Aquarium of the Bay tickets & tours | Price comparison

Aquarium of the Bay

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Aquarium of the Bay puts you inside the mood of San Francisco's north waterfront at PIER 39, where glowing jellies, shark tunnels, touch pools, and playful river otters all stay tied to the real waters of San Francisco Bay. It feels local rather than generic, with docks, sea lions, and bay wind waiting outside the doors.

Start with a general-admission mobile ticket, because it covers the full circuit, speeds up entry, and keeps the rest of your PIER 39 or Fishermans Wharf day flexible.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

General admission and VIP tickets

Choose this if the aquarium itself is the point of the visit and you want the cleanest entry at PIER 39, with the option of an early VIP format.
Aquarium of the Bay General Admission Ticket
3.9(473)
 
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Aquarium of the Bay Tickets
 
headout.com
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San Francisco: VIP Experience at Aquarium of the Bay
 
tiqets.com
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Guided San Francisco combo tours

Best if you want Aquarium of the Bay folded into a guided city route instead of treated as a slow, standalone marine-life stop.
From San Francisco: Alcatraz, Aquarium of the Bay & Yosemite 2-Day Trip
 
headout.com
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From San Francisco: Alcatraz, Aquarium of the Bay, & Napa/Sonoma Wine Country 2-Day Trip
 
headout.com
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San Francisco Grand City bus tour and Aquarium of the Bay tickets
 
musement.com
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Alcatraz and California day trips

Use this section when the aquarium is one part of a much bigger day or 2-day plan that also includes Alcatraz, Yosemite, or wine-country time.
From San Francisco: Alcatraz Day and Yosemite Day Tour
3.5(12)
 
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From San Francisco: Alcatraz Night and Yosemite Day Tour
4.6(4)
 
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Muir Woods with Napa & Sonoma Wine Tour + Alcatraz & Aquarium Access
5.0(2)
 
viator.com
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Muir Woods & Sausalito + Alcatraz Night Tour & Aquarium Access
4.0(3)
 
viator.com
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7 tips for visiting the Aquarium of the Bay

1
Go right at opening
If you want the shark tunnels and touch pools before PIER 39 turns fully busy, aim for the 10 am opening. Later morning brings more stroller traffic and more general waterfront footfall. Starting early makes the route calmer, and the photos easier, so you can focus on the animals instead of the crowd.
2
Keep 90 minutes, hold 2 hours
If you just want the main circuit, plan about 90 minutes. If you are visiting with children, stopping for presentations, or lingering in the tunnels, hold closer to 2 hours. That extra buffer keeps the last third of the visit relaxed instead of rushed.
3
Use the F-Line from Embarcadero
If you are starting downtown or arriving by BART, go to Embarcadero Station first, then use the historic Muni F-Line to The Embarcadero & Beach Street. It drops you right by PIER 39 and saves you from parking roulette on the north waterfront. That way the day starts with the bay, not with garage stress.
4
Travel light inside
If you are carrying luggage or a bulky stroller, sort it out before entry. There is no storage for personal items, and outside food is not allowed apart from closed-top water bottles. A smaller bag makes the tunnels and touch areas much easier to enjoy, so the visit feels fluid from the start.
5
Check the elevator detour
If anyone in your group depends on step-free access, check the current entry note before you go. As posted on March 10, 2026, the exterior elevator is out of service, so you need to use PIER 39's elevator to level 2 and walk through the gift shop to the main entrance. Knowing this in advance avoids awkward backtracking at the pier.
6
Scan the QR codes
If you want more context without joining a fixed group, use the QR codes around the exhibits on your phone or tablet. They support multiple languages, including English, German, Italian, Spanish, French, Japanese, Korean, and Mandarin. This is the easiest way to deepen the visit at your own pace, without slowing the whole group down.
7
Keep one waterfront follow-up
After the aquarium, choose one easy continuation: Fishermans Wharf for a broader waterfront walk, Alcatraz if you already have a timed ferry, or Lombard Street for a short uphill photo stop. One clear second act keeps the day fun instead of turning into a rushed PIER 39 checklist.

