Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% – Includes Vasa Museum Ticket

One QR code can save you real time. The Go City Stockholm Pass is a digital ticket that lets you pick from 50+ major sights, museums, tours, and boats across 1 to 5 consecutive days—starting with the big name stuff like the Vasa Museum and the Royal Palace. It’s an easy way to plan less, move more, and stop doing math every time you see an admission price.

Two things I like a lot are how the pass bundles top attractions and how it keeps you flexible once you’re in town. You’re not locked into one tour; you can bounce between museums, guided experiences, and classic Stockholm rides. The other big win is the included hop-on hop-off bus, which is a practical shortcut when you want to cover ground fast without overthinking routes.

One thing to watch: the pass works best if you’re willing to manage timing. The most popular activities need reservations, and if you wait too long, you can lose your slots.

In This Review

Key things to know before you buy

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Key things to know before you buy

  • Vasa Museum is included, so you’re not paying separate ticket prices for one of Stockholm’s biggest draws
  • Unlimited hop-on hop-off bus rides on the green and red City Sightseeing routes (per included access)
  • The pass is valid for consecutive days, not 24-hour chunks, so start when you’re ready to go
  • Boat options are built in, including the 1-hour Royal Canal Tour (seasonal) and archipelago cruise choices
  • You’ll likely need reservations for the headline items, especially if you travel in peak season

Stockholm Pass in plain English: what you’re really buying

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Stockholm Pass in plain English: what you’re really buying
You’re buying a digital pass, not a paper voucher. Once it’s activated, it’s valid for the number of consecutive days you chose (1, 2, 3, 4, or 5). You don’t redeem it at a counter. You just show a QR code at the main entrance of each included place.

That sounds simple because it is. The value comes from three things working together:

1) You pick the attractions based on your interests and energy level.

2) You skip the ticket-buying step for included items.

3) A big chunk of Stockholm’s must-dos are already on the list—so you can build a plan around the pass instead of trying to squeeze the pass into your plan.

It also includes a digital guide with opening times and reservation instructions when needed, which matters because Stockholm’s hours can change by season and holiday.

Price and value at a glance: is $95 a good deal?

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Price and value at a glance: is $95 a good deal?
At $95 per person, you’re not trying to win a lottery—you’re buying convenience plus potential savings. The pass advertises savings up to 50%, and you’ll feel that when you stack several high-demand entries in a short window.

Here’s the value logic I’d use:

  • If you plan to visit multiple headline attractions (think Vasa Museum, Royal Palace, Viking Museum, Skansen), the pass can pay off quickly.
  • If you also add experiences that normally cost more or are harder to coordinate, like archipelago boat tours and the included hop-on hop-off bus, you get extra transportation value.
  • If your plan is mostly free neighborhoods and long walks, the pass can feel overpriced because you won’t use enough included tickets to “cash in.”

A good rule: the pass is a strong buy when you can realistically visit several included sights per day. People who spend time planning priorities usually get the best results, because the biggest items can require reservations.

Using your pass like a local: QR code, activation, and timing

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Using your pass like a local: QR code, activation, and timing
You’ll want to start early in the day. After activation, the pass runs for your purchased number of consecutive days, not 24-hour periods. That means your first visit sets the clock.

It also helps to sync the pass with the Go City app as directed. You can also save it to your phone/tablet or print a copy. Either way, bring a charged smartphone—because this is a QR-code show.

Most importantly, reservations are where the pass either feels effortless or feels stressful. The most popular activities require them, so reserve well in advance. If you wait until you’re already in line at the wrong time, you’ll find out fast that a pass doesn’t replace a booked entry slot.

Big-ticket anchors you should build around: Vasa, Royal Palace, Viking

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Big-ticket anchors you should build around: Vasa, Royal Palace, Viking
This is where Stockholm Pass shoppers tend to smile—because the pass covers the anchors people actually travel for.

