Luna Park Sydney tickets & tours | Price comparison

Luna Park Sydney

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Luna Park Sydney, often shortened to Luna Park, turns the north side of Sydney Harbour into a bright mix of 1930s fun-fair nostalgia, harbor views, and modern coaster energy at Milsons Point. In one stop, you can move from heritage Coney Island to the harbour-facing Ferris Wheel and the relaunched Big Dipper.

If you want the classic full experience, book an online Unlimited Rides Pass first; it keeps the day simple when operating hours and ride lineups vary by date.
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Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

7 tips for visiting the Luna Park Sydney

1
Take the ferry in
If you want the classic first impression, use the ferry and step off at wheelchair-accessible Milsons Point Wharf, right in front of the famous face. It removes almost all last-minute navigation stress. That way the fun starts before the rides do.
2
Pick the right day type
If your priority is the fullest ride lineup, do not assume every open day works the same way. Luna Lite days are reduced-offering sessions, often on Mondays to Wednesdays outside school holidays, and usually run from 10 am to 2 pm. Checking this before you buy saves disappointment and keeps expectations calm.
3
Book only for riders
If part of your group only wants to stroll, eat, or watch, remember that standard park entry is free on regular park-open days. Buy ride passes only for the people who actually want rides and attractions. This keeps the budget cleaner, and nobody pays for a plan they will not use.
4
Check height bands early
If you are traveling with children, check the red, green, and yellow height bands before you promise specific rides. Guests are measured for wristbands on arrival, and some younger riders still need a paying adult beside them. Sorting this out at home avoids awkward queue-side negotiations later.
5
Start with the accessible route
If you travel with a wheelchair, a stroller, or lower walking tolerance, use the wharf-side arrival or stay on the promenades first. The public park areas and venues are wheelchair accessible, and service animals are permitted. Starting with the easiest surfaces lowers stress, so you can decide later how ambitious the day should get.
6
Go card-ready
At busy front gates, assume card or phone payment first, because Luna Park Sydney is predominantly cashless. Cash still works in limited spots, but the smoother move is to arrive digitally ready. That keeps the queue moving, and you avoid payment friction before the fun starts.
7
Pair one nearby icon
If your day continues after Luna Park Sydney, add only one nearby landmark: the north-shore side of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, Sydney Observatory, or the ferry-linked Sydney Opera House. One clear add-on is enough. That way the harbor day feels rich, not overstuffed.

How to plan a Luna Park Sydney day from the harbour

This stop works best when you decide early what kind of day you want: a full rides day, a short harbor detour, or a nostalgia-heavy family stop. Once that choice is clear, the rest becomes much easier.

Choose your visit style before you book

Best for first-time visitors: decide whether you want a full rides day, a shorter Luna Lite sample, or simply free-entry time inside the park. If you want the classic version of Luna Park Sydney, choose the Unlimited Rides Pass and build the day around that. One clear format choice saves money, avoids mismatched expectations, and makes the rest of the planning feel obvious. Book now.

Pick ferry, train, or car before your ticket

If you want the cleanest arrival, start with the ferry and use Milsons Point Wharf. If your day starts on the north shore, Milsons Point Station gives you a simple downhill approach, while drivers can rely on the on-site car park via Dind Street and Northcliff Street. Choosing the route before the ticket removes avoidable friction and keeps the first hour smooth.

Check height bands before you promise rides

At Luna Park Sydney, the ride day begins with a height check, not with the queue. Red, green, and yellow bands shape what children can do, and some younger riders still need a paying adult beside them. If you sort this out before you arrive, families avoid the deflating moment when a promised ride turns into a negotiation at the gate.

Start on the easiest surfaces if accessibility matters

Great for visitors with wheelchairs, strollers, or simply lower walking tolerance: begin on the public promenades and accessible arrival routes, then decide how far into the ride-heavy parts you want to go. The park's public areas and venues are wheelchair accessible, and service animals are permitted. Starting gently keeps the visit flexible instead of exhausting. Book now.