How to plan a smooth Aquarium of the Bay visit at PIER 39

The aquarium itself is compact. The real planning trick is managing the PIER 39 context around it: your ticket format, your arrival route, and how many other waterfront ideas you try to stack on the same day.

Choose simple entry before you add a bigger combo

Best for most first-time visitors: start with straightforward general admission, because it keeps the aquarium as the main event and leaves the rest of the day open. Move to VIP only if you want a quieter pre-opening feel, or to a larger combo only if the aquarium is clearly secondary to the wider itinerary. One clean decision upfront saves money, timing stress, and overpacked expectations. Book now.

Opening hour beats late-morning drift

If your priority is a calmer tunnel run, use the 10 am opening instead of drifting in after the pier is already busy. Later morning on PIER 39 means more background noise, more stroller traffic, and more casual walk-ins from the sea-lion side. Arriving early gives the marine-life moments more room to breathe.

Ride the F-Line and keep arrival easy

For most downtown starts, BART plus the historic Muni F-Line is the cleanest move. You step off at The Embarcadero & Beach Street, reach PIER 39 almost immediately, and avoid burning energy on garage logic before you have even seen the first tank. This matters even more if your day already contains a timed stop like Alcatraz.

Pick one waterfront follow-up by intent

After Aquarium of the Bay, one nearby continuation is usually enough. Go to Fishermans Wharf if you want to stay flat, snack, and keep the day easy; keep Alcatraz as the fixed anchor if you already have the ferry booked; use Lombard Street only if your group still has energy for one short uphill classic. One deliberate second step protects the mood. Book now.

What you actually see inside Aquarium of the Bay

This aquarium works because it stays anchored to the water outside the doors. Instead of trying to show the whole world, it keeps pulling you back to the species, textures, and moods of San Francisco Bay.

Discover the Bay sets the local tone

The first strong signal is that the aquarium starts close to the shoreline world you are already standing beside at PIER 39. In Discover the Bay, species such as green moray eels, wolf eels, juvenile swell sharks, and bright orange garibaldi make the visit feel tied to this coast rather than borrowed from somewhere tropical and generic.

Under the Bay is the signature tunnel moment

This is the payoff most visitors remember. Under the Bay combines jellies with two immersive tunnels totaling 91.4 m (300 ft), where rays and sharks move overhead and the whole visit suddenly feels slower, darker, and more cinematic. If you came for one clear wow moment on the north waterfront, it is usually here.

Touch the Bay slows the pace in a good way

After the tunnels, Touch the Bay changes the rhythm. Instead of just looking, you move into tactile encounters with juvenile bat rays, skates, sharks, sea stars, and anemones, with the Bay Lab adding a more hands-on, family-friendly angle. It is the point where children usually lock in, and adults stop speed-walking.

The otter gallery changes the energy

The North American river otters are not just a cute finale. Their feedings, training sessions, and biologist-led presentations give the aquarium a looser, more animated second rhythm after the darker tunnel mood. That shift is one reason the visit works so well for mixed groups with very different attention spans.

Ticket types at Aquarium of the Bay

This POI has a clear split between straightforward entry, guided city-combo formats, and larger California bundles where the aquarium is only one stop among several.

General admission and VIP tickets

Best for visitors who actually want Aquarium of the Bay itself, not just another logo on a bigger pass. General admission is the clean, all-day-valid default, while VIP is the upgrade if you want the quieter pre-opening feel from 9:15 am to 10:30 am. Choose this when the tunnels, touch pools, and otters are the point of the day, not a sidebar. Book now.

Guided San Francisco combo tours

Great when your priority is a broader city story and the aquarium is one curated stop inside it. These products make more sense if you want guidance, routing, and multi-stop convenience, not if you are hoping for a slower marine-life-heavy visit. Choose this when you want the aquarium folded into a city day with less self-navigation. Book now.

Alcatraz and California day trips

Best when the aquarium is clearly secondary to a much bigger itinerary built around Alcatraz, Yosemite, Muir Woods, or wine-country time. These are not the right buy if your goal is a relaxed aquarium visit; they are the right buy if you want one efficient booking that bundles several headline California moments. Match this section to your ambition level, not just to the aquarium name in the title. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Aquarium of the Bay focused on?

