Skip to content
City Pass USA logo
City Pass USA
What Is Included in the Orlando Pass? Full Attraction List + 2026 Prices

What Is Included in the Orlando Pass? Full Attraction List + 2026 Prices

The quick version

Full 2026 inclusion list for every Orlando pass — Go City All-Inclusive, Explorer, Essentials and the CityPASS Disney bundle — verified prices and worth-it math.

26 min readBy Megan Hartley
Share this article:
On this page

What Is Included in the Orlando Pass? Full Attraction List + 2026 Prices

The single most confusing thing about Orlando tourist passes is that there is no single "Orlando Pass." There are four distinct products — three from Go City and one from CityPASS — each covering a completely different set of attractions and operating on a different structure. Getting this wrong before you book costs real money: buy the wrong product and you might pay $239 for a pass that covers zero of the attractions you actually planned to visit.

One important note for 2026: the Sightseeing Pass is no longer available. The operator filed for bankruptcy in mid-2025 and ceased operations entirely. Any page still listing it is out of date. The active products are Go City (All-Inclusive, Explorer, and Essentials) and the Orlando CityPASS (which is a Disney World ticket bundle, not a multi-attraction city card). We verified prices and inclusion lists directly from Go City and authorized resellers in June 2026, and every number in this guide is current.

Orlando skyline
Orlando skyline (CC BY · lololomo / Flickr)

The most critical thing to understand before reading any inclusion list: Go City does NOT include Disney World, Universal Studios, or Epic Universe. If those parks are the center of your trip, the Orlando city pass comparison explains why Go City will not help you. The Orlando CityPASS, by contrast, is built specifically around Disney — it is an authorized Disney ticket bundle, not a flexible multi-attraction card. These two products serve completely different trips.

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.

Key Takeaways

Sponsored
  • Go City All-Inclusive covers 34 non-Disney attractions including SeaWorld, LEGOLAND + Water Park, Kennedy Space Center, ICON Park, and WonderWorks — NO Disney or Universal.
  • Go City Explorer covers 19 of those 34 attractions on a choose-N basis; pick 3 to 5 specific experiences within 30 days.
  • Go City Essentials is a fixed bundle of 5 pre-selected top attractions at $139 per adult — the lowest-price entry into the Go City Orlando lineup.
  • Orlando CityPASS is a Walt Disney World ticket bundle. It bundles Disney, Universal, SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, and Kennedy Space Center admissions in one purchase, but you are paying per-park admission rates, not a flat access fee.
  • The Sightseeing Pass shut down in mid-2025 (bankruptcy) and is no longer available in any form.
  • Kennedy Space Center ($75 adult) and SeaWorld ($79 adult) are the highest-value inclusions in any Go City pass — picking these maximizes your savings on the Explorer and Essentials.

2026 Orlando Pass and Price Overview

Sponsored

Updated June 2026. All adult prices. Verified from Go City and authorized resellers. The Sightseeing Pass is excluded — it is no longer operating.

Pass Price (adult, 2026) Validity Type Total attractions covered Disney / Universal? Best for Buy
Go City All-Inclusive $239 (2-day) / $279 (3-day) / $339 (5-day) 2–5 days within 14 calendar days Time-based unlimited 34 No Multi-day visitors doing 3+ non-Disney attractions per day Buy
Go City Explorer $89 (3-choice) / $96 (4-choice) / $109 (5-choice) 30 days from first use Choose-N 19 available, choose 3–5 No Selective visitors with a clear shortlist of 3–5 non-Disney stops Buy
Go City Essentials $139 (adult) / $119 (child 3–12) 30 days from first use Fixed bundle (5 attractions) 5 pre-selected + choose from extras No Visitors who want the top 5 non-Disney parks at the lowest flat rate Buy
Orlando CityPASS Disney 4-day from $365 (ages 10+); Universal 3-day from $297; SeaWorld from $79; LEGOLAND from $64; KSC from $67 Varies by park (Disney 4-day, Universal multi-day, etc.) Authorized Disney ticket bundle 5 major theme parks (individual park admissions) Yes — Disney and Universal included Disney-anchored trips that want to add SeaWorld or Universal Buy

Go City All-Inclusive Orlando: What's Included

Sponsored

The Go City All-Inclusive Pass gives you unlimited access to 34 non-Disney Orlando attractions across the number of days you purchase — 2, 3, or 5 days, used within a 14-calendar-day window. It is the broadest product in the Orlando pass market, and it covers virtually every major non-Disney, non-Universal experience the city offers. Adult prices start at $239 for 2 days, $279 for 3 days, and $339 for 5 days. Children aged 3 to 12 pay slightly less.

