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Las Vegas City Pass Price: 10 Things to Know Before You Buy

Las Vegas City Pass Price: 10 Things to Know Before You Buy

The quick version

Compare Las Vegas city pass prices for 2024. Learn about Go City Explorer vs. All-Inclusive costs, hidden fees, and how to save up to 50% on top attractions.

12 min readBy Megan Hartley
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Las Vegas City Pass Price: Every Option Compared for 2026

Verified June 2026. The short answer: Go City is the only active Las Vegas pass in 2026 — it runs three tiers (All-Inclusive, Explorer, Essentials) and there is no Las Vegas CityPASS product. We priced every attraction on the list this year so you can see exactly when the math works and when it doesn't. This guide covers every 2026 price, the honest break-even point, and a clear verdict on which option — if any — is worth buying for your trip.

Quick verdict: the 2-day All-Inclusive at $169/adult pays off if you visit three or more attractions per day from open to early evening. The 3-choice Explorer at $109 wins for selective travelers who only want two or three headline attractions. Skip the pass entirely if your list runs to fewer than two paid sights — Vegas has enough free spectacles to fill a day.

Las Vegas skyline
Las Vegas skyline (CC BY · Gage Skidmore / 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 City Pass Comparison (2026)

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We priced these in June 2026 directly from Go City's Las Vegas page. Prices are adult rates; child rates (ages 3–12) run roughly 10–15% lower.

PassPrice (2026)ValidityTypeKey Inclusions# AttractionsSkip-the-Line?Digital?Buy
Go City All-Inclusive 1-Day$891 consecutive dayTime-based unlimitedHigh Roller, Madame Tussauds, The STRAT SkyPod, Mob Museum45+Yes (most venues)YesBuy at Go City
Go City All-Inclusive 2-Day$1692 consecutive daysTime-based unlimitedAll of the above + Hoover Dam tour, Grand Canyon day trip45+Yes (most venues)YesBuy at Go City
Go City All-Inclusive 3-Day$2193 consecutive daysTime-based unlimitedFull list including premium tours45+Yes (most venues)YesBuy at Go City
Go City Explorer 2-Choice$7960 days from first useChoose-N attractionsPick 2 from 40+ optionsChoose 2YesYesBuy at Go City
Go City Explorer 3-Choice$10960 days from first useChoose-N attractionsPick 3 from 40+ optionsChoose 3YesYesBuy at Go City
Go City Explorer 5-Choice$16960 days from first useChoose-N attractionsPick 5 from 40+ options (incl. Hoover Dam)Choose 5YesYesBuy at Go City
Go City Essentials$4930 days from first useFixed curated bundleHigh Roller + Madame Tussauds + 1–2 more3–4 fixedYesYesBuy at Go City

Note: The Sightseeing Pass closed operations in June 2025 — do not buy it. There is no Las Vegas CityPASS product; Go City is the sole operator here.

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

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We ran the numbers on the most popular combos. Gate prices verified in June 2026.

Scenario 1: Busy 2-Day Sightseer (All-Inclusive 2-Day, $169)

AttractionÀ-La-Carte Price (2026)
High Roller Observation Wheel (daytime)$37
Madame Tussauds Las Vegas$37
The STRAT SkyPod$25
Mob Museum general admission$30
Hoover Dam Highlights Tour$65
Big Bus Las Vegas (hop-on hop-off)$49
Total à-la-carte$243
2-Day All-Inclusive pass$169
Savings$74 (30%)

Verdict: A solid saving if you genuinely do all six. Add a Grand Canyon day trip (~$179 à-la-carte) and the math improves dramatically. The 2-day pass earns its keep at three or more attractions per day — start early, because "days" are calendar days, not 24-hour windows.

