London: Go City Explorer Pass® – Tickets for 2-7 Attractions

REVIEW · LONDON

London: Go City Explorer Pass® – Tickets for 2-7 Attractions

  • 4.31,111 reviews
  • 30 days
  • From $72
Book on GetYourGuide →

Operated by Go City - London · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.3 (1,111)Duration30 daysPrice from$72Operated byGo City - LondonBook viaGetYourGuide

London is best seen in pick-and-mix mode. The Go City Explorer Pass turns entry tickets into a simple credit plan, so you can map a London highlight day-by-day without racing.

Two things I like right away: the instant digital credits package (so you can start using it fast) and the flexibility to choose exactly 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 attractions from a big shortlist of top sights and tours. You’re not stuck with a fixed schedule.

One consideration: this type of pass only pays off if you actually use enough of your credits. And some of the most popular places can require reservations, plus you may still hit lines at busy entries like Westminster Abbey and The Tower of London.

Key things that make this pass work

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Key things that make this pass work

  • Choose 2–7 attractions with credits: one credit equals one attraction visit.
  • 90+ options: historic landmarks, top museums, and fun tours, all in one pass.
  • 30-day validity from first use: you get time to spread your sightseeing out.
  • App planning helps you navigate London: the Go City app can guide you and sync your pass.
  • Popular viewpoints and icons are included: The Shard, Tower Bridge, Westminster Abbey, and more.
  • Big-name tours and river time are on the list: like a 2-day Hop-On Hop-Off bus and a 24-hour Thames cruise option.

Credits and savings: what you’re really buying for $72

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Credits and savings: what you’re really buying for $72
The London Go City Explorer Pass is sold as a value math problem you can actually control. You pay for a pass that includes 2 to 7 attractions, and each attraction visit costs one credit. The goal is simple: save versus buying tickets one at a time, especially if you plan to hit several major sights.

Go City advertises up to 50% savings based on sample itineraries. That doesn’t mean every itinerary saves the same amount. The real question for you is this: will you use enough of those credits on worthwhile, ticket-only attractions?

A quick sanity check I recommend: pick your likely top 3–5 must-dos first (not your “maybe” list). Then see if they’re actually on the pass. If your plan is mostly free things to walk past, this pass won’t feel like a steal. If your plan is to enter big-ticket places and tours, the credits can add up fast.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in London

How the app + digital credits keep your days flexible

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - How the app + digital credits keep your days flexible
This pass is designed to be easy to access. After you buy, you get instant digital sightseeing credits. In London, that matters more than it sounds, because you’ll be bouncing between neighborhoods and trying to keep your schedule sane.

You’ll also want the Go City app, since it’s the tool for attraction info, digital map help, and—most importantly—making sure your pass is synced so entry is smooth. The app also tends to have the most up-to-date lineup, opening times, and access instructions, and attractions can change.

Here’s the timing rule to lock in mentally: your pass is activated at your first attraction visit, and you then have 30 days for the remaining attractions. So if you’re traveling for a week, start with your easiest-to-use first visit and let the clock work for you, not against you.

Picking your 2–7 attractions: build a route, not a wish list

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Picking your 2–7 attractions: build a route, not a wish list
The biggest advantage of this pass is not the price tag. It’s that you can choose your highlights based on your actual energy level.

I’d plan like this: group attractions that live close to each other, then add one “anchor” sight that’s far away. That way, you use fewer transport hops and you don’t waste credits on “we barely made it” days.

A solid approach for a first visit is:

  • One landmark + one church/cultural entry per day
  • One museum block (so you’re indoors during a rain window)
  • One low-effort sightseeing tool like a bus route or a Thames river option, if you want views without constant ticket lines

From the included list, you can create routes with famous names: The View from the Shard, Tower Bridge, Westminster Abbey, St Paul’s Cathedral, The Tower of London, and Kensington Palace. Then you can round out with museums and fun stops like London Transport Museum, Royal Observatory Greenwich & Prime Meridian, London Zoo, or even an evening-friendly option such as a Sherlock live game.

The Shard, Tower Bridge, and a South Bank viewing plan

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - The Shard, Tower Bridge, and a South Bank viewing plan
If you want skyline payoff early, start with The View from the Shard. The highlight says you get the views, and that’s the whole point: a quick ticketed experience that gives you perspective on the city’s shape.

