Northeast / New York State
One World Observatory
How to visit One World Observatory: which ticket to book, when to go for clear views, and whether it beats Top of the Rock and SUMMIT for the money.
Where
New York City, United States
Opening hours
Generally 09:00-21:00, with last entry around 20:15; hours extend later in summer and can be shorter or close in high winds. Always confirm your date on oneworldobservatory.com before booking.
Tickets
From about $44 (โยฃ33) for general admission; timed and sunset slots from about $59 (โยฃ44); the flexible 'All-Inclusive' with priority entry from about $79 (โยฃ59). Under-5s free.
Time needed
1-1.5 hours on the deck; add 15-20 minutes for the airport-style security screening even with a timed ticket.
In short
Visiting One World Observatory
Buy a timed One World Observatory ticket online before you go โ peak-season and sunset slots sell out a day or two ahead, and the on-the-day desk is dearer and slower. The deck sits on floors 100-102 of One World Trade Center, around 1,250 feet up in a building whose spire tips out at the symbolic 1,776 feet, reached by the SkyPod lifts that play a 47-second time-lapse of New York rising as you climb. Allow about an hour and a half; the view runs north up the length of Manhattan, so it reads as a skyline rather than a single building, unlike the Midtown decks.
How to visit without wasting the trip
Book a timed-entry ticket online before you go rather than queueing at the desk, where the same ticket costs more and the line moves slowly through airport-style security. The deck sits on floors 100-102 of One World Trade Center, and you reach it on the SkyPod lifts, which run a 47-second time-lapse of the city rising from 1500s marshland to today on the walls as you climb โ most people film it, which is the point. General admission is fine if you just want up there; pay up for a fixed timed or sunset slot if youโre visiting in summer, and consider the flexible All-Inclusive ticket if the forecast looks changeable, because it lets you switch your time on the day.
The mistake people make is treating this as interchangeable with the Midtown decks. It isnโt. One World looks north up the whole length of Manhattan, so you get the island as a single sweep rather than a close-up of a few towers, but it canโt put the Empire State Building or the Chrysler in your own photo the way Top of the Rock does. Check the forecast before you lock a time: on a low-cloud day the top of the tower can sit inside the mist and youโll pay $44 to look at grey.
Is the One World deck worth it?
Go on a clear morning for the sharpest distance views and the thinnest crowds, or take a sunset slot if you want atmosphere and donโt mind paying more and sharing the glass. Allow an hour to ninety minutes up top, plus fifteen or twenty minutes for the security screening even with a timed ticket. There are no outdoor terraces here โ itโs all behind glass โ so if standing on an open-air ledge matters to you, Edge at Hudson Yards is the one to book instead.
If you do exactly one observation deck in New York, One World earns its place for the full-island view and the lift ride down at the Financial District end of town. Pair it with the free 9/11 Memorial pools right at its foot and a walk across to the Oculus rather than stacking it against a second paid deck the same day โ three decks in one trip is money you donโt need to spend.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the New York City city guide.
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