The following table shows the confirmed inclusions and their individual à-la-carte ticket prices, which we verified directly in June 2026. These are the numbers that matter for break-even math.

Attraction A-la-carte price (adult, 2026) Included in All-Inclusive?
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex from $75 Yes
SeaWorld Orlando from $79 (online) Yes
LEGOLAND Florida Resort + Water Park from $74 (online) Yes (Water Park included free)
PEPPA PIG Theme Park Florida from $39 Yes
Madame Tussauds Orlando $29 Yes
WonderWorks All-Access Pass from $31 Yes
SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando from $26 Yes
The Orlando Eye (ICON Park) $29 (advance online) Yes
Fun Spot America — 4-Ride Sampler from $25 Yes
Boggy Creek Airboat Tour with Butterfly Nectar from $30 Yes
Gatorland from $30 Yes
Museum of Illusions Orlando from $20 Yes
The Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show from $39 Yes
Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition from $25 Yes
Gray Line Orlando City Tour from $35 Yes
Congo River Adventure Golf from $13 Yes
Additional experiences (tours, shows, activities) varies Yes — full list on gocity.com

What is NOT included in the Go City All-Inclusive

The All-Inclusive does not cover Walt Disney World (Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Hollywood Studios, Animal Kingdom), Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, Epic Universe, or Universal's Volcano Bay. These are simply not part of the Go City model — they are not excluded for a quirky reason, they just are not the products Go City operates. Any parking, dining, premium attraction upgrades (such as behind-the-scenes tours with extra fees), and merchandise are also excluded. If your Orlando trip consists primarily of Disney and Universal days, the All-Inclusive pass will not help you on those days.

One practical note on the LEGOLAND inclusion: the pass covers LEGOLAND Florida Resort at Winter Haven, about 45 minutes from International Drive. It is a dedicated half-day or full-day trip and should not be combined with another major park on the same day. The free Water Park inclusion is a legitimate bonus — LEGOLAND's Water Park alone is $25 to $35 to add at the gate.

Worked break-even math — 3-day All-Inclusive at $279

Day 1 (theme parks): SeaWorld Orlando ($79) + LEGOLAND + Water Park ($74) = $153. Day 2 (Space Coast): Kennedy Space Center ($75) + Boggy Creek Airboat Tour ($30) = $105. Day 3 (ICON Park and museums): The Orlando Eye ($29) + Madame Tussauds ($29) + WonderWorks ($31) + SEA LIFE Aquarium ($26) = $115. Three-day à-la-carte total: $373 vs pass price $279 — saving of $94. That math works, but it requires a genuinely dense itinerary. Cut the visit to five attractions instead of eight: SeaWorld ($79) + Kennedy Space Center ($75) + LEGOLAND ($74) + WonderWorks ($31) + Madame Tussauds ($29) = $288 versus $279 — you are $9 ahead of the 3-day pass with five stops, barely breaking even. The All-Inclusive only generates strong savings if you actually fill those days.

Go City Explorer Pass Orlando: What's Included

Sponsored

The Go City Explorer Pass Orlando works on a choose-N model: pick 3, 4, or 5 specific attraction entries from a menu of 19, and use them at any pace within 30 days of first use. There is no daily clock — visit one attraction per day or cluster three on a single day, and the 30-day window is the only constraint. Adult prices are $89 for 3 choices, $96 for 4 choices, and $109 for 5 choices. Children aged 3 to 12 start at $69 for 3 choices.

