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Hollywood Sign and Walk of Fame, United States
Hollywood Sign and Walk of Fame

California

Hollywood Sign and Walk of Fame

How to actually see the Hollywood Sign and the Walk of Fame: which free viewpoint beats the others, why you can't walk up to the letters, and how little time the boulevard really deserves.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Where

Los Angeles, United States

Opening hours

Both are open public spaces with no gates or tickets. The Walk of Fame is best in daylight and feels safer by day; the sign viewpoints are best in clear morning or late-afternoon light. Griffith Observatory grounds stay open into the evening for the night-time sign-and-skyline view.

Tickets

Free. There is no charge to see the Hollywood Sign, walk the Walk of Fame, or stand in the TCL Chinese Theatre forecourt. Costs are optional: parking, a guided hike or sign tour, or a paid theatre tour.

Time needed

Walk of Fame and Chinese Theatre forecourt: about an hour. Sign by car viewpoint: 30-45 minutes including the drive up. Sign by foot on the Brush Canyon Trail: allow three hours plus travel.

In short

Visiting Hollywood Sign and Walk of Fame

Both are free, and both reward a plan. You cannot walk up to the Hollywood Sign โ€” it's fenced, camera-watched and guarded around the clock โ€” so pick your view: Lake Hollywood Park or the top of Canyon Lake Drive for a close head-on photo by car, Griffith Observatory for the classic skyline-and-sign shot, or the Brush Canyon Trail (about 6.4 miles return, three hours) to stand behind the letters. The Walk of Fame and the TCL Chinese Theatre forecourt are an hour of orientation, not an afternoon: see the stars and the handprints, take the photo, then move on to Griffith.

Seeing the Hollywood Sign: pick your effort level

The first thing to know is what you canโ€™t do: you canโ€™t walk up and touch the letters. The sign sits on Mount Lee behind a tall chain-link fence, watched by cameras and security 24 hours a day, with an LAPD officer often stationed nearby. So the real question isnโ€™t whether to see it โ€” itโ€™s free and visible from half of LA โ€” but which view you want, and how much effort youโ€™ll spend getting it.

For a close, head-on photo with almost no effort, drive to Lake Hollywood Park or up to the end of Canyon Lake Drive. Both are residential streets that put the sign large and straight ahead, with legal street parking at Lake Hollywood Park. This is the option most first-timers actually want and donโ€™t know exists.

For the classic postcard shot โ€” the sign small but set against the whole city โ€” go to Griffith Observatory. Itโ€™s free to enter, the view is the best in LA, and you get the observatory and the skyline in the same trip. Time it for late afternoon into dusk and you can stay for the night view.

To stand behind the letters, hike the Brush Canyon Trail from Canyon Drive up to Mount Lee: roughly 6.4 miles there and back, about three hours, with free parking at the bottom. You end up right above the H, looking down โ€” a different photo from any of the road viewpoints, and worth it if you like a proper walk. Bring water and a hat; thereโ€™s no shade and no closer you can get even up there.

The Walk of Fame: an hour, not an afternoon

The Walk of Fame is more than 2,700 brass-and-terrazzo stars set into the pavement along Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street. Itโ€™s free, itโ€™s open air, and the honest truth is that the stars themselves are smaller and more underwhelming than the films make them look โ€” youโ€™ll spend more time dodging costumed characters and tour touts than reading names.

The better stop on the same block is the TCL Chinese Theatre forecourt, where nearly 200 stars have left hand and footprints in the concrete โ€” Marilyn Monroe, Tom Hanks, the Harry Potter wands. Itโ€™s free to wander into and far more tactile than the sidewalk stars.

Give the boulevard about an hour of orientation in daylight, see the Chinese Theatre forecourt, take your photo, and donโ€™t linger. Itโ€™s tired and pushy after dark. Pair it with Griffith Observatory โ€” which doubles as your best sign view โ€” rather than building a whole afternoon around the pavement.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Los Angeles city guide.

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Hollywood Sign and Walk of Fame FAQs

Can you walk up to the Hollywood Sign?
No. The letters sit behind a tall fence on Mount Lee, watched by cameras and security around the clock, with an officer often stationed nearby. The closest you get on foot is the path behind and just above the sign via the Brush Canyon Trail; you still can't touch it. For a head-on photo without hiking, drive to Lake Hollywood Park or the top of Canyon Lake Drive.
What is the best view of the Hollywood Sign?
It depends how much effort you want. For a quick, close, head-on photo, Lake Hollywood Park or the end of Canyon Lake Drive are the easiest by car. For the classic shot of the sign set against the city, Griffith Observatory is hard to beat and free to enter. To stand right behind the letters, hike the Brush Canyon Trail to Mount Lee.
Is the Hollywood Walk of Fame worth it?
For an hour, yes โ€” as orientation, not a destination. There are more than 2,700 stars along Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street, and the TCL Chinese Theatre forecourt of hand and footprints next door is the better stop. The boulevard itself is tired, crowded and pushy with costumed characters and touts. See it, photograph it, then move on to Griffith or the Getty.