Beijing National Aquatics Center tickets & tours | Price comparison

Beijing National Aquatics Center

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Beijing National Aquatics Center, widely known as the Water Cube and now also the Ice Cube, sits in Olympic Park beside National Stadium. Built for the Beijing 2008 Games and adapted for the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, it blends Olympic history, signature architecture, and active visitor experiences.

For most first visits, start with a standard daytime admission, then add the evening Water Light Show combo only if you plan to stay after dark, so your schedule stays flexible and low-stress.
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Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

6 tips for visiting the Beijing National Aquatics Center

1
Choose day or night first
If you want calmer indoor time in the Olympic hall, choose a daytime slot. If your priority is the glowing facade, pick the evening format with Water Light Show. Deciding this first avoids ticket overlap and keeps your pace realistic.
2
Arrive before your slot
The reference schedule starts entry at 10:30 am, with last admission around 8 pm. Arrive 15 to 20 minutes early for ticket checks and orientation in the south plaza. That buffer helps you start smoothly instead of rushing at the gate.
3
Use the right metro station
For most visitors, Olympic Park station on lines 8 and 15 is the easiest approach. Olympic Sports Center on line 8 is a useful backup if your route changes. Picking your station before departure saves time once you enter the park zone.
4
Separate swim and ice blocks
If you plan active formats, avoid stacking everything back-to-back. The swimming side runs reservation sessions up to 120 minutes, and the ice center also uses timed blocks. Keeping one active block per half-day prevents fatigue and leaves room for photos and breaks.
5
Use the visitor desk services
The visitor desk on the east side of the south commercial street can help with wheelchairs, strollers, basic first-aid items, storage, and lost-and-found support. Use it early if you travel with children or grandparents. That small stop prevents mid-visit logistics stress.
6
Pair one nearby landmark
After Water Cube, add one nearby stop instead of three: Olympic Park Observation Tower for skyline views, or Forbidden City if you want imperial-history contrast later in the day. One focused pairing usually gives a better rhythm than overloading your route.

How to plan a smooth Water Cube visit

At Beijing National Aquatics Center, a strong day depends less on distance and more on format choices. If you set timing and one clear add-on early, the visit feels much easier.

Start with the format that fits your goal

Choose standard daytime admission if you want architecture, exhibitions, and a calmer pace. Choose the evening combo if your priority is the illuminated shell and a stronger visual finish. Lock that choice first, then secure your slot. Book now.

Use timing buffers at the gate

The reference window runs from 10:30 am to 9 pm, but access flow still tightens at peak moments. Arrive 15 to 20 minutes early, especially with family groups, so checks and orientation do not eat into your visit time. That way you start focused, not rushed.

Plan active experiences as separate blocks

Swimming at the Huo Yingdong Pool uses sessions up to 120 minutes, and the ice center also works with timed formats. If you travel with children or older relatives, one active block plus one easy sightseeing block is usually the sweet spot. You avoid fatigue and still see the venue highlights.

Add one nearby Olympic Park continuation

After Water Cube, keep momentum with exactly one follow-up: Olympic Park Observation Tower for skyline perspective, or Forbidden City later for imperial-history depth. Limiting the add-on to one stop keeps your route coherent and your energy stable. Then secure the next slot. Book now.

From Water Cube to Ice Cube: Olympic legacy in one venue

This site is not just photogenic architecture. It is one of Beijing's clearest examples of long-term Olympic reuse, where a summer icon evolved into a dual-season venue.

2003 to 2008: building the Water Cube

The project phase began in 2003, and the venue entered the global spotlight at the Beijing 2008 Games. Its bubble-like envelope and vast competition hall immediately made it one of the city's most recognizable Olympic forms.

2022: conversion into the Ice Cube

For the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, the center was adapted to host curling, then reopened with public ice programs. This water-ice conversion model is why the venue now works as both a memory site and an active sports platform.