The Explorer menu is a curated subset of the All-Inclusive list, focused on the most popular and highest-value options. Here is what is on it, with à-la-carte prices for honest comparison:

Attraction A-la-carte price (adult, 2026) Available as Explorer choice?
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex from $75 Yes
SeaWorld Orlando from $79 (online) Yes (verify on gocity.com)
LEGOLAND Florida Resort from $74 (online) Yes (verify on gocity.com)
WonderWorks All-Access Pass from $31 Yes
Madame Tussauds Orlando $29 Yes
SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando from $26 Yes
The Orlando Eye (ICON Park) $29 (advance online) Yes
Boggy Creek Airboat Tour from $30 Yes
Gatorland from $30 Yes
Museum of Illusions Orlando from $20 Yes
PEPPA PIG Theme Park Florida from $39 Yes
Island H2O Water Park (seasonal) from $35 Yes (seasonal)
Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition from $25 Yes
Congo River Adventure Golf from $13 Yes
The Outta Control Magic Dinner Show from $39 Yes
Chocolate Kingdom Factory Adventure Tour from $15 Yes
Wild Florida Airboat Ride from $30 Yes
Additional dining credits / experiences varies Select options — verify on gocity.com

What is NOT included in the Go City Explorer

Same Disney and Universal exclusions apply. The Explorer menu is also narrower than the All-Inclusive — some of the 34 All-Inclusive attractions (particularly smaller tours and activities) are not available as Explorer choices. Always check the current menu at gocity.com before purchasing, because the Explorer attraction list can change. SeaWorld and LEGOLAND appear on some Explorer configurations; confirm they are available for your travel dates before relying on them for your break-even math.

One structural note: each attraction counts as exactly one choice regardless of its à-la-carte price. Choosing Gatorland ($30) costs you the same one choice as Kennedy Space Center ($75). Always prioritize the highest-priced options when building your Explorer selection.

Worked break-even math — Explorer vs à-la-carte

3-choice Explorer at $89 (best-value scenario): Kennedy Space Center ($75) + SeaWorld ($79) + LEGOLAND ($74) = $228 à la carte vs $89 pass — saving of $139. If the Explorer menu includes all three of those parks, this is the strongest single-pass value calculation in the Orlando market. Verify the current menu at gocity.com, because the major theme parks cycle in and out of the Explorer roster.

3-choice Explorer at $89 (modest-value scenario): Madame Tussauds ($29) + WonderWorks ($31) + SEA LIFE Aquarium ($26) = $86 à la carte vs $89 Explorer — a $3 loss. At the cheaper end of the menu, the Explorer barely breaks even and can lose money. The lesson is clear: if your three choices are smaller ICON Park attractions rather than the marquee theme parks, the Explorer is not worth it. I would only recommend it if at least one or two of your choices is a $60-plus attraction.

5-choice Explorer at $109 (strongest case): Kennedy Space Center ($75) + SeaWorld ($79) + LEGOLAND ($74) + WonderWorks ($31) + Madame Tussauds ($29) = $288 à la carte vs $109 pass — saving of $179. That is extraordinary value per dollar, provided you genuinely want all five and the Explorer menu includes the major parks. This is the pass that would convince me to buy even if I had only four of those five on my original list, because the fifth comes along essentially free.

Go City Essentials Pass Orlando: What's Included

Sponsored

The Go City Essentials is a fixed-bundle product at $139 per adult ($119 for children aged 3 to 12). It provides access to five pre-selected top Orlando attractions, valid for 30 days from first use. There are no day-count requirements and no choices to make — the five attractions are fixed. Go City describes it as their entry point to the Orlando pass range, positioned for visitors who want the biggest non-Disney parks at a predictable all-in price without any configuration decisions.

What's included

The confirmed core inclusions are SeaWorld Orlando, LEGOLAND Florida Resort with Water Park, and Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex — three of the highest-priced individual attractions in the Go City Orlando menu. Two additional slots pull from a selection of smaller experiences; check gocity.com/en/orlando/passes at time of purchase for the current complete Essentials bundle, as Go City periodically refreshes the included extras.

What is NOT included

Same Disney and Universal exclusions as every Go City product. The Essentials bundle is also smaller than the All-Inclusive — it covers five attractions versus thirty-four. If you want more flexibility to add ICON Park experiences, dinner shows, or airboat tours, you will need the Explorer or All-Inclusive instead. The Essentials is specifically designed for the visitor who wants to hit the three biggest non-Disney theme parks and nothing else.

