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

A single pass can cover half your Stockholm days. The Go City Stockholm Pass is a smart way to see the big names and fill in the gaps without playing ticket-Tetris all day. It’s digital, flexible, and built around “show your QR code and go.”

I especially like two things: the Vasa Museum ticket is included, and the hop-on hop-off bus plus boat options make it easy to hop between areas. The big consideration is timing: popular entries often need reservations, and your pass counts consecutive days once you start.

Key ways this pass helps you see Stockholm

Included hits first: Vasa Museum, Royal Palace, Viking Museum, Skansen, and more

Flexible days: pick 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 consecutive days

Unlimited hop-on hop-off rides on green and red buses

Archipelago time: cruises and boat tours are part of the mix

Popular spots may require reservations, so plan early

Everything runs through the Go City app for the newest times and access rules

One QR Code, Fifty Plus Ways to Sightsee

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - One QR Code, Fifty Plus Ways to Sightsee
This is a digital pass, so there’s no envelope, no printed ticket hunt, no “which office was it?” moment. You’ll go straight to the attraction, show your pass QR code at the entrance, and move on with your day.

The list of included experiences is broad: museums, historical sites, the hop-on hop-off buses, and boat tours that look great even when you’re not a “boat person.” Since the pass includes over 50 options, you’re not forced into one rigid route. You can build days around what you feel like doing—art one hour, maritime history the next.

A practical note: you’ll want a charged smartphone. If your battery dies, so does your ability to enter with the QR code.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Stockholm

How the Stockholm Pass Works (and Why Timing Matters)

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - How the Stockholm Pass Works (and Why Timing Matters)
Pick your number of days first: 1 through 5 consecutive days. After that first attraction visit, your pass becomes active and those days run consecutively (not 24-hour blocks). That means you’ll get the most out of it if you start early on your first day rather than saving it for late afternoon.

Also, activation only happens when you actually use the pass for your first entry. If you’re arriving in the city and waiting a day, that’s fine—just don’t activate too late unless you’re sure you can still pack in your must-dos.

One more reality check: the pass lineup and hours can change. The safest approach is to rely on the Go City app for the most current list, opening times, and any reservation instructions.

Your Best Value Days: Simple 1-, 2-, and 3-Day Strategies

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Your Best Value Days: Simple 1-, 2-, and 3-Day Strategies
With a pass like this, the winning move is focus. Decide what your “can’t miss” anchors are, then let the pass fill in everything around them.

If you have 1 day, aim for a tight loop:

  • One museum anchor (like Vasa Museum)
  • One classic landmark stop (like the Royal Palace area)
  • One photo/art museum option (such as Fotografiska if it fits your day)
  • Use the hop-on bus to minimize transit time between neighborhoods

If you have 2 days, you can do two anchors plus one flexible buffer day:

  • Day 1: Vasa Museum + a nearby museum stop
  • Day 2: Royal Palace + a second major choice like Viking Museum or Skansen
  • Add the bus rides to connect the dots fast

If you have 3 days, you’ll feel the real advantage:

  • Mix one “inside” day with Vasa/Viking/major museums
  • Mix one “out-and-about” day with Skansen and harbor/archipelago options
  • Add a distinct Stockholm flavor stop like Swedish fika (Systrarna Andersson) or ICEBAR Stockholm to keep your schedule from becoming all-ticket-and-line

Don’t feel guilty skipping some included options. Even with tons of choices, the pass works best when you pick a handful of top priorities and then use the rest like bonus chapters.

Vasa Museum and the Royal Palace: the Two Heavy Hitters

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Vasa Museum and the Royal Palace: the Two Heavy Hitters
Two inclusions drive most people’s excitement for good reason.

Vasa Museum

This is the “sea-meets-history” stop you’ll be glad you planned. It’s included on the pass, and it’s exactly the kind of attraction that makes a pass feel worth it. If you only do one heavyweight museum, this is a strong candidate.

Royal Palace

The palace is right in the old-town core. It’s one of those places where walking the surrounding streets feels like part of the experience, not a prelude. Since it’s also included, it’s a great anchor for a first or second day when you’re still figuring out your bearings.

Here’s how I’d use these anchors: put one on day one and the other on day two. That spacing keeps you from feeling like you’re bouncing between “big indoor things” all day.

Skansen, the Viking Museum, and Time Travel Without the Stress

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Skansen, the Viking Museum, and Time Travel Without the Stress
If you want Stockholm to feel like more than a photo backdrop, these are the stops that deliver.

Viking Museum

This is a major inclusion on the pass, and it’s the kind of place that turns museum time into story time. It pairs well with other history-focused choices because the themes are clear and memorable.

Skansen

Skansen is included too, and it’s especially useful if you want a daytime plan that feels local rather than strictly “museum room.” It’s also a strong complement to your Viking stop so your trip moves through different eras without feeling random.

Bonus seasonal pick: Gröna Lund

If you’re traveling in June to September, Gröna Lund Amusement Park is included. That’s a nice option if you want something more playful that still keeps you inside the pass value.

My advice: don’t try to cram every single “past” stop in one day. Pick Skansen or another big historical anchor if you’re short on time. You’ll enjoy it more.