Then pair it with Tower Bridge—especially since the included experience explicitly mentions climbing it. This is one of those combinations that makes London feel like a postcard without spending all day commuting.

To tie it together, consider adding the City Cruises 24 Hour Thames River Pass. Even when you’re not trying to “do everything,” a Thames-focused day gives you a ribbon of sights and a calmer pace than hopscotching multiple neighborhoods back-to-back.

Practical tip: if you’re doing Shard + Tower Bridge + river time, watch your order. Pick your most timed/most crowded item first, then let your later stops be more flexible. That keeps your day from turning into a sprint.

Westminster Abbey + St Paul’s Cathedral: iconic interiors and busy entries

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Westminster Abbey + St Paul’s Cathedral: iconic interiors and busy entries
These two stops are on the list for a reason: they’re top-name London entries. Westminster Abbey is specifically called out in the highlights as a must-explore place. St Paul’s Cathedral is another big-ticket entry included in the pass.

The drawback to know: these kinds of landmarks can have long lines when they’re at peak demand. Even if your pass makes entry straightforward, you can still lose time waiting to get in.

So I’d treat them as “bookend” sights:

  • Put one on a morning slot when possible
  • Put the other on a later block with time built in

Why this works: you can build around the reality of London crowds. You’re not trying to thread two heavyweight entrances into a too-tight itinerary.

You can also read our reviews of more city tours in London

Tower of London: make it a priority, then let the neighborhood breathe

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Tower of London: make it a priority, then let the neighborhood breathe
The Tower of London is one of the headline attractions included. It’s also the kind of place where a half-plan can turn into a half-day.

This is where credits can be your friend. One credit buys entry, and you can focus your day energy on actually seeing it, not deciding what to do while time slips away.

If you’re using the pass for a “best-of London” trip, I’d schedule Tower of London as a centerpiece day. Then, if you’re feeling fresh afterward, add a nearby museum entry from your list (like The Monument to The Great Fire of London) rather than stacking another major timed attraction.

Kensington Palace + Royal Botanic Gardens Kew for a calmer rhythm

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Kensington Palace + Royal Botanic Gardens Kew for a calmer rhythm
Not all London highlights have to mean crowds and queues. Kensington Palace gives you a royal stop without making your entire trip revolve around one borough. Then you can switch gears with Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew for a break that feels less like a checklist.

Kew makes sense if you want space, walking, and a different mood from the city center. It also helps balance out heavier “history and stone” days.

If you’re choosing between two “palace/gardens” ideas, think about what you’ll enjoy more when London weather is mixed. Gardens can be weather-dependent, but you still get a change of pace that can reset the whole trip.

Shakespeare’s Globe: theatre-style history you can feel

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Shakespeare’s Globe: theatre-style history you can feel
Shakespeare’s Globe Exhibition & Theatre Tour is included, and it’s a great example of a pass option that isn’t only about museums. It’s built around a famous place tied to performance and storytelling.

This is a good credit choice if you want your London experience to include a little spectacle and a sense of how the theatre world works, not just artifacts behind glass.

I’d add it to a day when you’re otherwise visiting more formal sites. It breaks up the “large-name venue” pattern and makes your schedule more varied.

Hop-On Hop-Off bus + Thames cruise: the view-first strategy

London: Go City Explorer Pass® - Tickets for 2-7 Attractions - Hop-On Hop-Off bus + Thames cruise: the view-first strategy
If you like seeing a lot of London without planning every turn, this pass includes two classic tools:

  • a 2-day Hop-On Hop-Off London Bus tour (Big Bus Tours)
  • a City Cruises 24 Hour Thames River Pass

The value here is that both options can stretch your sightseeing without adding extra ticket stress. You can hop when you’re ready and bail when you’re tired.

One real-world caution: bus routes can take longer when traffic is heavy. If your day depends on timing multiple major entries, build in buffer time. I’d treat the bus as a flexible base, not as your “we must arrive on the minute” solution.

Also, note that some entries can have extra waiting depending on how pass access is handled. If you’re sensitive to lines, keep your most time-critical attraction earlier in the day and use the bus/cruise as your calmer filler.