Worked break-even math — Essentials at $139

SeaWorld Orlando ($79) + LEGOLAND Florida + Water Park ($74) + Kennedy Space Center ($75) = $228 à la carte vs $139 Essentials — saving of $89. That is an 39% discount on those three parks, and it is not contingent on any density requirement. Unlike the All-Inclusive, you do not need to pack your itinerary to extract value from the Essentials — you get the full $89 saving whether you visit all three parks in a single frantic day or spread them across three separate days inside the 30-day window.

The honest caveat: if your plan is only SeaWorld plus one smaller attraction, the Essentials at $139 will likely lose money. SeaWorld ($79) + The Orlando Eye ($29) = $108 à la carte — $31 less than the Essentials. In that scenario, buy individual tickets, not the Essentials. The Essentials makes sense when the three headline parks are all genuinely on your list.

Orlando CityPASS: What's Included (and Why It's Different)

The Orlando CityPASS is structurally different from every Go City product, and understanding this distinction is essential. CityPASS is not a flat-rate multi-attraction card. It is an authorized ticket reseller that bundles individual Disney World tickets with optional add-ons (Universal, SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, Kennedy Space Center) into a single purchase. You are buying per-park admissions at standard or near-standard prices; the "savings" come from convenience and occasional bundle discounts, not a dramatic flat-rate reduction.

What's included

The core Orlando CityPASS offering in 2026 is built around Walt Disney World tickets — 3 to 10-day passes covering Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom, with options for Park Hopper (multiple parks per day) and Park Hopper Plus (adds water parks). To that Disney anchor, you can add:

  • Universal Orlando Resort: 1-to-5-day Park-to-Park tickets covering Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, and Epic Universe (new in 2025).
  • SeaWorld Orlando: Single-park or multi-park (SeaWorld + Aquatica or SeaWorld + Busch Gardens Tampa) options.
  • LEGOLAND Florida Resort: Single-day admission.
  • Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex: Single-day admission.
Park / Pass component Price through Orlando CityPASS (2026) Individual buy price Saving
Walt Disney World — 4-Day Magic Ticket (ages 10+) from $365 from $400+ (date-dependent) Varies; CityPASS pricing is competitive but Disney dynamic pricing makes exact savings fluctuate
Universal Orlando — 3-Day Park-to-Park from $297 from $319 direct ~$22 (modest)
SeaWorld Orlando — single-day from $79 from $79 (online) Roughly equivalent; convenience value mainly
LEGOLAND Florida — single-day from $64 from $74 (online) ~$10
Kennedy Space Center — single-day from $67 from $75 ~$8

What is NOT included in Orlando CityPASS

Dining, parking, in-park merchandise, theme park hotel stays, FastPass / Lightning Lane priority access (that is a separate Disney charge), and any special event tickets (such as Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party). CityPASS does not provide skip-the-line access — you still join the standard queue at every park. The CityPASS is also non-refundable and non-transferable once activated, and same-day purchase is not available due to ticket processing.

The honest verdict on the Orlando CityPASS: it is most useful as a single-transaction convenience for the Disney-anchored trip. If you are planning four days at Disney World plus one day at Universal and one day at SeaWorld, CityPASS lets you buy all of those tickets in one place and sometimes saves $20 to $30 on the non-Disney add-ons. It is not a dramatic money-saver the way a Go City Explorer can be. If your trip does not include Disney World at all, CityPASS adds no value — use Go City instead. Read the detailed comparison in our Orlando CityPASS worth-it guide for the full verdict.