How the architecture feels on site

The bubble-like facade wraps a structure designed to feel lightweight from outside and monumental inside. You notice this contrast most when you move from the plaza edge into the main hall volume: the building shifts from playful to cathedral-like in seconds.

What visitors see in today's dual-use venue

Today the complex combines tourism, event staging, swimming operations, and ice-sport formats in one footprint. The south-plaza approach, the Olympic competition hall, and program-specific zones make it easy to understand how one Olympic venue kept evolving instead of becoming static.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Beijing National Aquatics Center the same as Water Cube and Ice Cube?

Yes. The venue is the same complex in Olympic Park: visitors still call it Water Cube, while the winter-sport conversion is known as Ice Cube.
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What are the current visiting hours?

A current reference schedule lists operations from 10:30 am to 9 pm, with ticket sales to 7:50 pm, last entry around 8 pm, and clearing at 8:30 pm. Always check same-day posted times for final confirmation.
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How much does a standard visit cost?

Reference prices list CNY 30 for standard admission, CNY 15 for reduced admission, and CNY 48 for the visit + light-show combo (CNY 33 reduced). Same-day posted prices remain the final price point.
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Who gets free or reduced admission?

Free categories include visitors aged 65+, certified disabled visitors, and children aged 6 or younger or up to 1.2 m (3.9 ft). Reduced categories include ages 60 to 64, students with valid student ID, and selected service groups. Bring original documents for verification.
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Can I swim and skate on the same day?

Yes, but plan carefully. Swimming uses reservation sessions up to 120 minutes, and ice products also run on timed formats. Most visitors enjoy the day more by choosing one active block and one sightseeing block.
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Is the site suitable for families?

Yes. The venue includes family-friendly visitor flow, stroller support through the service desk, and child-focused options in the water-activity zone. If you travel with children, arrive early and keep your route short between major stops.
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How do I reach the venue by public transport?

Use metro line 8 or 15 to Olympic Park, or line 8 to Olympic Sports Center. Nearby bus anchors include Beichen Xiqiao North and Beichen Xiqiao with several city lines.
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What should I pair nearby after Water Cube?

A practical same-zone add-on is Olympic Park Observation Tower for elevated Olympic Park views. If you want a larger history contrast later, continue toward Forbidden City. One pairing usually keeps the day balanced.
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General information

opening hours

A September 2025 reference schedule lists venue operations from 10:30 am to 9 pm, ticket sales from 10:30 am to 7:50 pm, entry from 10:30 am to 8 pm, and clearing at 8:30 pm. Day-of posted times remain the final rule, and special-date notices can change access windows.

tickets

Current reference prices list standard admission at CNY 30, reduced admission at CNY 15, and visit + Water Light Show at CNY 48 (reduced CNY 33). Free admission categories include visitors aged 65+ with valid ID, certified disabled visitors, and children aged 6 or younger or up to 1.2 m (3.9 ft). Same-day posted prices remain authoritative.

address

Beijing National Aquatics Center (Water Cube)
No. 11 Tianchen East Road
Chaoyang District, Beijing
China

how to get there

Metro anchors are Olympic Park station (lines 8 and 15) and Olympic Sports Center station (line 8). Bus options include Beichen Xiqiao North (81, 82, 510, 607) and Beichen Xiqiao (386, 400, 407, 490, 613, 645, 658). If you drive, nearby P2 north/south Olympic Park parking is the practical first option.

accessibility

The tourism service desk provides wheelchair and stroller rental and can support mobility-related visit planning. If you need extra assistance, ask there at the start of your visit so your route, breaks, and entrances are planned before crowds build.

security

Use your valid ticket/QR for entry, and bring original ID documents if you use reduced or free categories. Venue rules also ban dangerous items in activity areas. On event days, temporary flow controls can apply, so arrive with extra buffer time.

luggage

The visitor desk includes item-storage support and lost-and-found service. Travel with a compact day bag, then store bulk items early if you plan to switch between exhibits and activity areas. This keeps movement easier in the hall and south-plaza routes.
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