Scenario 2: Selective Traveler (Explorer 3-Choice, $109)

AttractionÀ-La-Carte Price (2026)
High Roller Observation Wheel (evening Happy Half Hour)$57
Mob Museum$30
Madame Tussauds Las Vegas$37
Total à-la-carte$124
Explorer 3-Choice pass$109
Savings$15 (12%)

Verdict: Modest saving. The Explorer 3-choice barely pays off on mid-tier attractions. Swap one of those three for the Hoover Dam Highlights Tour ($65 à-la-carte) and your savings jump to $53 — choose the highest-value attractions you actually want, or upgrade to 5-choice.

Scenario 3: When the Pass Loses Money

If your Las Vegas list is only the High Roller ($37–$57) and Eiffel Tower Experience at Paris (~$30 — not included on Go City), you're looking at $67–$87 à-la-carte vs the cheapest pass at $79. The Essentials pass at $49 is worth checking against your exact list, but with only three or four fixed inclusions, it's a narrow bet. The pass loses money whenever you visit fewer than its implied number of attractions per day.

Buy It If / Skip It If

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  • Buy the All-Inclusive 2-Day if: you're doing a packed first-timer itinerary — High Roller, Mob Museum, The STRAT, Madame Tussauds, Hoover Dam, and Big Bus. Three or more attractions on each of two full days easily covers the $169 outlay.
  • Buy the Explorer 3–5 Choice if: you want flexibility over 60 days, a relaxed pace, or you're mixing Vegas with a road trip. Include at least one premium tour (Hoover Dam or Grand Canyon) to make the math work.
  • Buy the Essentials if: your list is exactly the two or three included sights and nothing else — it's the cheapest entry point at $49.
  • Skip the pass entirely if: you're mainly gambling, eating, and catching one paid show. You'd buy fewer than two included attractions. Vegas has world-class free sights (Bellagio Fountains, Fremont Street, Flamingo Wildlife Habitat) that don't need any pass.
  • Important gotcha: Several premium tours — particularly the Grand Canyon helicopter flights and some Hoover Dam experiences — require advance booking even with a pass. Timed-entry slots fill weeks ahead during peak conventions and holidays. Book as soon as you activate.

For a full per-traveler breakdown, see our guide on is the Las Vegas city pass worth it.

Go City Las Vegas Pass Types Explained

Go City runs three structurally different products, and the worth-it math is completely different for each:

High Roller, Las Vegas
High Roller, Las Vegas (CC BY · Thomas Hawk / Flickr)
  • All-Inclusive (time-based): Unlimited entry to all included attractions for 1, 2, 3, 5, or 7 consecutive calendar days. The day "clock" resets at midnight, not 24 hours from activation — start early. Best for high-intensity sightseers doing 3+ attractions daily. See Las Vegas attractions on Go City for the full inclusion list.
  • Explorer (choose-N): Select 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 attractions from the full list; valid for 60 days from first use. No rush, no calendar pressure. Best for slow travelers, families with kids who need flexibility, or anyone blending sightseeing with pool days.
  • Essentials (fixed bundle): A smaller curated set at a lower price point — good if the included sights match your list exactly. Check the current bundle on Go City's site before buying, as inclusions can change.

For families, child pricing (ages 3–12) runs about 10–15% below adult rates on most tiers. Kids under 3 are free at most attractions regardless of pass status. See our Las Vegas city pass for families guide for the family-specific math.

Highest-Value Inclusions to Max Your Pass

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Not all included attractions are equal. These are the ones that swing the math most:

  • Hoover Dam Highlights Tour — $65 à-la-carte. The single biggest-value inclusion on Go City Las Vegas. If you're within range of a 2-day pass, include this and you've already covered a large chunk of the cost.
  • High Roller Observation Wheel (Evening "Happy Half Hour") — $57 à-la-carte for the open-bar evening experience. The standard daytime ticket is $37; if you can book the evening slot via Go City, that's the better redemption. See is the High Roller worth it for more detail.
  • Grand Canyon day trips — If available on your tier, these run $150–$200+ à-la-carte. A single Grand Canyon inclusion can single-handedly justify the 2-day or 3-day All-Inclusive.
  • Big Bus Las Vegas — $49 à-la-carte. Not glamorous but genuinely useful for Strip navigation; fold it into a busy day and it costs you nothing extra.
  • Mob Museum — $30 à-la-carte, 2–3 hours of content. Excellent inclusion-per-dollar ratio; most visitors genuinely enjoy it.