Aquarium of the Bay is built around the marine life of San Francisco Bay rather than a generic global collection. You move through shark and ray viewing, touch pools, jelly displays, and river-otter areas that keep the bay itself as the main theme.
Read more.

How long should I plan for the visit?

For most visitors, 90 minutes is the right baseline. If you stop for scheduled presentations, add roughly 10 to 20 minutes; if you are with children or taking lots of photos, keeping closer to 2 hours is safer.
Read more.

What are the current opening hours and last entry?

At the moment, Aquarium of the Bay is published as open daily from 10 am to 5 pm, with last entry at 4:30 pm. Some holiday dates use shorter hours, so it is worth rechecking before a special-date visit.
Read more.

How much do tickets cost, and is CityPASS accepted?

Published online prices retrieved March 10, 2026 start at $30.48 for adults, $22.00 for children, and $26.24 for seniors, all including the web fee. Yes, CityPASS is accepted, and eligible Museums for All visitors can get up to four $5 tickets.
Read more.

Can teenagers enter without an adult?

Only from age 16. The aquarium's published minimum age for entry without adult supervision is 16, so younger visitors need an accompanying adult.
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Is the aquarium wheelchair-accessible right now?

Yes, but note the current arrival detour. As posted on March 10, 2026, step-free access uses PIER 39's elevator to level 2 because the exterior elevator is out of service, and wheelchairs are available first come, first served.
Read more.

Is there luggage or stroller storage?

No. Aquarium of the Bay does not store personal items. If you need help before entry, the venue suggests checking with the San Francisco Welcome Center on the west side of PIER 39.
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Can I bring food or drinks inside?

Outside food and drink are not allowed, except for closed-top water bottles. If you want a fuller break, eat before entry or save it for after the visit around PIER 39.
Read more.

Is there an audio guide or non-English interpretation?

There are QR codes throughout the aquarium that work on your own phone or tablet. The listed languages are English, French, Italian, German, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, and Spanish.
Read more.

What is the best nearby follow-up stop?

Choose by intent: Fishermans Wharf if you want to stay fully on the waterfront, Alcatraz if you already have a timed ferry reservation, or Lombard Street if you want one short classic San Francisco photo stop afterward. One add-on is usually enough.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

Current published visitor hours, with pages updated March 4, 2026, are daily 10 am to 5 pm, with last entry at 4:30 pm. Some holiday dates shift to 10 am to 3 pm, and Christmas Day is listed as closed, so recheck before major holiday visits.

tickets

Published prices retrieved March 10, 2026:
- Adult general admission: $30.48 online incl. fee, or $28.25 at the box office
- Child general admission: $22.00 online incl. fee, or $20.25 at the box office
- Senior general admission: $26.24 online incl. fee, or $24.25 at the box office
- Museums for All: up to four $5 tickets for eligible visitors

General admission is valid for the whole day after redemption. CityPASS is accepted, VIP tours run daily 9:15 am to 10:30 am, and both the Family Combo and VIP format require at least 3 tickets.

website

address

Aquarium of the Bay
PIER 39
The Embarcadero & Beach St.
San Francisco, CA 94133
United States

how to get there

The simplest transit plan from downtown is usually BART to Embarcadero Station, then the historic Muni F-Line inbound toward Fisherman's Wharf to The Embarcadero & Beach Street. If you drive, the usual parking options are the PIER 39 Garage or Pier 35; the aquarium itself does not validate parking.

accessibility

As posted on March 10, 2026, the exterior elevator is out of service, so step-free access currently uses PIER 39's elevator to level 2 and the route through the gift shop. Wheelchairs are available during your visit on a first-come, first-served basis, with a photo ID held while you use them.

luggage

The aquarium does not store personal items, including group or class-trip belongings. If you arrive with bags you do not want to carry, ask first at the San Francisco Welcome Center on the second floor of PIER 39's west side. That quick stop can save you from dragging extra weight through the tunnels.
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