Coney Island Cyclone tickets & tours | Price comparison

Coney Island Cyclone

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Coney Island Cyclone, often called The Cyclone, is Brooklyn's wooden legend: since 1927 it has rattled riders across 805 m (2,640 ft) of track, with a 26 m (85 ft) drop just off Surf Avenue.

If you want more than one ride, start with a date-specific all-day wristband for Luna Park in Coney Island, and lock your day early so limited opening windows do not squeeze your plan.
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Some experiences and attractions are seasonal and might close temporarily.

6 tips for visiting the Coney Island Cyclone

1
Check the calendar before anything else
If your priority is actually riding, verify the operating calendar before you build the rest of your day. The 2026 calendar is date-specific, with some closed weekdays, 11 am to 8 pm windows, and selected event or holiday nights running as late as 12 midnight. This quick check saves you a wasted trip to Surf Avenue.
2
Ride early, then decide a reride
If you want at least one guaranteed ride, head to Coney Island Cyclone early in your visit window. On tighter operating days, that first run protects your plan before lines build. If queues stay manageable later, add a second ride for a different light and skyline mood.
3
Choose wristband or single ride on purpose
If you want multiple attractions inside Luna Park in Coney Island, all-day wristbands are usually the better value. If your plan is mainly one headline ride, single rides for Coney Island Cyclone, Thunderbolt, and the B&B Carousell are also sold at the park. Picking this before arrival saves money and decision stress.
4
Pack light for faster boarding
If your priority is smoother boarding, keep your setup simple and follow ride safety instructions at the entrance. Height checks are strict, and ride operators enforce manufacturer limits. Traveling light and staying ready reduces friction at the platform, so you can focus on the thrill.
5
Use subway over parking at peak times
If your goal is reliable timing, make subway your default: Q and F to West 8th Street, or D, F, N, and Q to Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue. Around opening windows, this usually feels easier than hunting for street parking near the boardwalk.
6
Pair your ride with one nearby stop
For a high-yield half day, pair Coney Island Cyclone with New York Aquarium, then keep Brooklyn Bridge Park as your optional extension later in Brooklyn. If you travel with kids, this one-neighborhood pairing is usually easier than jumping across multiple boroughs in one rush.

How to plan a smooth Cyclone visit

A good Coney Island Cyclone day depends less on luck and more on sequence: calendar first, ticket format second, and arrival timing third. Get those three decisions right, and the classic wooden-coaster thrill becomes much easier to enjoy.

Start with the operating calendar

For most visitors, the main mistake is assuming fixed daily hours. In practice, Luna Park in Coney Island can have open-day clusters and closed weekdays outside peak season, so your date choice decides almost everything. Lock your day first, then build the rest of your route around it.

Pick your ticket format for your goal

If you want a broad ride day with friends or family, all-day wristbands are usually the cleanest option. If your priority is one iconic run, single-ride purchase keeps the visit focused and fast. Decide this before you arrive so you do not lose platform time comparing options on-site. Book now.

Use transit and arrival timing to cut friction

If your priority is reliability, subway anchors are the easiest path into Coney Island: West 8th Street or Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue. Arrive early in your selected window, ride once, then decide if a second run is worth the queue. That sequence works especially well for first-time visitors.

Build a one-neighborhood pairing loop

The strongest low-stress pairing is Coney Island Cyclone plus New York Aquarium. Families, in particular, usually get a better day by staying local instead of forcing long cross-city transfers. If energy remains, keep Brooklyn Bridge Park as your later extension, not your first add-on.

History and ride profile of the Coney Island Cyclone

Coney Island Cyclone is not just old, it is still operationally relevant: a pre-war wooden coaster that continues to run in modern New York. Its numbers are simple, but the context around Surf Avenue is what turns one ride into a destination memory.

Why 1927 still matters on every ride

Opening in 1927, Coney Island Cyclone still follows the same core identity that made it famous: a wooden structure, compact layout, and physical, old-school pacing. You feel that history immediately when the train leaves the station near Surf Avenue.