Why Luna Park Sydney still feels unlike anywhere else

The appeal here is not only speed. What makes the place special is the collision of harbour-edge Sydney, 1930s fantasy architecture, and a preserved fun-house core that still feels alive.

The 1935 opening still shapes the place

When Luna Park Sydney opened on 4 October 1935, it arrived as a rare surviving amusement park with fantasy architecture in the Art Deco style of the 1930s. That is why the place still feels more theatrical than generic, even before you step onto a single ride. The harbour setting at Milsons Point turns that old-showman atmosphere into something unmistakably Sydney.

Coney Island keeps old Luna alive

The emotional center of the park is still heritage-listed Coney Island. Inside, you get a real fun-house mix of Devil's Drop, Barrels of Fun, Mirror Maze, and 1930s-era artwork linked to artist Arthur Barton. If you want the most distinctive part of Luna Park Sydney, this is where the place stops feeling like a normal amusement park and starts feeling like a survivor.

The 2004 reopening rebuilt the modern park

The version you see today is strongly shaped by the redevelopment that led to the 4 April 2004 reopening. That phase kept the site's heritage identity while adding refurbished buildings, an on-site car park, and a larger event-ready footprint around the Big Top. In practice, it explains why the park can feel both historic and operationally current at the same time.

The 2020s brought back big-ride ambition

In January 2021, Luna Park Sydney temporarily closed to install nine new rides, including the new Big Dipper. By December 2023, the story expanded again with Sydney's Immersive Big Top and Dream Circus. That recent layer matters because it turns the park into more than a nostalgia stop; it is now also a live entertainment destination on the harbour. Book now.

How to choose the best Luna Park Sydney experience

You do not need to do the whole park the same way as everyone else. The strongest version of this visit depends on whether your group wants headline coasters, heritage fun, a short weekday sample, or a simple harbor photo stop.

Best for thrill-seekers: Big Dipper and the headline rides

Choose this if your priority is speed and modern ride energy. The new Big Dipper is the clearest symbol of that shift, and rides such as Volaré and the park's larger thrill lineup turn the stop into more than a heritage curiosity. For this version of Luna Park Sydney, come on a fuller operating day and book the Unlimited Rides Pass first. Book now.

Best for mixed-age groups: Ferris Wheel and Coney Island

Great when not everyone wants the biggest coasters. The Ferris Wheel gives broad harbour views, and Coney Island carries the park's heritage fun-house personality without demanding all-out thrill tolerance. Choose this mix if you want one version of the park that children, cautious adults, and nostalgia-hunters can all enjoy. Book now.

Best for a short weekday stop: Luna Lite days

Best if your day is already busy, or if you want a smaller sample instead of a full amusement-park commitment. Luna Lite days usually run from 10 am to 2 pm with a reduced offering and can add single-ride or two-ride passes. This is the calmest way to fit Luna Park Sydney into a wider harbor itinerary without letting it take over the whole day. Book now.

How to pair Luna with nearby Sydney icons

If you stay on the north side, the cleanest follow-ups are the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Sydney Observatory. If you continue by ferry, the Sydney Opera House gives you the classic south-shore icon. Choose one continuation only, because the park itself can already take more energy than you expect.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a ticket if I only want to walk through Luna Park Sydney?

Not on a standard park-open day. Entry to the grounds of Luna Park Sydney is free, and you only need a pass if you want rides or attractions.
Read more.

How do the height bands work at Luna Park Sydney?

Guests are measured on arrival and receive a wristband based on height zones: red 85-106 cm (33.5-41.7 in), green 106-132 cm (41.7-52 in), or yellow 132 cm+ (52 in+). Some younger riders also need a paying adult beside them, so check this before you queue.
Read more.

What are Luna Lite days?

