One pass, a whole orbit. The Orlando All-Inclusive Pass with Kennedy Space Center stacks 25+ attractions (from rocket science to water slides) into one digital ticket, so you can change your mind day to day. I like the built-in flexibility of using it across a 14-day window, and I love that it mixes the big-name stops with easier add-ons. One thing to consider: some places don’t treat the pass like a simple phone scan, so it helps to bring photo ID and be ready for extra steps at ticket counters.
You choose a 2, 3, or 5-day option, then activate the pass at any included attraction. The day rules matter: after your first visit, your pass runs for the number of calendar days you bought (not rolling 24-hour chunks) across a 14-day period, so timing is part of the game. Also, this pass is non-refundable, so plan your dates carefully.
Before you go, sync everything with the Go City app (you can also save to your phone/tablet or print). Start early on the days you use the pass, and reserve ahead for the most in-demand experiences when the app asks.
In This Review
- Key points to know before you go
- How the Orlando All-Inclusive Pass works (and where the value really comes from)
- Kennedy Space Center and LEGOLAND Florida: plan your biggest day first
- Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
- LEGOLAND Florida Resort
- Beyond the headlines: Gatorland, airboats, safaris, and the Florida outdoors day
- Gatorland – The Alligator Capital of the World
- Boggy Creek Airboat Tour with Butterfly Nectar
- Lion Country Safari
- Indoor escapes and classic Orlando stops: SEA LIFE, Madame Tussauds, Titanic, Wonderworks
- Wonderworks Orlando All-Access Pass
- SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando
- Madame Tussauds Orlando
- Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition
- The Orlando Eye
- Fun nights, golf detours, and water-park choices
- Outta Control Magic Dinner Show
- Congo River Adventure Golf
- Fun Spot America Theme Park – 4 Ride Sampler
- Old Town USA: Ferris Wheel and Meal
- Island H2O Water Park – Weekday Admission
- The app, lines, and ticket counter steps: how to avoid day-one frustration
- 1) Smooth scanning at the gate
- 2) Ticket counter processing (with photo ID)
- 3) Extra time in queues
- Reservations and day-based timing: how not to waste a pass day
- Getting to and around Orlando: transportation and parking realities
- Value check: is $219 per person smart money?
- Who this pass suits best (and who should skip it)
- Should you book the Orlando pass with Kennedy Space Center?
- FAQ
- How many days is the pass valid?
- Can I use the pass immediately after buying?
- What attractions are included?
- Do I need to reserve attractions?
- Is transportation or parking included?
- Is the pass refundable?
Key points to know before you go

- 25+ attractions under one digital pass, including Kennedy Space Center and LEGOLAND Florida
- 2, 3, or 5 days, valid across a 14-day window after activation
- You pick as you go, no need to pre-lock an itinerary before purchase
- Big mix of Orlando classics and Florida oddities, from airboats to wax museums
- Reservations are often required for the most popular options
- Bring photo ID and expect some venues may route you through a ticket counter process
How the Orlando All-Inclusive Pass works (and where the value really comes from)

This pass is built for travelers who don’t want to buy separate tickets for every stop. Instead, you pay one price and then decide how to spend your days. It can save real money when you actually use the pass for multiple attractions, not just one “must-see.”
Here’s the practical rhythm:
- Your pass stays valid for 1 year from purchase, but it only starts running after your first attraction visit.
- After activation, your pass is valid for the number of days you purchased, used over a 14-day period.
- You should think in terms of calendar days, not 24-hour validity. That matters if you’re trying to squeeze in an evening reservation after a morning visit somewhere else.
The digital guide is the other half of the deal. It includes opening times and instructions for accessing each attraction. That means you’re not just buying a ticket—you’re also getting the basic “how to use it here” info. In my view, that’s where you get the least stress: you can check what’s open, when to go, and which steps to follow.
One more “value” point: transportation and parking are not included. If you’re hopping around Orlando, you’ll need a car or rides. Budget for parking fees and time, especially if you’re planning a Kennedy Space Center day plus other stops.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando.
Kennedy Space Center and LEGOLAND Florida: plan your biggest day first