Track, speed, and drop in real terms

On paper, the profile is clear: 805 m (2,640 ft) of track, up to 97 km/h (60 mph), and a 26 m (85 ft) drop. On-site, those numbers translate into a short, punchy ride with strong directional changes that still feels intense for many first-time riders.

Landmark status and cultural weight

The designations are a strong signal of long-term relevance: New York City Landmark in 1988 and National Register listing in 1991. That legal and cultural status helps explain why The Cyclone remains central to Coney Island identity, not just a nostalgic side ride.

How the Cyclone stays relevant today

Recent official updates describe ongoing investment and maintenance to keep this nearly century-old ride operating safely. In practical terms, you still get a functioning historic coaster experience in active rotation, not a static museum piece. That mix is exactly why the stop keeps strong visitor pull.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is the Coney Island Cyclone considered historic?

Coney Island Cyclone opened in 1927 and still operates in the same amusement district by Surf Avenue. It was designated a New York City Landmark in 1988 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.
Read more.

How tall do I need to be to ride the Cyclone alone?

The minimum for the Coney Island Cyclone is 137 cm (54 in) to ride alone. If you are near the limit, check the ride entrance marker before joining the line.
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Is the park open every day?

Not always. Luna Park in Coney Island runs on a date-specific calendar, and many days can be closed outside peak season. Always verify the live calendar for your exact date.
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Should I buy an all-day wristband or a single ride?

If you want several attractions in one visit, all-day wristbands usually make more sense. If your goal is one signature run, single rides for Coney Island Cyclone, Thunderbolt, and B&B Carousell are available on-site.
Read more.

What is the best transit option to get there?

For most visitors, subway is the easiest option: Q/F to West 8th Street or D/F/N/Q to Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue. Bus lines B36 and B68 are also listed as direct options.
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Can guests with limited mobility ride?

Use Guest Services first: there is an alternative waiting process at eligible rides, but ride-by-ride restrictions still apply. Staff can guide access procedures, yet they cannot physically transfer guests onto attractions.
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What happens if weather turns bad during my visit?

Rides can pause for electrical storms, heavy rain, high winds, or other dangerous conditions. Operations restart when conditions are safe, and weather-related interruptions are not refunded.
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What should I pair with the Cyclone nearby?

The easiest same-area add-on is New York Aquarium. If you want to extend the day in Brooklyn after Coney Island, Brooklyn Bridge Park is a practical second stop.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The Cyclone follows the calendar-based, weather-dependent operating model at Luna Park in Coney Island rather than a separate daily table. The 2026 park windows include starts from 10 am to 4 pm and closings from 8 pm to 12 midnight, with some weekdays closed. Ride schedules, dates, and hours can change without notice, and rides may pause in bad weather.

tickets

A Coney Island Cyclone ride uses 10 credits and requires a 137 cm (54 in) minimum to ride alone; Cyclone pricing is shown in credits rather than as a standalone dollar fare. The 2026 park pass prices start at $89.99 for the 48 in and above Luna Boardwalk Daily Pass, $55.99 for the under-48 in Boardwalk pass, and $49.99 for Luna Midway Daily Passes in Lot A only.

address

Luna Park in Coney Island
1000 Surf Avenue
Brooklyn, NY 11224
United States

how to get there

Subway: Q and F to West 8th Street, or D, F, N, and Q to Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue.
Bus: B36 to Surf Avenue and West 8th Street, or B68 to Neptune Avenue and West 8th Street.
Driving is possible, but no private visitor lot is dedicated to the park.

accessibility

Guests with restricted mobility can use an alternative waiting process at applicable attractions, coordinated through Guest Services. Ride-specific limits for height, body proportions, and transfer ability still apply, and staff cannot physically transfer guests onto rides. Documented service animals are allowed when they meet the park's service-animal rules.

security

Ride operations can pause during electrical storms, heavy rain, high winds, or other dangerous conditions, and weather interruptions do not trigger refunds. Height/safety checks are enforced at ride entrances. Follow ride-operator instructions to keep boarding smooth and avoid being turned away at the platform.

photography and filming

Personal photos are common, but commercial shooting inside Luna Park in Coney Island requires written approval. Tripods, lights, reflectors, and similar production equipment are not permitted without permission. Keep your setup simple so security checks stay quick.
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