Museums worth spending credits on (and how to choose)

The pass includes plenty of museums and major places of interest. You’ve got options like:

  • London Transport Museum
  • Royal Observatory Greenwich & Prime Meridian
  • Cutty Sark
  • Freud Museum London
  • London Transport Museum
  • The Courtauld Gallery
  • Royal Air Force Museum London

Since the pass is credit-based, the best way to choose is to match the museum to your mood:

  • If you like London as a system, go for London Transport Museum.
  • If you want science + a famous line, pick Royal Observatory Greenwich & Prime Meridian.
  • If you want a ship-related heritage stop, consider Cutty Sark.
  • If you’re into art, the included Courtauld Gallery can work well.

My approach: don’t pick museums just because they’re included. Pick one that fits what you want to think about during your visit. That’s how credits feel like value instead of “another ticket.”

Fun tours and offbeat tickets: when you want London to play back

One of the most enjoyable parts of this pass is that it doesn’t limit you to solemn landmarks. Included options range from playful to weird-in-a-good-way, such as:

  • Swingers Crazy Golf (West End or City venues)
  • All Star Lanes (bowling)
  • Solve a Mystery: the Murder at Trafalgar Square
  • Sherlock: The Official Live Game
  • Up at the O2
  • The Dare Skywalk
  • music and movie tour options like Brit Music Tours and Brit Movie Tours
  • sports tours like Chelsea FC Stadium Tour & Museum, Arsenal Stadium Tour, Wembley Stadium Tour, and Tottenham Hotspur FC Stadium Tour
  • even family-friendly picks like London Zoo and LEGO(L)AND Windsor

If you’re traveling with mixed ages or you want a “not another museum” evening, these are great ways to use credits where the payoff is fun, not only learning.

A smart tactic: save one credit for something you can’t easily do on your own. Live games and mystery experiences tend to feel more special when they’re timed and guided.

Reservation reality: the one thing that can spoil a good plan

The pass is flexible, but it’s not magic. The key warning is that the most popular activities require reservations. If you skip reserving, you risk missing the experience even though you own the credits.

So I’d do this:

  1. Identify your top 2–4 must-dos.
  2. Check reservation needs for those specific entries through the Go City app.
  3. Book/reserve early for the ones that are hardest to get.

Also, plan for lines at high-demand sites. Even with a valid pass, entries for places like Westminster Abbey and The Tower of London can be busy.

And one more practical note: it’s possible to end up not using all credits if your schedule slows down. That’s especially likely with attractions that can take hours. Choose your number of credits based on how fast you realistically move.

Who this pass fits best

This Explorer Pass is a strong match for:

  • First-time London visitors who want the big icons without building a fragile itinerary.
  • People who like options: you can adjust based on weather and energy.
  • Anyone who wants a mix of viewpoints (like The View from the Shard), major landmarks (Westminster Abbey, Tower of London), and museum time.

It may feel less ideal if:

  • You’re only interested in one or two paid attractions.
  • Your trip is so short that you can’t realistically use multiple credits within 30 days from first use.
  • You hate dealing with reservations and crowd timing for top entries.

Should you book the Go City London Explorer Pass?

If your goal is a best-of London trip with a handful of major entrances, I think it’s a good buy. The structure—2 to 7 credits you redeem over 30 days—is exactly what you want when you’re balancing must-sees with breathing room.

I’d book it if you can honestly commit to using most of your credits and you’re willing to reserve where required. I’d skip or downsize the pass if you’re mostly doing free walks, parks, and spontaneous window-shopping.

Ultimately, this pass shines when you use it like a tool: pick anchors, reserve the popular ones, and let the rest of the city come naturally.

FAQ

How many attractions can I choose with the London Explorer Pass?

You can choose 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 attractions depending on the pass you buy.

What does one credit mean?

One credit equals one attraction visit.

How long is the pass valid?

The pass is valid for 30 days.

When does the 30-day countdown start?

The 30 days start on your first attraction visit, when your pass is activated.

Yes. The most popular activities require reservations, so it’s smart to reserve well in advance.

How do I access and use the pass at attractions?

After you buy, you receive a digital credits package. For the best experience, sync your pass with the Go City app, which provides access instructions for each attraction.

Can I cancel and get a refund?

Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Do I get instant delivery of my tickets?

Yes. You get instant delivery of your digital sightseeing credits package.

Will I have the same meeting point for every attraction?

No. The meeting point may vary depending on the option booked.

Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in London we have reviewed

Scroll to Top

Explore London

Every corner of the city, and the best days out beyond it.