Downtown Orlando
Downtown Orlando (CC BY · Alveart / Flickr)

What the Orlando Pass Does NOT Include

Sponsored

This is worth a dedicated section, because the exclusions catch visitors off guard at the gate more often than the inclusions delight them. Here is a consolidated list of what is not covered by any Go City Orlando pass:

  • Walt Disney World — Magic Kingdom, Epcot, Hollywood Studios, Animal Kingdom, and the Disney Springs entertainment district (itself free, but its paid experiences are not covered). Not on any Go City product.
  • Universal Orlando Resort — Universal Studios Florida, Islands of Adventure, Epic Universe, and Volcano Bay water park. Not on any Go City product.
  • SeaWorld Orlando's premium add-ons — Aquatica water park is a separate admission at SeaWorld; the Discovery Cove all-inclusive experience costs $189 to $289 and is not included.
  • Parking — not included at any attraction. Budget $25 to $35 per vehicle per day at SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, and Kennedy Space Center. This is a real cost that erodes the pass savings.
  • Dining and merchandise — excluded everywhere. Food inside any theme park costs a significant premium. Factor park dining into your daily budget separately.
  • Lightning Lane / FastPass and ride upcharges — at attractions that offer premium express experiences, those costs are separate even if the base admission is covered.
  • Crown or interior access at the Statue of Liberty (irrelevant to Orlando, but the same exclusion logic applies: passes cover base admission, not premium add-ons).
  • Kennedy Space Center launch viewing events — standard admission is covered, but special launch-viewing tickets cost extra.

The short version: the Go City Orlando passes cover gate admission to their listed attractions. They do not cover transport, parking, food, or any paid upgrade beyond the base admission. A realistic daily budget for an Orlando day with a Go City pass still includes $30 in parking and $30 to $50 in food — budget accordingly.

A-La-Carte Orlando Attraction Prices: 2026 Baseline

Sponsored

These are the individual ticket prices we verified in June 2026. Pass math only makes sense against actual standalone prices — these are the numbers that determine whether any pass saves you money.

Attraction Adult price (2026, online) Notes
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex from $75 Gate price higher (~$83). 45 min from I-Drive; plan a full day.
SeaWorld Orlando from $79 (date-specific online) Dynamic pricing; popular dates can be $90+. No child/adult split for adults.
LEGOLAND Florida Resort + Water Park from $74 (online, advance) Located in Winter Haven, 45 min from Orlando. Water Park is an add-on at gate (~$25); Go City covers it free.
PEPPA PIG Theme Park Florida from $39 Adjacent to LEGOLAND; can be visited same day with early start. Best for ages 2–6.
Gatorland from $30 Includes breeding marsh tour and zip-line sampler. 30 min from I-Drive.
Boggy Creek Airboat Tour from $30 Butterfly Nectar add-on included in Go City version. 35 min from I-Drive.
WonderWorks All-Access Pass from $31 Includes the Outta Control Magic Show; standalone show is ~$39.
Madame Tussauds Orlando $29 Located at ICON Park on I-Drive. Combo with Orlando Eye + SEA LIFE from $74.
The Orlando Eye (ICON Park) $29 (advance online) Gate price $30+. 400-ft observation wheel; ~20-min ride.
SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando from $26 Located inside ICON Park. Combo well with Orlando Eye and Madame Tussauds.
Museum of Illusions Orlando from $20 Instagram-friendly optical illusion museum. 1–2 hours typically.
Island H2O Water Park (seasonal) from $35 Seasonal operation. Verify open dates before planning.
The Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show from $39 Dinner included. 2-hour show; family friendly.
Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition from $25 Artifact-based permanent exhibition at ICON Park.
Congo River Adventure Golf from $13 18-hole mini golf on I-Drive. Lowest-value Explorer choice.

For context on what the Go City pass does not cover: Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom costs $109 to $189 per adult (date-dependent), Universal Orlando's 1-day Park-to-Park runs $99 to $189, and Discovery Cove (SeaWorld's all-inclusive reef snorkeling experience) runs $189 to $289 per person. These are entirely outside the Go City system.

Which Pass Matches Your Trip?

Sponsored

Use this to cut straight to the right product.

You want Disney only (or Disney + Universal)

Skip every Go City product entirely. Disney sells multi-day tickets directly, and Universal sells 1-to-5-day passes. The Orlando CityPASS can bundle those admissions in one transaction with modest savings (typically $20 to $30 on the non-Disney parks). For Disney-only itineraries, buy Disney tickets directly — they are the same price everywhere. See the Orlando CityPASS vs Go City guide for the full head-to-head.

