REVIEW · LOS ANGELES
Los Angeles: Go City All-Inclusive Pass with 35+ Attractions
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Go City - USA · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Hollywood is easier when tickets are already handled. This pass bundles 35+ attractions with a simple QR-code entry system, so you can bounce between studio tours, theme parks, and classic sightseeing without building a spreadsheet of tickets. It’s also built for flexible pacing because you can choose a 1 to 7-day pass and use it over a 14-day window after you start.
I especially like how the lineup mixes big-name LA hits with different vibes: Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood next to neighborhood-style tours, plus ocean-time at Aquarium of the Pacific and a whale watch off Newport Beach. The other strong win is the “do more, save more” idea that works well if you actually plan to use the pass each day. One real consideration: popular items can require reservations, and some tours have limited operating days, so you’ll want to check timing before you lock in your schedule.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Mark on Your LA Map
- How the Go City Pass Works (And Why It Feels Low-Stress)
- Hollywood in the Pass: Warner Bros., Tussauds, and Icon Walks
- Big Bus Tours: The Easiest Way to Chain Neighborhoods Together
- Knott’s Berry Farm and Soak City: A Full-Day Payoff
- Aquarium of the Pacific and Newport Whale Watching: Ocean Time You Can Actually Use
- Battleship IOWA Museum: A Different Side of the LA Harbor Mood
- SoFi Stadium and Dolby Theatre: Big-Name LA Stops, With Scheduling Checks
- Santa Monica and Venice by Bike: Where the Pass Feels Like a Real Trip
- Value Check: When This Pass Makes Sense Money-Wise
- A Smart Way to Build Your 1–7 Day Itinerary
- Who This Pass Is Best For (And Who Should Rethink It)
- Should You Book the Los Angeles Go City All-Inclusive Pass?
- FAQ
- How do I enter the attractions with the Go City pass?
- How many days is the pass valid for?
- Do I need to make reservations?
- What time is the pass valid for entry?
- What should I bring with me?
- Are food and transportation included?
Key Things I’d Mark on Your LA Map

- Scan-and-go QR code entry for 35+ included activities, with a digital pass and a PDF guidebook.
- Hollywood anchors in one bundle, including Warner Bros., Madame Tussauds, and the Original Hollywood Sign Walking Tour.
- Theme-park day built in, from Knott’s Berry Farm rides to Knott’s Soak City Water Park.
- Ocean experiences are included, with Aquarium of the Pacific plus a whale watch & dolphin tour from Newport Beach.
- Hop-on, hop-off transport option through Big Bus tours that helps you stitch neighborhoods together.
- Time window matters: you must scan for entry before 5:30pm for pass-valid admission.
How the Go City Pass Works (And Why It Feels Low-Stress)

This pass is designed around one simple idea: you pay once, then you use a phone-based pass to get into lots of attractions. You pick a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7-day option, then you show your QR code at the ticket office or gate for scanning. No ticket counters hopping around the city just to keep your day on track.
A smart detail: the pass is activated with your first attraction visit. After that, your days of use are valid for the number of days purchased, but within a 14-day period. That means you’re not forced into a strict day-by-day plan from the moment you buy it, which is useful if your LA days shift due to weather or energy levels.
There’s also a time rule you should respect. Passes are valid for entry between 9am and 5.30pm, and you can stay later only if you were scanned for entry before 5.30pm. I’d build your plan so your last pass scan happens earlier than you think, especially on days that involve buses, walking, or multiple stops.
One last “small but important” thing: you’ll need a charged smartphone. Since the pass is digital, you don’t want to spend your first hour in LA hunting for a charger.
You can also read our reviews of more city tours in Los Angeles
Hollywood in the Pass: Warner Bros., Tussauds, and Icon Walks

If you want classic Hollywood without paying for every separate tour ticket, this pass lines up several heavy hitters in the same general theme zone. You get:
- Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood
- Madame Tussauds Hollywood
- TCL Chinese Theatre Tour or Movie with Drink
- The Original Hollywood Sign Walking Tour
- Big Bus Celebrity Homes & Lifestyle Tour
- Big Bus Hop-on Hop-off Discover Tour
Here’s why that matters for you: these stops aren’t identical, so you can create variety without switching plans mid-day. Studio tours tend to work best when you can focus, while Madame Tussauds and Hollywood landmarks are great for the “wander with purpose” style of sightseeing.
Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood is the big “LA credential” experience on the list. It’s the kind of stop that usually takes more attention than a quick photo stop, so I’d treat it like a main event on your itinerary rather than a filler between other plans.
Madame Tussauds Hollywood is more playful and photo-forward. If you’re traveling with someone who likes celeb-style attractions, this is the easiest way to get those fun selfies without needing extra tickets.
The TCL Chinese Theatre entry is flexible: you can choose a guided tour or a movie with drink option. The key value here is choice. If your schedule is tight, the guided format can feel easier to slot in; if you want a calmer break, the movie option can work better.
Then there’s the Original Hollywood Sign Walking Tour. Even if you’ve lived in Southern California for years, it’s the kind of activity that many people skip until they have a structured reason to do it. Build in time for walking and viewpoints, and try to go earlier in the day if you want cooler temps and less crowd flow.
Possible drawback to watch: your day can get crowded fast if you try to stack all Hollywood anchors at once. This pass encourages “more,” but your feet may veto your plan. Pick one studio-style anchor, one landmark-style stop, and one “fun break” attraction per day.
Big Bus Tours: The Easiest Way to Chain Neighborhoods Together

