
One World Observatory
The deck atop the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, looking down the harbor toward the Statue of Liberty.
The call
Worth it if you are traveling with kids and you are traveling as a couple.
Why
- 01
The Sky Pod elevators and the floor-reveal film are a slick build-up to a genuinely high, panoramic view.
Our read - 02
The reason to pick this deck over Edge, Top of the Rock or the Empire State is one specific thing: you look straight down the harbor toward the Statue of Liberty and across to New Jersey — a downtown-and-water angle none of the Midtown decks can give you.
Our read
Is it a fit?
Go if
This is your first trip to New York
A strong single choice of deck for the downtown-and-harbor angle, especially paired with the 9/11 sites below.
You are traveling with kids
With kids, One World Observatory is an easy yes.
You are traveling as a couple
As a couple, One World Observatory is an easy yes.
You are traveling solo
Solo, One World Observatory is an easy yes.
Think twice if
You are watching the budget
Save the money. One World Observatory does not return enough for the price.
You only have one day
Keep One World Observatory only when it outranks a half-day elsewhere.
Plan it well
- Cost
- ~$44 adult
- Timing
- Late afternoon into sunset on a clear day; check the forecast since haze flattens the view.
- Booking
- Buy timed tickets online in advance, especially for sunset slots.
- Allow
- 45–60 min
- Accessibility
- Fully elevator-served and wheelchair accessible throughout.
- Getting there
- E to World Trade Center, or R/W to Cortlandt, at the base of the tower.
Consider instead
Sources and method (1)
- Sits atop One World Trade Center, the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere at 1,776 ft; SkyPod elevators reach the deck in about 47 seconds. oneworldobservatory.com ↗
- General adult admission runs roughly $38-44 depending on ticket type; a visit takes about 1-2 hours. oneworldobservatory.com ↗