You want Kennedy Space Center + SeaWorld + LEGOLAND (the big non-Disney three)

The Go City Essentials at $139 is your best option. It covers all three plus two more, for $89 less than buying those three individually ($228). The Explorer 3-choice at $89 is even cheaper if the Explorer menu includes all three parks — save $139 versus individual tickets. Confirm the Explorer inclusion list before buying, because the major theme parks cycle in and out of the choose-N roster.

You want 4–5 specific non-Disney attractions, at your own pace

Go City Explorer 4-choice ($96) or 5-choice ($109). The 30-day window means no daily density pressure. A 5-choice Explorer covering Kennedy Space Center + SeaWorld + LEGOLAND + WonderWorks + Madame Tussauds saves $179 versus individual tickets — the strongest per-dollar case in the Orlando market. Load up on the highest-priced attractions first.

You want a multi-day non-Disney blitz (3+ attractions per day)

Go City All-Inclusive 2-day ($239) or 3-day ($279). If you can genuinely commit to three stops per day across two to three days, the All-Inclusive saves $94 to $125 over individual tickets. The 2-day pass works well for visitors who want to pack Kennedy Space Center and SeaWorld and LEGOLAND into a concentrated two-day push while spending the rest of the trip at Disney.

You are visiting only one or two paid non-Disney attractions

Skip every pass. Buying Kennedy Space Center ($75) and SeaWorld ($79) individually totals $154 — compared to $139 for the Essentials (which saves $15) or $89 for the Explorer 3-choice (which adds a free third attraction worth $26 to $79). At one attraction, no pass breaks even. At two, only the Explorer 3-choice makes clear financial sense if one is a high-value park. For solo or couple trips doing one or two stops, individual tickets are simpler.

Family with young children

The Orlando city pass for families breaks this down in detail, but the short version: LEGOLAND, PEPPA PIG Theme Park, SEA LIFE Aquarium, and WonderWorks are the most kid-friendly inclusions. The Essentials Pass ($139 adult / $119 child aged 3–12) covers three of the biggest names and is the easiest calculation for a family — fixed price, 30-day window, no daily density anxiety. A family of two adults and two children visiting the Essentials five attractions pays $516 versus $770+ à la carte — a saving of over $250.

When the Orlando Pass Loses Money (Honest Verdict)

Sponsored

Most "Orlando pass" guides only tell you when the pass wins. Here is when it does not.

The All-Inclusive loses money when you visit fewer than three attractions per day. At $239 for 2 days, you need $120 in à-la-carte admissions per day to break even. SeaWorld ($79) and The Orlando Eye ($29) in a day = $108 — $12 short of break-even, and you have used one of your two days. If bad weather, illness, or a slow family pace means you cover two or fewer attractions per day, the All-Inclusive will cost you more than buying tickets at the door.

The Explorer loses money if you pick cheap attractions. A 3-choice Explorer covering The Orlando Eye ($29) + SEA LIFE Aquarium ($26) + Congo River Golf ($13) = $68 à la carte versus $89 for the pass — you pay $21 extra for the convenience. The Explorer only makes financial sense when your choices include at least one high-value park ($60 or above). If your shortlist is entirely ICON Park experiences, buy individual tickets instead.

The Essentials may lose money if your third attraction is small. The Essentials is priced fairly against SeaWorld + LEGOLAND + Kennedy Space Center. If instead your Essentials bundle includes SeaWorld + Kennedy Space Center + a $25 experience as the third slot, the à-la-carte total is $179 versus $139 — the pass still saves $40, but you should double-check the current bundle contents before assuming the big three are all included.

The CityPASS is not a dramatic money-saver on Disney tickets. Disney's own multi-day ticket prices and CityPASS prices are very close. The main value of CityPASS is convenience (one transaction for multiple parks) and small discounts on the non-Disney add-ons. If you are purely looking for the cheapest Disney tickets, compare CityPASS against buying Disney tickets direct and against Undercover Tourist (an authorized reseller that sometimes prices Disney tickets $5 to $15 below direct). The best US city passes comparison covers where the biggest savings are nationwide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What attractions are included in the Go City Orlando All-Inclusive Pass?