Luna Lite days are reduced-offering park sessions, usually running from 10 am to 2 pm on many Mondays to Wednesdays outside school holidays. They are useful if you want a shorter taste of the park rather than the fullest ride day.
Read more.

What is the easiest way to get there from central Sydney?

For most visitors, the easiest route is the ferry to wheelchair-accessible Milsons Point Wharf, right in front of the entrance. Rail also works well: Milsons Point Station is about a 5-minute walk downhill toward the water.
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Is Luna Park Sydney wheelchair accessible?

Yes, the public promenades and venues at Luna Park Sydney are wheelchair accessible, and Milsons Point Wharf is accessible too. Service animals are permitted, which makes the basic arrival and circulation easier to plan.
Read more.

Can a Companion Card holder bring a carer?

Yes. A carer can receive a complimentary rides pass on the day when the valid Companion Card holder buys their own pass and presents the card at the ticket box. Special events can use different rules, so recheck those separately.
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Is Luna Park Sydney cashless?

Mostly yes. Luna Park Sydney is predominantly cashless, with limited cash handling at the front ticket box and retail store only.
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What if not everyone in my group wants big thrill rides?

Use Coney Island and the Ferris Wheel as your common ground. Coney Island keeps the heritage fun-house mood alive, while the Ferris Wheel gives you harbor views from about 40 m (131 ft) above the ground without making the whole group commit to the biggest coasters.
Read more.

What should I pair with Luna Park Sydney nearby?

For the easiest same-area continuation, choose the north-shore side of the Sydney Harbour Bridge or Sydney Observatory. If you are already ferry-hopping, the Sydney Opera House is the strongest south-shore follow-up.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Hours at Luna Park Sydney vary by date. Through July 2026, the park generally opens at 10 am: many Luna Lite weekdays run 10 am to 2 pm, fuller Fridays and Saturdays often run until 8 pm, some late-May dates run until 10 pm, and Sundays commonly close at 6 pm. School-holiday periods can use broader daily hours, so check your exact date before buying; individual rides and experiences may run to their own schedules.

address

Luna Park Sydney
1 Olympic Drive
Milsons Point NSW 2061
Australia

how to get there

Milsons Point Wharf sits directly in front of the park face, so ferry is the most scenic arrival from the CBD. If you use rail, Milsons Point Station is the closest stop and is about a 5-minute walk downhill toward the water on the T1 and T9 lines. Drivers can use the on-site car park with over 380 secure spaces, entering via Dind Street and Northcliff Street.

accessibility

Public promenades and venues at Luna Park Sydney are wheelchair accessible, and Milsons Point Wharf is also wheelchair accessible. Service animals are permitted in the park. If you are visiting with a valid Companion Card holder, a carer can receive a complimentary rides pass on the day when the card holder buys their own pass and presents the card at the ticket box.

tickets

Ground entry is free on standard park-open days; rides, Coney Island, and ticketed experiences require the relevant ticket or pass. Prices are in AUD, include GST, and can change by date:
- Unlimited Rides Pass: AUD 34-75; wristbands use the measured height bands red 85-106 cm (33.5-41.7 in), green 106-132 cm (41.7-52 in), and yellow 132 cm+ (52 in+)
- Lunaverse Superpass: AUD 99, bundling rides with Dream Circus, Lite-Brite, and Sonic Neon
- Luna Lite Ticket: AUD 59 on Luna Lite days, bundling a 2-ride pass with the same experiences
- Coney Island Pass: AUD 25; Ferris Wheel or Carousel pass: AUD 15 each; Annual Rides Pass: AUD 149
Guests under 85 cm (33.5 in) do not need a ticket, but ride access is very limited and requires a paying adult where allowed.

photography and filming

Luna Park Sydney can film or photograph guests in the park for promotional use. Personal tripods are allowed, but not in ride areas, and they must not block walkways, emergency exits, or other guests. Keep your setup compact, especially at busy harbour viewpoints, so you can shoot without being asked to move.
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