Vasa Museum: a top first stop

The Vasa Museum is included, and it’s one of the easiest wins for first-time Stockholm planning. You can treat it like your “base museum” for your trip. If you’re only in town briefly, anchoring your schedule around Vasa keeps the rest of your choices flexible.

Other Stockholm Pass and multi-attraction tickets

Royal Palace: old town energy without the ticket hunt

The pass includes the Royal Palace in the old town. The idea here is simple: you don’t waste energy hunting for admission tickets, and you can pair it with nearby old-town walking days.

Viking Museum and the craft-and-era experience

The pass also includes the Viking Museum, and it’s described as a step-back-in-time stop with a 19th-century replica-town feel and craftspeople demonstrating skills. Even if you’re not a museum superfan, that interactive element is the kind of thing that makes a ticket feel like an experience, not a checkbox.

Practical tip: Put these big anchors earlier in your trip. If you schedule everything “for later,” you can end up with reservation gaps or you’ll simply run out of energy.

Old Town classics you can stack: Storkyrkan, Fotografiska, and more

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Old Town classics you can stack: Storkyrkan, Fotografiska, and more
Once you’ve got your main museum day set, Stockholm gets easy. These are the kinds of stops you can weave in without changing your whole plan.

Storkyrkan – Stockholm Cathedral

The pass includes Storkyrkan – Stockholm Cathedral. It fits naturally into an old-town route: short stops, great for photos, and an easy way to add a dose of local atmosphere when you’re between longer museum visits.

Fotografiska – The Photographic Museum

If you want variety, the pass includes Fotografiska, the photographic museum. It’s a good choice when you want something different from royal palaces and ship history. It also works well on a day when you’d rather trade “big walking” for “quiet indoor time.”

SkyView Stockholm: a view stop that doesn’t eat the whole day

The pass includes SkyView Stockholm, which is useful when you want a payoff without committing to another full museum block. It’s also a nice “energy-level decision” stop: if you’re tired, you can keep it short.

Swedish culture mix: Skansen, Nordiska museet, and fika that actually matters

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Swedish culture mix: Skansen, Nordiska museet, and fika that actually matters
Stockholm Pass also nudges you into the Swedish “daily life” layer of the city, not just headline landmarks.

Skansen: time-travel style history

The pass includes Skansen. One of the big reasons this is worth considering is that the description of the included heritage experience includes craftspeople demonstrating skills in a 19th-century replica setting. That’s the kind of hands-on detail that makes this part of the city feel alive.

Nordiska museet

Nordiska museet is included too. It gives you a broader cultural anchor than the single-topic museums, which helps if you don’t want your whole trip to revolve around just one theme.

Traditional Swedish fika at Systrarna Andersson

This is the kind of inclusion I genuinely appreciate: traditional Swedish fika at Systrarna Andersson. You’re building in a real break, and it’s often easier to plan when you already know there’s a included option for a sit-down moment.

Small but smart advice: If fika is on your list, time it like a real meal. Don’t treat it as a five-minute stop right before your next reservation.

Archipelago and city views: bus, Royal Canal Tour, and boats

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Archipelago and city views: bus, Royal Canal Tour, and boats
Stockholm feels bigger than it looks on a map. The pass helps solve that with transportation options.

Hop-on hop-off buses: your move-fast tool

The pass includes Stockholm Hop On-Hop Off Bus (April to October), and it also covers unlimited rides on green and red buses on the included routes. This is a practical gift for saving legs on days when your feet start bargaining.

In the real world, bus signage and stop-finding can be a bit of a puzzle in some places, so build in some patience the first time you use it. Also, plan your day with the reality that the bus may stop earlier than you’d like. If you want late-night plans, pair the bus with walking or other transit for the evening end.

Royal Canal Tour (1 hour): seasonal boat time

The pass includes Royal Canal Tour (1 hour) (April to December). Boat time is one of the best ways to understand Stockholm’s “islands built into the city” layout without turning it into an all-day expedition.