If you’re buying this pass, chances are you care about at least one heavyweight: Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex or LEGOLAND Florida.
Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex
This is the iconic pick—space, rockets, and the kind of educational fun that doesn’t feel like a school field trip. It’s a full-day energy stop for many people, and you’ll want to arrive ready to spend real time on-site.
A key logistics reality: at some attractions, the pass experience isn’t always a one-scan swipe. One practical issue you can plan around is needing extra time in lines for entry or ticket processing. If Kennedy is your anchor attraction, give yourself breathing room. Go early, and don’t stack three major reservations back-to-back.
What to watch:
- Use the Go City app to confirm the access instructions for your exact day.
- Start early in the day so you don’t feel rushed when ticket processing takes longer than expected.
LEGOLAND Florida Resort
LEGOLAND is the family-friendly counterweight to the space theme. It’s playful, hands-on, and easier to enjoy in bursts rather than as one long, exhausting marathon.
From a planning standpoint, LEGOLAND can be the kind of place where you lose time if you assume everything will be instant at the gate. Some venues may require a ticket counter step even though you’ve got the digital pass. If that happens, photo ID (passport or government ID) can be essential to get your entry tickets.
My tip: treat LEGOLAND as your “go with the flow” day, but still arrive early enough that a ticket counter process doesn’t derail your whole schedule.
Beyond the headlines: Gatorland, airboats, safaris, and the Florida outdoors day

One reason this pass works well is that it helps you see more than theme parks. You can build a day around wildlife and “Florida weird,” and that often feels more memorable than another indoor attraction.
Here are standout outdoor-style options included with the pass:
Gatorland – The Alligator Capital of the World
This is the big gator stop. It’s a classic Florida theme, and it’s the kind of place where you can wander at your own pace. Expect a lot of time outdoors, so sun and heat matter. If your schedule has flexible hours, aim for morning or later in the day, and keep water handy.
Boggy Creek Airboat Tour with Butterfly Nectar
If you want something different, this is it: an airboat tour with a butterfly-nectar element. This can be a great change of pace because you’re not stuck in a building or queue line for rides. It’s also the kind of experience that feels better when you’re not trying to rush through everything else afterward.
Plan around the fact that airboat tours depend on their own schedule. Use your Go City guide to check times and access instructions, then build the rest of your day around it rather than squeezing it between two long theme park blocks.
Lion Country Safari
This is included and it adds a different animal experience than an aquarium. It can fit families well, and it’s a nice option if you want a “see animals” day without committing to a full amusement park.
The common thread with outdoors attractions: build in time for movement and weather. When you’re saving money with a multi-attraction pass, you’re paying for flexibility—but you still need a realistic route and pacing.
Indoor escapes and classic Orlando stops: SEA LIFE, Madame Tussauds, Titanic, Wonderworks

Orlando weather can change fast. That’s why I like that this pass includes multiple indoor or climate-friendly options, so you’re not stuck planning only around sunny days.
Wonderworks Orlando All-Access Pass
Wonderworks is a strong “rain plan” and also a good break when you need something more active but not strictly outdoors. It’s the kind of place that can eat up half a day without feeling like wasted time.
SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando
Aquariums are reliable. They’re easy to navigate, good for families, and work well as a lighter day when you’ve already done your big outdoor stop.
Madame Tussauds Orlando
If you want a quick, fun stop, Madame Tussauds is ideal. It’s also a handy “between bigger attractions” choice because you can spend an hour here and then move on.
Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition
This is one of those included attractions that breaks the theme-park pattern. It’s indoor and typically pairs well with cooler parts of the day. It’s also the sort of stop you can enjoy even if your group mixes ages.
The Orlando Eye
The wheel at ICON Park offers views that help you picture where everything is. It’s not a whole day on its own, but it’s a great “soft landing” after more intense attractions.
Fun nights, golf detours, and water-park choices

This pass is not only about big daily anchors. It’s also good for adding fun side trips that make your days feel full without requiring a huge planning commitment.
Outta Control Magic Dinner Show
A dinner show is the kind of activity that can make an evening feel planned instead of chaotic. It’s also one of the experiences where reservations matter, and popular slots can go fast. If the app nudges you to reserve, do it early.
Congo River Adventure Golf
Golf is an easy win when you’re trying to keep energy up without rushing a major attraction. It’s also a good “family reset” if your group needs something light.
Fun Spot America Theme Park – 4 Ride Sampler
This is included and it’s a clever add-on. Instead of paying for a full day at a theme park, you get a sampler vibe that fits well if you already plan to do other attractions.
Old Town USA: Ferris Wheel and Meal
This is a classic “take a breath” experience. If you want a dinner plus a view (instead of another ride line), this pairing fits.
Island H2O Water Park – Weekday Admission
Water parks can be a great use of a pass day. The detail to know here is weekday admission. If your travel dates fall on a weekend, double-check how that affects your plan using the guide.
The app, lines, and ticket counter steps: how to avoid day-one frustration