The Go City Orlando All-Inclusive Pass includes 34 non-Disney attractions in 2026: SeaWorld Orlando, LEGOLAND Florida Resort with free Water Park, Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, Madame Tussauds Orlando, WonderWorks All-Access Pass, SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando, The Orlando Eye, Fun Spot America (4-Ride Sampler), Boggy Creek Airboat Tour, Gatorland, Museum of Illusions, The Outta Control Magic Comedy Dinner Show, Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition, Gray Line Orlando City Tour, Congo River Adventure Golf, and more. Walt Disney World, Universal Studios, and Epic Universe are NOT included.

Does the Orlando pass include Disney World?

No Go City Orlando pass includes Disney World or Universal Studios. If you need Disney tickets, the Orlando CityPASS is the relevant product — it is an authorized Disney ticket bundle that lets you add Universal, SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, and Kennedy Space Center in a single transaction. Go City and the Orlando CityPASS serve completely different trips.

Is Kennedy Space Center included in the Orlando pass?

Yes, Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex ($75 à la carte) is included in the Go City All-Inclusive, the Go City Essentials, and usually in the Go City Explorer (verify on gocity.com at time of purchase). It is also available as an add-on through the Orlando CityPASS at a discounted rate of approximately $67. At 45 minutes from International Drive on the Space Coast, it requires a dedicated half-day or full day — do not combine it with a major theme park on the same day.

What is included in Go City Orlando Explorer Pass?

The Go City Orlando Explorer Pass lets you choose 3, 4, or 5 attractions from a menu of 19 in 2026. The menu includes Kennedy Space Center, SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, WonderWorks, Madame Tussauds, SEA LIFE Aquarium, The Orlando Eye, Boggy Creek Airboat Tour, Gatorland, Museum of Illusions, PEPPA PIG Theme Park, Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition, Island H2O Water Park (seasonal), and others. Adult prices are $89 (3-choice), $96 (4-choice), and $109 (5-choice). Valid for 30 days from first use — no daily density required.

How much is the Orlando pass in 2026?

In 2026: the Go City All-Inclusive costs $239 (2-day), $279 (3-day), or $339 (5-day) per adult. The Go City Explorer costs $89 (3-choice), $96 (4-choice), or $109 (5-choice) per adult. The Go City Essentials costs $139 per adult ($119 for children aged 3–12). The Orlando CityPASS is a Disney ticket bundle that starts around $365 per adult for a 4-day Disney ticket; non-Disney add-ons (Universal, SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, KSC) are priced separately. The Sightseeing Pass is no longer available — the operator shut down in mid-2025.

Is the Go City Orlando pass worth it?

The Go City Explorer Pass is worth it if your shortlist includes at least two high-value attractions ($60+) — Kennedy Space Center, SeaWorld, and LEGOLAND are the key anchors. A 3-choice Explorer covering those three parks saves $139 versus individual tickets. The All-Inclusive is worth it when you realistically plan to visit three or more attractions per day across your purchased days. The Essentials at $139 is the simplest calculation — if SeaWorld, LEGOLAND, and Kennedy Space Center are all on your itinerary, it saves $89 over buying those three individually. See the full Orlando city pass comparison for pass-by-pass verdict details.

The Orlando pass market in 2026 comes down to a straightforward matching problem: Go City for non-Disney attractions, Orlando CityPASS for Disney-anchored trips. The Go City Explorer is the strongest single product for most visitors — choose the 3 to 5 highest-priced attractions on your list, verify the current menu at gocity.com, and you will almost certainly save $50 to $179 over individual tickets. The Essentials is the most foolproof option if the three big marquee parks (Kennedy Space Center, SeaWorld, LEGOLAND) are all on your itinerary — $89 in guaranteed savings, no configuration required.

Whatever pass you choose, book your park admissions as early as possible. Kennedy Space Center and SeaWorld both recommend advance booking, especially during summer (June to August), when Orlando's highest crowds make day-of capacity restrictions possible. And budget separately for parking ($25 to $35 per vehicle at each major park) — it is the most commonly forgotten cost in Orlando trip planning, and it is the one that eats pass savings fastest.

Sponsored

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.

Tags
Browse all articles →

Continue reading

More guides you'll find useful