New York
Statue of Liberty
How to visit the Statue of Liberty from New York: which ticket gets you onto Liberty Island, why the crown sells out months ahead, the free Staten Island Ferry alternative, and whether Ellis Island is the better half of the day.
Where
New York City, United States
Opening hours
Liberty Island and Ellis Island open daily except 25 December; Statue City Cruises ferries run roughly every 20โ30 minutes from about 09:00, with later last departures in summer than winter. A security check-in time of 14:00 or later won't leave enough daylight to do both islands. Confirm your date on cityexperiences.com.
Tickets
Base round-trip ferry from $26 adult (about ยฃ19.50), $23 senior 62+, $17 child 4โ12; under-4s free. Pedestal or crown access each add just $0.30 on top of the ferry fare. There is no separate National Park entrance fee. The Staten Island Ferry is free.
Time needed
Half to a full day. Budget 30โ45 minutes for the airport-style security queue before boarding, 15-minute ferry crossings, an hour or so on Liberty Island, and 1.5โ2 hours for Ellis Island if you do it justice.
In short
Visiting Statue of Liberty
There is one authorised ferry to Liberty Island and Ellis Island โ Statue City Cruises from Battery Park or Liberty State Park โ so book it online before you fly and ignore the touts selling 'tickets' near the dock. Decide which level you want before booking: grounds-only lands you on the island, pedestal gets you up the base, and the crown is a 162-step climb that sells out two to four months ahead. If you only want the photo, the free Staten Island Ferry passes the statue at about 500 yards and costs nothing. Allow most of a day if you do both islands properly โ Ellis Island's immigration museum is the quietly better half.
Book the right ferry, and ignore the touts
There is exactly one boat that lands on Liberty Island and Ellis Island, and itโs Statue City Cruises, the only operator the National Park Service authorises. It sails from Battery Park in Lower Manhattan or Liberty State Park in New Jersey, and you book it online before you fly. Anyone selling you a โStatue of Liberty ticketโ on the pavement near the dock is selling a sightseeing cruise that circles the harbour without ever landing โ a different thing entirely.
Decide your access level before you book, because it changes nothing about the queue but everything about what you get. Grounds-only (from $26, about ยฃ19.50, for the round-trip ferry) lands you on the island to walk around the base and over to Ellis Island. Pedestal access lets you climb the granite plinth for the museum and the eye-level view, and crown access adds the famous 162-step spiral up inside the statue to the windows in her head. The clever detail: pedestal and crown each add only $0.30 to the ferry fare, and thereโs no separate park entrance fee โ the money is all in the boat. The catch is that pedestal and especially crown places are capped and reserved.
The crown sells out months ahead โ and the free alternative
If the crown matters to you, book two to four months ahead for peak season (roughly April to September). There is no on-the-day release, the tickets come only through Statue City Cruises, and crown tickets are non-refundable, so be sure of your date. The climb itself is tight, hot in summer and has no lift for the final stretch โ skip it if stairs or small spaces are a problem and take the pedestal instead, which gives you the close-up and the museum without the scramble.
If you only want the iconic photo and the harbour skyline, you donโt need to pay at all: the free Staten Island Ferry runs around the clock from Whitehall Terminal and passes the statue at about 500 yards. Sit on the right-hand (starboard) side leaving Manhattan, take the photo, and ride straight back โ it doesnโt dock at Liberty Island, but itโs the best free view in the city.
How long it takes, and is it worth it?
Budget more time than youโd think. The airport-style security screening before boarding routinely runs 30 to 45 minutes, the crossing is about 15 minutes, and a security check-in time of 2pm or later wonโt leave you enough daylight to do both islands. Allow an hour on Liberty Island and a good hour and a half to two hours on Ellis Island, where the immigration museum traces the twelve million people who arrived through its halls.
The statue is the headline, but Ellis Island is the quietly better half of the day, and plenty of visitors come away more moved by the museum than the monument. If your trip is tight and you mainly want the silhouette against the skyline, the Staten Island Ferry does the job for nothing. If you want to actually stand under her and walk the immigration hall, book grounds-or-pedestal Statue City Cruises tickets, go on a morning sailing, and treat it as a half-day rather than a quick tick. Pair it with a walk up to the 9/11 Memorial afterwards โ both sit in Lower Manhattan, a short walk apart.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the New York City city guide.
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