The pass is digital, but real-world entry can vary by venue. I recommend you plan for three scenarios.
1) Smooth scanning at the gate
Some attractions may be straightforward. Your best odds are using the Go City app instructions and syncing correctly before you arrive.
2) Ticket counter processing (with photo ID)
Some venues may not let you walk straight in on a phone scan. In that case, you may need to go to a counter and show photo ID/passport to receive entry tickets, similar to how you would buy tickets directly. This is not the same at every attraction, so don’t assume the rules are identical everywhere.
3) Extra time in queues
Even when the pass works, you might face extra lines if the venue needs ticket processing before entry. For your schedule, that means: don’t build a day around “arrive at 12, do everything, and be done by 4.”
Practical move: give your busiest attraction an early start. If you’re visiting Kennedy Space Center or LEGOLAND, treat them as time anchors.
Reservations and day-based timing: how not to waste a pass day

The pass is flexible, but timing still matters. Most popular activities require reservations, and popular slots can be limited.
Also, don’t plan around a 24-hour idea. The pass runs by calendar days purchased, valid over a 14-day window after activation. If you treat it like a rolling day ticket, you can get surprised at the end of the day when an attraction won’t accept it.
My advice:
- Plan your most popular reservations for earlier in your pass days.
- If you’re traveling across multiple attractions, start early so you have enough time to handle any ticket-processing steps.
Getting to and around Orlando: transportation and parking realities

This is where many people accidentally lose money. The pass cost looks straightforward, but transportation and parking fees are on you.
If you’re doing Kennedy Space Center plus other attractions, you’ll need to account for driving time and parking. If you’re staying in a central Orlando area, your day trips may still require a bigger time budget than you expect.
There’s also mention of easy add-ons toward Tampa and Miami as part of the wider Florida road-trip mindset. If you attempt that, remember: the pass covers included attractions, not travel time. Build in buffer hours so you aren’t arriving late to reservations.
Value check: is $219 per person smart money?

At $219 per person, the deal can be excellent or just okay depending on your plan.
Here’s how to judge it fast:
- If you’ll do only one or two included attractions, you might be overpaying.
- If you’ll stack multiple stops—especially a major anchor like Kennedy Space Center plus several smaller attractions—you’re using the pass the way it’s designed.
Why it can be a strong value:
- You get access to 25+ attractions without buying each ticket separately.
- You can mix expensive-feeling big names with lower-cost in-between options like aquariums, museums, and wheels.
- You don’t need to pre-select your attractions before you buy. That lets you adjust based on weather, energy, and schedules.
But here’s the reality check: this is not a “walk in whenever, zero planning” product. You still need to follow the guide, use the app correctly, and reserve when asked.
If your travel style is last-minute, you’ll still enjoy it—but you’ll want to spend a little time each morning checking what’s open and what needs reservations.
Who this pass suits best (and who should skip it)
This pass is a good fit for:
- Families who want multiple included attractions without buying a pile of separate tickets
- Groups that include both thrill seekers and calmer indoor-experience people
- Travelers who want variety: space, wildlife, and Orlando mainstays in one package
- Anyone building a multi-day Orlando base who might add a Tampa or Miami road trip day (while still keeping some included attractions nearby)
It may be less ideal if:
- You only want one major attraction and then want a casual vacation
- You hate any “download the app, sync the pass, check entry steps” type of logistics
- You’re trying to pack impossible timing into tight windows with multiple reservation commitments
Should you book the Orlando pass with Kennedy Space Center?
Book it if you’re planning to visit several included attractions and you can handle a bit of daily planning. The best scenario is an anchor day (Kennedy Space Center or LEGOLAND) plus a handful of smaller picks—aquariums, museums, shows, safari or gator-style Florida stops—so your days feel varied without nickel-and-diming every ticket.
Skip it if your itinerary is mostly one big stop and a few casual wanderings. This pass shines when you actually use it across multiple attractions and start early to reduce the risk of delays at entry.
If you do book, I’d take three steps: sync the Go City app early, bring photo ID in case a venue needs ticket counter processing, and reserve popular activities well ahead. That’s how you turn the pass into a stress-free money-saver instead of a last-minute puzzle.
FAQ
How many days is the pass valid?
You choose a 2, 3, or 5-day option. After you activate the pass on your first attraction visit, it’s valid for the number of calendar days purchased over a 14-day period.
Can I use the pass immediately after buying?
Not automatically. The pass becomes activated with your first attraction visit. You’ll want to sync it with the Go City app for smooth use.
What attractions are included?
The pass includes 25+ attractions such as Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, LEGOLAND Florida Resort, Wonderworks Orlando, Madame Tussauds Orlando, SEA LIFE Aquarium Orlando, The Orlando Eye, and more.
Do I need to reserve attractions?
The most popular activities require reservations. It’s smart to reserve well in advance to avoid disappointment.
Is transportation or parking included?
No. Transportation and parking fees are not included.
Is the pass refundable?
No. The activity is non-refundable.
