Archipelago cruise options

The pass also includes dozens of boat tour options around the archipelago. Even if you don’t pick the most long one, the key benefit is choice: you can match a boat to your schedule, weather, and energy level.

Timing note: If boats are on your must-do list, you’ll want to reserve early when required, because water-based experiences often fill up.

Suggested day-by-day routes for 1 to 5 days

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Suggested day-by-day routes for 1 to 5 days
You can use the pass loosely, but having a rough structure prevents wasted time. Here are practical ways to build your route without getting trapped.

1 day: hit the headline trio

Focus on one “heavy” museum block plus one or two shorter classics:

  • Start with Vasa Museum
  • Add Royal Palace if you can get the timing right
  • Slip in something nearby like Storkyrkan

Finish the day with a flexible stop such as SkyView (if it fits your hours)

2 days: museums plus one heritage or photo day

This is a sweet spot for many people because you get enough time for quality, not just quantity.

  • Day 1: Vasa Museum + old-town stops (Royal Palace and/or Storkyrkan)
  • Day 2: Viking Museum and Skansen (or Nordiska museet)

If you want variety, mix in Fotografiska and fika at Systrarna Andersson.

3 days: add a boat and one special-interest stop

Now you can breathe and still cover major sights.

  • Keep your museum anchor days early
  • Add a Royal Canal Tour (1 hour) in season
  • Build in Nobel Prize Museum and ICEBAR Stockholm for a distinct Stockholm flavor

4 to 5 days: rounds of choice

At this point, you’re not rushing. You’re exploring.

  • Add more of the included museums and views you skipped earlier
  • Use the bus and boat options to connect neighborhoods without feeling chained to walking distances
  • If your travel includes June to September, consider Gröna Lund Amusement Park since it’s included during that window

Who this pass is best for (and who should skip it)

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Who this pass is best for (and who should skip it)
I think the Stockholm Pass is a great match if you:

  • Want structured flexibility with minimal ticket planning
  • Plan to visit multiple major sights like Vasa Museum, Royal Palace, Viking Museum, and Skansen
  • Appreciate transportation help from hop-on hop-off buses and boat tours
  • Travel with a phone-first mindset (charged smartphone, QR access)

You might skip it if:

  • Your schedule is mostly a slow wander with fewer paid attractions
  • You don’t want to manage reservations for the most popular entries
  • You prefer buying a smaller number of tickets you choose on the fly

Should you book the Stockholm Pass? My quick decision guide

If your trip is short and you want to hit Stockholm’s key sights without doing ticket arithmetic all day, I’d lean yes. The included Vasa Museum alone makes the pass worth serious consideration, and the mix of museums, old-town stops, and boats fits real sightseeing rhythms.

Book it if you can answer yes to two questions:

  • Can you commit to using it for at least a couple days, with multiple included entries per day?
  • Are you willing to reserve the headline items early when required?

If both answers are yes, the Stockholm Pass is one of those rare city tools that feels like it reduces stress instead of adding planning chores.

FAQ

Do I need to pick up anything in person?

No. The pass is digital. You show your QR code at the main entrance of each included attraction or tour.

What phone requirement do I need?

Bring a charged smartphone, since the pass is used via QR code access.

How long is the pass valid?

You choose 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 consecutive days. After activation, it runs for that number of consecutive days.

When does the pass start counting?

It only becomes activated with your first attraction visit, and after that it’s valid for the consecutive days you bought.

Is the Vasa Museum included?

Yes. The Vasa Museum is listed as included.

Does the pass include the Royal Palace?

Yes. The Royal Palace is included.

Are reservations required?

Some of the most popular activities require reservations. The guidance is to reserve well in advance.

Does the pass include a hop-on hop-off bus?

Yes. The Stockholm Hop On-Hop Off Bus is included (April to October), with unlimited rides on the green-colored and red-colored buses.

Are boat tours included?

Yes. The pass includes cruise and boat tour options, including the Royal Canal Tour (1 hour) (April to December).

What if I need to cancel?

You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

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