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Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood, United States
Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood

California / Southern California

Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood

How to visit the Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood: which tour to book, how far ahead it sells out, and whether the working-backlot version is worth the price for UK visitors.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026

Where

Los Angeles, United States

Opening hours

Tours run roughly every 15โ€“30 minutes from about 08:30 to 18:00 daily (last tour mid-afternoon, with extended evening tours in summer). The lot is in Burbank, not Hollywood. Always confirm your date and slot on wbstudiotour.com.

Tickets

From about $74 (~ยฃ58) for the standard ~3-hour tour; the Deluxe Tour with lunch and extra access runs around $295 (~ยฃ233). Children under 5 are not admitted.

Time needed

About 3 hours for the standard tour; closer to 6 for the Deluxe. Add 30โ€“45 minutes for arrival, security and the gift shop.

In short

Visiting Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood

Book the Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood online before you fly โ€” it's a timed, pre-booked tour on a working Burbank lot, not a turn-up-and-queue attraction, and weekend slots disappear days ahead. The standard tour is a cart-and-walk through real soundstages, backlot streets and the Central Perk and Batmobile sets, led by a guide rather than self-paced. Allow three hours, and pick an earlier weekday slot when more of the lot is actively filming, which is the whole point of choosing this over a theme park.

How to visit without wasting the trip

The mistake people make is lumping this in with Universal and expecting rides. It isnโ€™t that โ€” itโ€™s a timed, guided cart-and-walk around a genuinely working Burbank lot, where you cross real backlot streets, step onto soundstages and stand on the Central Perk and Batcave sets, led by a guide who decides the route on the day. That working-lot reality is exactly why you book ahead: departures are fixed every fifteen to thirty minutes, weekend and holiday slots vanish days out, and there is no dependable turn-up queue.

Book the standard three-hour tour online before you fly from about $74 (ยฃ58); it covers the soundstages, backlot and prop houses and is plenty for most visitors. Only add the Deluxe Tour (around $295/ยฃ233, with lunch and extra access) if youโ€™re a serious film fan with a spare half-day. Note the lot is in Burbank, not Hollywood, so factor a 20โ€“30 minute drive or Uber, and that under-fives arenโ€™t admitted.

Studio tour or theme park?

Pick an earlier weekday slot. Filming is far likelier on a working weekday morning, so you see a live lot rather than empty stages, and the carts run quieter than at weekends. Itโ€™s shaded and partly indoors, which makes it the smart booking for a hot afternoon or a grey June-Gloom morning when the coast is socked in.

If you want the real machinery of Hollywood rather than a theme park, this is the better-value, calmer choice, and three hours is the right length. If you want rollercoasters and big-build worlds, spend the day at Universal Studios Hollywood instead โ€” they answer different cravings, so donโ€™t pay for both on the assumption they overlap. Pair this with Griffith Observatory at sunset rather than stacking two studio days back to back.

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

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Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood FAQs

Do you need to book the Warner Bros. Studio Tour in advance?
Yes. It's a timed, guided tour with fixed cart departures, not an open attraction โ€” weekend and holiday slots routinely sell out several days ahead, and there's no reliable on-the-day entry. Book online via the official site or a reputable tour partner before you travel.
Is the Warner Bros. Studio Tour worth it?
If you want the real, working version of Hollywood โ€” actual soundstages, backlot streets and sets that may be mid-production โ€” yes, and it's calmer and cheaper than a full theme-park day. If you're after rides and big-build attractions, Universal Studios Hollywood is the better fit. Don't book both expecting the same thing.
What is the best time to visit?
Take an earlier weekday slot. Filming is most likely on a working weekday morning, so you see more of a live lot rather than empty stages, and the carts are quieter than at weekends. It's an indoor-and-shaded tour, so it also works well on a hot or grey LA day.

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