California
Griffith Observatory
How to visit Griffith Observatory: why the building and its views are free, when to arrive for the sunset and skyline, the $10-an-hour parking trap to avoid, and whether the planetarium show is worth the $10.
Where
Los Angeles, United States
Opening hours
Tuesday–Friday 12:00–22:00, Saturday–Sunday 10:00–22:00, closed Mondays. The surrounding grounds and the lawn views are open every day. Confirm your date on griffithobservatory.lacity.gov.
Tickets
Admission is free. Parking is $10 per hour, capped at $15 a day (about £8 an hour / £12 max). Samuel Oschin Planetarium shows are $10 adults 13–54 / $8 seniors 55+ and students / $6 children 5–12 (roughly £8 / £6.30 / £4.70), bought in person on the day only.
Time needed
1.5–2 hours for the building, exhibits and views; add 30–40 minutes if you do a planetarium show, plus driving or shuttle time from the city.
In short
Visiting Griffith Observatory
Entry to the Griffith Observatory building, the grounds and the public telescopes is free — you only pay for parking and the planetarium show. The point of the trip is the view: the LA basin laid out below, the Hollywood Sign on the next hill, and a copper-domed Art Deco building on the front lawn. Arrive about 90 minutes before sunset to get the city in daylight and then watch it light up. It's closed Mondays, and the $10-an-hour car park fills fast — take the 50-cent DASH shuttle or walk up instead.
How to visit without paying for what’s already free
The thing to understand before you go is that the building, the grounds and the public telescopes are all free. There is no entry ticket, no queue to buy one, and nothing to book ahead. The only money that changes hands is $10 an hour for parking (capped at $15 a day, roughly £8 an hour or £12 max) and, if you choose to see one, a planetarium show. People arrive braced to pay a fortune for an “LA landmark” and there’s nothing to pay for the main event.
What you’re actually coming for is the view. The copper-domed Art Deco observatory sits on the south slope of Mount Hollywood with the whole LA basin spread out below, the Hollywood Sign on the next ridge to the west, and downtown’s towers in the haze beyond. The telescopes on the roof terrace are free to look through when the sky is clear and staff are out — usually after dark.
The catch is the car park. It’s small, it’s $10 an hour (capped at $15 for the day), and on a clear evening or a weekend it fills before sunset and tailbacks form on the access road. Skip the drive: take the DASH Observatory/Los Feliz shuttle (about 50 cents, or 35 cents with a Metro TAP card, every 20–25 minutes, 10:00–22:00) up from the Vermont/Sunset Metro station, or park free in the streets around the Greek Theatre lower down and walk the last uphill stretch.
The best time to make the climb
Aim to arrive roughly 90 minutes before sunset on a clear day. You’ll see the skyline and the Hollywood Sign in daylight, then stay as the city lights flick on and the dome lights up — it’s the one window that gives you both. It’s also the most crowded window, so get there early in that slot. For a quiet visit instead, come at a weekday lunchtime; remember the building is closed Mondays and only opens at noon Tuesday to Friday (10:00 at weekends), though the lawn and views are open every day.
Allow an hour and a half to two hours for the building, the exhibits and the terraces. The Samuel Oschin Planetarium show ($10 adults, $8 seniors and students, $6 children 5–12) is bought in person on the day — you can’t reserve it — and runs about 30–40 minutes; it’s a genuine domed projector show rather than a phone-screen gimmick, and worth it on a hazy day when the outdoor view is washed out. The free Tesla coil demonstration and the foyer’s swinging Foucault pendulum are the indoor highlights either way.
This is the rare free sight that earns the trip up the hill, and it beats paying for a paid “viewpoint” elsewhere in the city. Do it as a late-afternoon-into-evening outing, pair it with a walk on the Griffith Park trails below, and don’t treat the planetarium as compulsory — on a clear evening the sky outside is the better show.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Los Angeles city guide.
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