Hop-on Hop-off Buses: Fast Transit, But Watch the End of Day

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Hop-on Hop-off Buses: Fast Transit, But Watch the End of Day
The hop-on hop-off bus is one of the smartest parts of this pass. You get unlimited access on the green-colored hop-on hop-off buses and also the red City Sightseeing Stockholm buses.

Why it matters: Stockholm can feel like a city of hills and water-bound neighborhoods. The bus helps you cover distance, then jump off for a walk where it’s convenient.

One practical warning to keep in mind: the buses don’t run all night. So plan your day so you end somewhere you can reach easily on foot or with your other local transit. If you want a late dinner far from your last bus stop, build that into your route.

Boat Tours and the Archipelago Feel, Plus the Royal Canal Tour

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Boat Tours and the Archipelago Feel, Plus the Royal Canal Tour
Part of Stockholm’s identity is its water. The pass includes boat and cruise options, which can be a low-effort way to see more of the city in less time.

You’ll also find Royal Canal Tour (1 hour) included (April to December). A one-hour canal cruise is a nice “between attractions” move. It can reset your brain after a museum, and it gives you a view of Stockholm that walking alone can’t fully match.

The bigger strategy: use boats on days when you’re doing fewer indoor stops. That way you don’t fight lines and schedules back-to-back. You also get the best weather match, since water views tend to reward you when the skies behave.

Museums, ICEBAR, and Swedish Fika: Where the Pass Feels Fun

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Museums, ICEBAR, and Swedish Fika: Where the Pass Feels Fun
Not every included item is a grand palace or a massive museum. Some are small, very Stockholm, and they help your days feel less like a checklist.

Here are a few inclusions that can break up your itinerary:

  • ICEBAR Stockholm: a buzzy, cold-themed stop that’s included on the pass
  • Systrarna Andersson: traditional Swedish fika is included, which is a real-world energy source for sightseeing days
  • Fotografiska: the photographic museum is included, and it’s great if you like modern visual stuff without getting stuck in only one theme
  • Nobel Prize Museum: included, a good “idea and innovation” stop
  • Nordiska museet and SkyView Stockholm: both included options if you want more variety in your mix

My take: choose at least one “mood stop” each day—fika, ICEBAR, or a photo-focused museum—so your schedule has a human pace.

Price Check: When $95 Actually Feels Like a Bargain

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Price Check: When $95 Actually Feels Like a Bargain
At $95 per person, the value depends on how many included attractions you’ll realistically use. The pass advertises savings up to 50% compared to buying single tickets, and that kind of promise tends to come true when you hit multiple big-name entries.

You’ll likely come out ahead if your plan includes several of these major anchors:

  • Vasa Museum
  • Royal Palace
  • Viking Museum
  • Skansen
  • One or two additional museums (like Nobel Prize Museum, Nordiska museet, or Fotografiska)
  • A cruise or canal tour, plus bus rides

If your itinerary is light—like you only want one or two attractions total—then a pass can feel expensive. It’s better then to buy single tickets for what you truly want, and spend the time saved on slower wandering.

One thing I like about this pass price model: it nudges you toward planning. When you commit to multiple included sights, the cost turns into a budget tool instead of a source of stress.

Should You Book This Stockholm Pass for Your Trip?

Stockholm Pass: Save up to 50% - Includes Vasa Museum Ticket - Should You Book This Stockholm Pass for Your Trip?
I’d book it if you want structure with flexibility. The digital QR entry makes it easy, and the included mix—palace, maritime history, Vikings, major museums, buses, and canal cruises—covers the core Stockholm experience without forcing you into one route.

Skip it if your trip is short and you know you’ll only do a couple attractions. In that case, your money may be better spent on a few specific tickets while you keep your schedule loose.

Also, if you’re traveling during a busy season or for major sights you already know you want, start reserving early where reservations are required. That one step prevents the biggest “pass frustration”: arriving ready, then finding a popular entry needs an advance slot.

Finally, if plans change, this pass offers free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund—so you’re not locked into a bad timing decision.

FAQ

What’s included in the Stockholm Pass from Go City?

The pass includes admission to 50+ Stockholm attractions and tours, with key inclusions like the Vasa Museum, Royal Palace, Viking Museum, Skansen, Nobel Prize Museum, ICEBAR Stockholm, Fotografiska, and more. It also includes the hop-on hop-off bus tour.

Do I need to exchange the pass before I use it?

No. This is a digital pass with no redemption necessary. You just head to the attraction and show your pass QR code at the main entrance.

How long is the pass valid, and is it measured in 24-hour periods?

Your pass is valid for 1 to 5 consecutive days, based on the option you buy. After activation, it runs for the number of consecutive days purchased (not 24-hour periods).

Are reservations required for included attractions?

The most popular activities require reservations, and you should reserve well in advance to avoid disappointment.

Can I ride the hop-on hop-off buses more than once?

Yes. You can take unlimited rides on the green-colored hop-on hop-off buses and the red City Sightseeing Stockholm buses.

What do I need to bring on the day of my visits?

Bring a charged smartphone so you can show your QR code. The pass also needs to be synced with the Go City app (you can save it to your phone/tablet or print a copy).

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