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The Statue of Liberty as seen from the front in 2024, with pedestal and base visible.
New York City, USA Worth it with caveats

Statue of Liberty

Block out half a day for the ferry, security, and both islands; the grounds and the Ellis Island museum are plenty for most. Crown access is the standout, but only if you booked it months ago and don't mind a steep, narrow climb.

Photo: AskALotl (CC0), via Wikimedia Commons

She is only reachable by the official ferry from Battery Park, and the ticket folds in Ellis Island next door, where the immigration museum is quietly the more moving half of the day. Most people walk the grounds and call it good. The crown is the real prize, but it sells out months out and means a tight 162-step climb.

Is Statue of Liberty worth it?Worth it with caveats

Worth it for

  • A first trip to New York when you want the harbor crossing and Lady Liberty up close
  • Anyone whose family came through Ellis Island, since that museum is included in the fare

You can skip if

  • You set your heart on the crown but are only deciding this week, when it has been sold out for months
  • Tight spiral stairs and small spaces are not for you

Our pick for Statue of Liberty

Reserved boarding skips the standby scramble and gets you on an early ferry, which matters when lines build fast in summer. A guided walk through both islands turns what could be a quick photo stop into the full story: the engineering behind the statue, the torch fragments on display inside the museum, and the Ellis Island arrival halls that put the whole harbor crossing in human scale.

If our pick doesn't fit

Buy it direct

This is the only authorized ferry to the island, so book here directly (crown access is limited and can be gone weeks ahead, so plan early).

Official tickets
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Straight from recent visitors

What travelers flag about Statue of Liberty

We weighed recent New York traveler opinion on the Statue of Liberty against the provider reviews. These are the themes that came up again and again.

  • Battery Park is full of ticket scammersReported by many

    This is one of the most reported scams in New York: people in official-looking vests around Battery Park claiming to sell Statue of Liberty tickets. They are not official. They push overpriced boat rides that only pass the island without landing, bus packages out to New Jersey, or tell you that you need a ticket just to enter the free park. Ignore anyone selling tickets on the street.

  • One official ferry onlyReported by many

    The single authorized ferry that actually lands on Liberty Island and Ellis Island is Statue City Cruises, from Battery Park or from Liberty State Park in New Jersey. Book it directly on their own site. Regular commuter boats and the many lookalike resale pages do not stop at the island.

  • Crown and pedestal sell out months aheadReported by several

    Everyone warns the same thing: crown tickets are tiny in number and go months in advance, and pedestal access books up too. If either is the goal, reserve as early as you possibly can. For a free view of the statue from the water, the Staten Island Ferry passes reasonably close at no cost.

Sourced from recent traveler discussions, not provider reviews. We only flag what several visitors independently reported, and the bars show how widely each point came up.

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Which ticket should you buy?

Buy the official ferry ticket in advance, since only the official operator sells pedestal and crown access and walk-up crown tickets are not available. If you want the crown, book as early as you can, often three to four months out, because it sells out fast; pedestal also goes days to weeks ahead in peak season. Take an early ferry to beat the crowds and the security lines.

TicketWhat's includedBest for
Ferry + grounds (Reserve) Round-trip ferry, access to the grounds of Liberty Island and the Ellis Island Immigration Museum, plus the Statue of Liberty Museum and an audio guide Most visitors, who get the islands, both museums and the harbor views
Pedestal access (Reserve) Everything in the grounds ticket plus entry to the pedestal level for a higher viewing platform and closer look at the statue's base Visitors who want to go up into the monument without committing to the crown climb
Crown access (Reserve) Everything in the pedestal ticket plus the climb of 162 steps from the pedestal up into the crown (377 from ground level), with strictly limited daily places Determined visitors who book far ahead and want the rare view from inside the crown
Liberty Island, New York, NY 10004 View larger map
© OpenStreetMap

What you are seeing

The statue depicts a robed female figure holding a torch and a tablet, mounted on a tall pedestal that sits on a star-shaped fort base. It was designed by the French sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, with an internal iron framework engineered by Gustave Eiffel, and given by France as a symbol of friendship and shared ideals. Up close, the copper skin has weathered to its familiar green.

For millions of immigrants arriving by ship in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the statue was the first thing they saw of the United States, before being processed at Ellis Island a short distance away. That history is why most visits pair the two islands, and why the on-site museums focus on immigration and the making of the monument.

Photo: Edward Moran (Public domain), via Wikimedia Commons

Getting there by ferry

The only authorized way to reach Liberty Island and Ellis Island is the official ferry, which leaves from Battery Park at the southern tip of Manhattan or from Liberty State Park in New Jersey. The crossing takes roughly 15 to 20 minutes. All visitors pass through airport-style security screening before boarding, so arrive with time to spare.

Boats run as a loop, stopping at both islands, so you can spend time on each and catch a later ferry back. Lines at Battery Park can be long in peak season, especially mid-morning. Booking the earliest departure and arriving before the crowds is the single best way to save time.

The Statue of Liberty, Liberty Island, New York Photo: Don Ramey Logan (CC BY 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Pedestal and crown access

There are three levels of access. A standard ticket lets you walk the island grounds and visit the museum. The pedestal upgrade gets you partway up for views from the base. The crown is the top level, reached by climbing 377 narrow steps with no elevator, and it offers the closest interior look.

Pedestal and crown access are limited and must be reserved before you arrive, since nothing is sold on the island itself. The crown in particular sells out months in advance, so if it matters to you, book as early as you can. The climb is steep and tight, and not suited to anyone uneasy with stairs or confined spaces.

Statue of Liberty (more formally, Liberty Enlightening the World, and more colloquially, Lady… Photo: William Warby (CC BY 2.0), via Wikimedia Commons

Planning your time

Budget at least half a day for the round trip. Between the ferry, security, time on Liberty Island, and a stop at Ellis Island, even a focused visit runs several hours. Bring water and sun protection in summer, since much of the island is open and exposed.

Ellis Island is worth the stop even if you came mainly for the statue. Its immigration museum sits in the restored main building where arrivals were processed, and it tells the human story behind the monument across the water.

Statue of Liberty: FAQs

Take the official ferry from Battery Park in Lower Manhattan or from Liberty State Park in New Jersey. The crossing takes about 15 to 20 minutes, and the boat loops between Liberty Island and Ellis Island. All visitors go through security before boarding.

Yes, if you booked the right ticket. The pedestal level gets you to the base for views, and the crown takes you to the top via 377 steps. Both must be reserved in advance, and the crown often sells out months ahead.

Plan at least half a day. Between the ferry, security screening, time on Liberty Island, and a stop at Ellis Island and its immigration museum, a relaxed visit easily takes four to five hours.

Yes. The official ferry is the only authorized way to land on Liberty Island and Ellis Island. You cannot drive or walk there. Sightseeing cruises that pass nearby do not stop or let you off.

Yes. The standard ferry ticket includes stops at both Liberty Island and Ellis Island, and the boat runs as a loop so you can visit each. The Ellis Island immigration museum is included at no extra charge.

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