
New York City Ticketing
Attractions, Observation Decks &
Hotels Across the Five Boroughs
New York City is the country's most-visited destination — five boroughs, an unending supply of museums, observation decks, neighborhoods, and food. The most rewarding visits skip the obvious traps, plan around the queue patterns, and balance one Manhattan day with one outer-borough day. Spring (April-May) and fall (September-October) are the strongest windows.
17
Attractions
7
Hotels
6
Travel Guides
5
Boroughs
Attractions & Tours
Top New York City Experiences

Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island
The defining symbol of New York and one of the most-photographed monuments in the world — ferry-only access from Battery Park, with Ellis Island and the Immigration Museum on the same ticket.

Empire State Building
The 1931 art deco icon that defined the New York skyline — 86th-floor outdoor observation deck and 102nd-floor enclosed observatory, with King Kong references everywhere.

Top of the Rock
The 70th-floor observation deck at Rockefeller Center — the only place to see the Empire State Building IN your skyline photo. Three levels of open-air viewing.

One World Observatory
The observation deck at the top of One World Trade Center — the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere, with the most emotionally weighted view in the city.

SUMMIT One Vanderbilt
The newest observation experience in NYC — a mirrored immersive art installation across multiple floors at the top of One Vanderbilt, including glass-floor ledges and an outdoor terrace.

Edge at Hudson Yards
The Western Hemisphere's highest outdoor sky deck — a triangular cantilever 1,131 feet above the Hudson, with a glass floor section and an angled-out glass wall.
Hotels
Where to Stay in New York City

1 Hotel Brooklyn Bridge
★★★★★
Sustainable luxury at the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge in DUMBO — reclaimed wood, living plant walls, and the city's best rooftop pool with direct Manhattan skyline views.

The Knickerbocker
★★★★★
The 1906 historic luxury hotel at the southeast corner of Times Square — the building where the original Manhattan cocktail was reportedly created — now a 330-room boutique with a rooftop New Year's Eve viewing bar.

The Beekman, a Thompson Hotel
★★★★★
The 1881 historic landmark in Lower Manhattan — a 287-room boutique with a nine-story Victorian atrium and rooftop bar, three blocks from City Hall and the 9/11 Memorial.

The Greenwich Hotel
★★★★★
Robert De Niro's Tribeca hotel — 88 individually-designed rooms above the Locanda Verde restaurant, with the Shibui Spa pool in a converted Japanese farmhouse beneath the lobby.
Live Deals
Current hotel offers & tour promotions
Active promotions from our booking partners — updated automatically.