Two Big Bus options are included: the Big Bus Celebrity Homes & Lifestyle Tour and the Big Bus Hop-on Hop-off Discover Tour. The practical value here is transportation you don’t have to schedule yourself.
When you’re using a pass like this, the biggest time robber is transit plus decision-making. Hop-on hop-off tours reduce both. You can ride, get your bearings, then hop off when you see something you want to check out, and hop back on later without paying for a separate tour for each hop.
The Celebrity Homes & Lifestyle Tour is a good choice when you want the storytelling layer: who lived where, what neighborhoods look like from the road, and how the city’s image is shaped. It’s also a good “recovery option” on a day when you don’t want to walk as much.
A good rule for you: plan to use Big Bus for a route day, then use the pass’s other attractions for stops that don’t overlap too heavily with the same travel time. It’s a simple way to keep your schedule from feeling like constant movement.
Knott’s Berry Farm and Soak City: A Full-Day Payoff

One of the strongest reasons to buy a bundled pass is when it includes something that normally costs more than you expect. Here, Knott’s Berry Farm and Knott’s Soak City Water Park do that job.
Knott’s Berry Farm is a theme-park day you can build around. If you’re choosing a 1 to 3-day pass, this is the kind of attraction that can quickly justify the purchase because you’re not paying separate entry tickets, plus you get a built-in reason to clear the calendar.
Soak City Water Park makes it even easier to choose a theme-park-with-a-splash day. If you’re traveling in warmer months, this is the kind of stop that can reset your energy without turning into a “stand in lines all day” situation.
How I’d plan it for best results:
- If you want rides and water, consider splitting them across one full day rather than trying to do both on different travel days.
- Start early in the day so you can get in the main attractions before your energy drops.
- Keep one low-pressure activity in reserve in case you hit weather, crowds, or long queue times.
Aquarium of the Pacific and Newport Whale Watching: Ocean Time You Can Actually Use

If LA feels a bit overwhelming, the ocean stops on this pass can give you a clean change of pace. You’ll find:
- Aquarium of the Pacific
- Whale Watch & Dolphin Tour – Beautiful Newport Beach
The Aquarium of the Pacific is the kind of attraction that works for many travel styles. If you want photos, you’ll get plenty. If you want calmer wandering, you can take your time. If you’re traveling with kids or anyone who likes animals, it’s also a strong “set-and-forget” stop because it’s naturally structured.
The whale watch & dolphin tour adds the outside element. Newport Beach is the one named marine departure point on the list, and that matters for planning: you’ll want to align your other LA days so you’re not burning time bouncing around the city right before this.
Practical advice: treat this as your “clock-based” experience. Tours like this usually have a fixed schedule, and missing a start time is annoying even when your pass is included. If you’re stacking multiple attractions, give yourself some buffer time around the tour.
Battleship IOWA Museum: A Different Side of the LA Harbor Mood

The pass also includes Battleship IOWA Museum. This is a very different kind of attraction from the theme-park and Hollywood stops. It’s a good choice if you want variety, especially if your first couple of days lean heavily toward sightseeing and studios.
This is also an attraction that tends to reward patience. You’re not just moving through rooms for quick photos. Even if you’re not a history person, you can still enjoy the scale and the way the ship layout makes you slow down.
If you’re building an itinerary, battleship + ocean experiences can be a smart pairing because both lean toward “maritime calm” rather than constant walking under bright city scenes.
SoFi Stadium and Dolby Theatre: Big-Name LA Stops, With Scheduling Checks
For downtown-style attractions, you have two good options:
- SoFi Stadium Tour
- Dolby Theatre guided tour
These are strong picks if you like behind-the-scenes looks at real LA institutions, not just the outside view. Stadium tours tend to feel practical because they’re organized and you can get the layout and history in a structured way.
Dolby Theatre is more show-and-production oriented. One timing caution for you: the Dolby Theatre Guided Tour can be closed on certain days, and if you’re traveling on a Saturday, double-check the operating schedule before you plan around it. That one detail can save you a lot of day reshuffling.
If you’re trying to build a tight itinerary, I’d treat these as “anchor tours” and leave lighter sightseeing as the fill-in blocks.
Santa Monica and Venice by Bike: Where the Pass Feels Like a Real Trip