For the full list of what each tier covers, see what is included in the Las Vegas pass.

Where to Buy — and Whether Discount Codes Help

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Buy directly from Go City's website or the Go City app. The pass is digital-only (QR code on your phone) — no physical card to collect. You can buy in advance and activate on your first day of use, so there is no risk in purchasing before you travel.

Costco and AAA occasionally list Go City passes at a small discount, but availability is inconsistent and selection is limited to a few tiers. GetYourGuide and Viator also list Go City passes — prices are usually the same as direct, but watch for occasional promotional bundles. Our recommendation: buy direct for the widest tier selection and instant digital delivery.

There is no reliable permanent discount code for Go City Las Vegas — "promo code" pages you see in search results mostly surface expired codes. The best legitimate saving is booking at least 7 days in advance during shoulder season (November–February, excluding New Year's weekend).

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does the Las Vegas Go City Pass cost in 2026?

Go City Las Vegas 2026 prices (adult): All-Inclusive 1-day $89, 2-day $169, 3-day $219; Explorer 2-choice $79, 3-choice $109, 5-choice $169; Essentials $49. Child rates (ages 3–12) run roughly 10–15% lower. Prices are verified from gocity.com as of June 2026 and may change seasonally — always confirm before purchasing.

Is the Go City Las Vegas Pass worth it for 2 days?

Yes, if you plan a full itinerary. We priced a 6-attraction 2-day plan (High Roller $37, Madame Tussauds $37, The STRAT $25, Mob Museum $30, Hoover Dam tour $65, Big Bus $49) at $243 à-la-carte vs $169 for the 2-day pass — a $74 saving. The pass earns its keep at three or more attractions per calendar day. For the full math, see our Las Vegas pass worth-it breakdown.

Does the Las Vegas Go City Pass include skip-the-line entry?

Yes — at most included venues you scan the Go City app QR code at a dedicated pass lane and bypass the standard ticket queue. The main exceptions are premium tours (Hoover Dam, Grand Canyon) that require advance time-slot booking even with a pass. Book those slots as soon as you activate, especially during peak convention periods when slots fill 1–2 weeks out.

Is there a Las Vegas CityPASS?

No. Unlike New York, Chicago, and Boston, Las Vegas does not have a CityPASS product. Go City is the sole multi-attraction pass operator for Las Vegas in 2026. There is also no Sightseeing Pass option — that operator ceased operations in June 2025.

What is the cheapest Las Vegas city pass?

The Go City Essentials pass at $49 is the lowest-priced tier. It covers a small fixed bundle of 3–4 attractions including the High Roller and Madame Tussauds. If your sightseeing list is short and matches those exact inclusions, it's the best-value entry point. For two or more full days of sightseeing, the All-Inclusive 2-day at $169 delivers better dollar-per-attraction value.

Can I use the Go City pass on non-consecutive days?

Only the Explorer pass and Essentials pass allow non-consecutive use — they're valid for 60 and 30 days respectively from first activation. The All-Inclusive pass requires consecutive calendar days: a 2-day pass must be used on two back-to-back days. Days reset at midnight local Vegas time, not 24 hours from your first scan.

The bottom line on Las Vegas city pass prices in 2026: Go City is the only game in town, and the 2-day All-Inclusive at $169 is the strongest value for a busy itinerary — we calculated a $74 saving on a realistic 6-attraction plan. The Explorer 3-choice at $109 suits selective visitors, but only really pays off when you include at least one premium tour like the Hoover Dam. Skip any pass if your paid-attraction list is two or fewer sights.

Planning a full 3-day visit? Our Las Vegas in 3 days with a city pass itinerary walks through a day-by-day schedule with running pass math. Traveling with kids? See the Las Vegas city pass for families guide for child pricing and family-friendly attraction picks.

Before you book: confirm 2026 pricing and hours directly at Visit Las Vegas.

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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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