Miami Pass Calculator: Go City vs Tickets (2026)
Miami's pass math swings on the day trips. The Everglades airboat and the Key West run are the expensive items, and both eat a whole day, so a pass that looks cheap per attraction can still lose on pace. Tick your list and see the real numbers.
1. Who's going, and for how long?
Days matter for unlimited passes; pick-a-number passes give you weeks.
2. What do you want to see?
Gate prices are our researched baselines (as of July 2026).
Live prices for the attractions you ticked above. Buying these one by one is the honest option whenever a pass doesn't beat the gate.
Prices per person in USD unless noted. Children priced at each operator's child rate where published; gate-price child tickets estimated at 80% of adult. Choice-slot menu rules are simplified; the linked booking pages have the exact menus.
How the Miami passes actually work
Is the Go City Miami pass worth it?
It hinges on whether you do the day trips. The Key West run and the Everglades airboat are the two expensive items on the pass, and together they are most of its value. If your Miami plan is beach, Wynwood and food, the pass covers almost none of it and you should buy tickets. The calculator prices your actual list either way.
Is the Miami Seaquarium on the pass?
No, and be careful here: the Seaquarium closed permanently in October 2025, but some seller pages and pass inclusion lists still show it. We have removed it from this calculator entirely. If a pass listing you are reading still advertises it, that listing is stale.
All-Inclusive or Explorer?
Miami attractions are far apart and the two best ones eat a full day each, so the unlimited pass rarely gets used hard enough to pay off. For most trips the Explorer pass (pick 2 to 5, 30 days to use them) is the better shape.