Another included highlight is the Highlights of Santa Monica and Venice Beach Bike Tour. This is valuable because it’s not just about getting tickets. It’s a way to experience the coastline areas efficiently while still getting outside.
Bike tours also solve a common LA problem: you want to see a lot, but you don’t want to fight transit lines and parking decisions every hour. When a tour includes the route structure, you can focus on the scenery and the ride.
For best comfort, plan this as a mid-trip day when you’re ready to move. If your first day includes studio walking, Hollywood climbs, and long transit, you might want to save the bike tour for a day when your legs are fresh.
Value Check: When This Pass Makes Sense Money-Wise

The pass price shown is $94 per person, and the big value idea is that the included attractions are usually more expensive if you book them one by one. The best way to judge value for you is to ask: how many “high-ticket” items do I actually plan to do?
This lineup includes several categories that typically cost more than you expect:
- A major studio tour (Warner Bros.)
- A theme park and a water park (Knott’s)
- A whale watch tour
- A big walking/landmark experience (Hollywood sign tour)
- Multi-hour guided attractions (SoFi Stadium Tour, Dolby Theatre)
If you can commit to even a handful of these anchor experiences, the pass often works well because it removes the constant mental math. If your plan is only one or two small attractions, then the pass can feel less efficient.
I also like that you can choose a shorter pass length if you’re doing LA for just a few days. That way you’re not paying for unused days.
A Smart Way to Build Your 1–7 Day Itinerary
Go City makes this easy in theory, but your schedule still needs a human touch. I’d build your plan in layers:
Layer 1: Pick 2 or 3 anchor experiences per day.
For example: Warner Bros. plus a nearby attraction, or Knott’s plus a separate water-park block.
Layer 2: Use the app and the PDF guide to avoid last-minute confusion.
You’ll be advised to sync your pass to the Go City app, and the PDF guidebook is part of the deal. That’s useful when you’re trying to figure out access details and the current opening information for each included stop.
Layer 3: Respect the scanning window.
Since entry for pass use is tied to scanning before 5.30pm, I’d plan your last scanned attraction earlier than you’d plan a normal ticket.
Layer 4: Reserve the popular items that require it.
Some attractions need reservations. If you wait until the last minute, you can end up with a plan that still has admission but no workable time slot.
If you’re the type who likes a plan but hates rigidity, this pass fits your style. You still decide the day flow, but you aren’t stuck buying tickets one by one.
Who This Pass Is Best For (And Who Should Rethink It)
This pass is a strong fit if you:
- Want a “greatest hits” LA trip with Hollywood + parks + ocean in one purchase
- Like mixing guided tours with self-paced sightseeing
- Have limited time and want your money to go further
- Are the kind of traveler who enjoys hopping between different neighborhoods without spending hours researching every ticket
It may not be the best fit if:
- You want a slow, open-ended vacation with only a couple of attractions
- You’re very sensitive to schedule changes, especially if a specific tour day matters to you (like Dolby Theatre on certain days)
The pass works best when you treat it as a framework and you commit to using it.
Should You Book the Los Angeles Go City All-Inclusive Pass?
I’d book this pass if your LA days include at least a few major anchors from the list: Warner Bros., Knott’s, Aquarium of the Pacific, a whale watch, and at least one of the guided downtown-style tours. It’s especially appealing when you want to try things even if they feel touristy, because the included mix makes you more likely to do the “I’ve always meant to” activities.
I’d hesitate if your plan is mostly low-priority stops or you’re locked into very specific days for a key attraction. In that case, verify opening days and reservation requirements early, then decide whether the pass still matches the way you want to travel.
Bottom line: this is a practical way to buy freedom in advance. You’ll spend less time on ticket logistics and more time doing the LA stuff you actually came for.
FAQ
How do I enter the attractions with the Go City pass?
You use a digital pass on your smartphone and show the QR code at the ticket office or gate. Staff scan it for admission.
How many days is the pass valid for?
You choose a pass for 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 7 days. After your first attraction visit activates the pass, it’s valid for the number of days purchased within a 14-day period.
Do I need to make reservations?
Some of the most popular activities require reservations. You should reserve well in advance to avoid missing out on your preferred times.
What time is the pass valid for entry?
Passes are valid for entry to attractions between 9am and 5.30pm. You can stay later, but your pass must be scanned for entry before 5.30pm.
What should I bring with me?
Bring a charged smartphone so you can access and show your digital pass QR code.
Are food and transportation included?
Food and drinks are not included unless specifically stated. Transportation to and from attractions is also not included unless an included attraction says otherwise.





























