89): needs 3–4 attractions in a single consecutive day to beat à-la-carte; exhausting but doable
  • All-Inclusive 2-day ($129): needs 5+ attractions across two days — relaxed and realistic for most visitors

Go City Nashville All-Inclusive Pass

This is the time-based, unlimited-entry option. Once you activate it at your first attraction, your countdown clock starts. The 1-day pass runs $89; the 2-day is $129 (2026 adult pricing). Entry is fully digital via the Go City app — no printed vouchers, just a QR code scan.

What's included (2026): Country Music Hall of Fame, Johnny Cash Museum, Madame Tussauds Nashville, Nashville Zoo, Hop-On Hop-Off bus, Patsy Cline Museum, Musicians Hall of Fame, Nashville Pedal Tavern, and 15+ more experiences. The full list is on gocity.com and does shift seasonally — confirm before you buy.

Gotcha: Several tours require 24-hour advance booking through the Go City app even with a valid pass. Don't wait until the morning-of to reserve a guided experience. RCA Studio B and certain walking tours fill up days in advance during peak season (June–August).

Best for: First-timers who want to cover maximum ground, group travelers, and anyone spending 2+ full days doing Nashville's main sights. See our full Nashville city pass comparison for a side-by-side of all available options.

Downtown Nashville
Downtown Nashville (CC BY · cmroman / Flickr)

Go City Nashville Explorer Pass

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The Explorer Pass is choice-based: you pay for a set number of attraction slots (3, 4, 5, or 7) and pick exactly which ones you want from the same 25+ list. Valid for 60 days from first use — no calendar pressure. Pricing in 2026: 3-attraction ~$69, 4-attraction ~$84, 5-attraction ~$99, 7-attraction ~$129.

This is the smarter pick for travelers with a specific bucket list rather than an "everything" mindset. You skip lower-value inclusions (a $15 venue is a wasted credit) and bank your slots on the expensive ones. The Country Music Hall of Fame ($32) + Hop-On Hop-Off ($43) + one more covers the 3-attraction pass's entire cost savings. Check the current Nashville city pass price page for any promotional rates.

Best for: Weekend visitors, selective travelers, and anyone spending only 1–2 days in Nashville who has already identified their top 3–5 must-sees.

Music City Total Access Pass (Nashville CVB)

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This locally-run pass from Nashville's Convention & Visitors Corp costs roughly $99–$119 (2026 — check visitmusiccity.com for the current price) and provides a bundle of credits redeemable at ~15–20 Nashville venues. Unlike Go City, it's not a national product — inclusions lean toward authentic Music Row experiences.

The standout inclusion is the RCA Studio B tour (where Elvis and Dolly recorded; tours run from the Country Music Hall of Fame building). This tour alone runs $55+ à-la-carte and is unique to this pass. That one inclusion can swing the math in its favor for music-history buffs.

The downside: the credit system is less transparent than Go City's clean choose-N model, and some inclusions are low-value ($10–$15 coupons). See the full Nashville pass inclusions breakdown before committing. This pass works best for travelers staying 4–7 days who want to spread visits across the week without a ticking clock.

Best for: Music history enthusiasts, slow travelers, week-long stays. Not recommended for 2-day visitors — Go City will deliver better value and less friction.

Buy It If / Skip It If

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Buy the Go City Explorer Pass if…

  • You plan to visit 3 or more paid attractions
  • Your must-sees include the CMHOF ($32) or HOHO bus ($43)
  • You want 60 days of flexibility with no daily pressure
  • You're visiting on a weekend trip and have 2–3 full days

Skip the pass if…

  • You only want 1–2 attractions (buy individual tickets)
  • Your main plan is Broadway bars and honky-tonks (free to enter)
  • You're primarily doing free/outdoor Nashville (the Parthenon, Bicentennial Park)
  • You hate advance booking and want total spontaneity (some tours need 24h notice)

What Nashville Passes Don't Cover

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Worth knowing before you finalize your budget:

  • Parking: Downtown garages run $15–$25/day. Not covered by any pass.
  • Food and drinks: Restaurants on Broadway are separate — budget $15–$30/meal.
  • Grand Ole Opry tickets: Not included in any city pass. Tickets start at $40–$90 depending on the show.
  • Special exhibits: Temporary exhibitions at some museums may carry an upcharge even with a valid pass.
  • Airboat and outdoor adventure tours: These tend to be add-on purchases regardless of which pass you hold.

Compare with other cities on our best US city passes guide to see where Nashville stacks up for overall value.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there a CityPASS for Nashville?

No. CityPASS (the red booklet brand) does not operate in Nashville. The main option is Go City, which offers both the All-Inclusive Pass (unlimited, time-based) and the Explorer Pass (choose 3–7 attractions, valid 60 days). The Sightseeing Pass shut down in June 2025 and is no longer available.

How much does the Go City Nashville pass cost in 2026?

As of June 2026: the All-Inclusive 1-day is $89, the 2-day is $129. The Explorer Pass runs $69 for 3 attractions and $99 for 5 attractions (adult pricing). Child rates are typically 10–20% lower. Prices can vary slightly by season — always verify at gocity.com before purchasing.

Does the Nashville Go City pass skip the line?

Yes, most included Nashville attractions accept Go City for priority or expedited entry. However, some popular guided experiences — including RCA Studio B and certain walking tours — require a 24-hour advance reservation even with a valid pass. Book these through the Go City app the day before your visit.

Is the Go City Nashville pass worth it for 2 days?

The 2-day All-Inclusive ($129) is worth it if you visit at least 5 attractions across both days — which is a comfortable pace. If you prefer a more selective approach, the Explorer 5-attraction pass ($99) is the better deal: same savings, no time pressure, and you pick exactly what you want.

What is the best Nashville pass for a first-time visitor?

The Go City Explorer 5-attraction pass ($99) is the best starting point for most first-timers. It covers the Country Music Hall of Fame, Johnny Cash Museum, the Hop-On Hop-Off bus, and two more venues of your choice — saving roughly $50 vs. buying separately. You get 60 days to use it, so there's no daily pressure to rush.

Nashville's pass landscape is actually straightforward once you cut through the clutter: Go City runs the show here, and the Explorer Pass is the best bet for most visitors. Buy it if you have 3+ paid attractions on your list; skip it if you're mainly there for Broadway, the honky-tonks, and the food scene. We priced every major site in June 2026 and the math checks out — $50+ saved on a standard 5-attraction weekend is real money.

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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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