Mount Vernon tickets & tours | Price comparison

Mount Vernon

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Mount Vernon, also known as George Washington's Mount Vernon, rises above the Potomac River with the Mansion, gardens, farm, museums, and tomb all in one estate about 24 km (15 mi) south of Washington, DC. You can walk the same lanes George Washington planned and still catch that quiet river view from the piazza.

Start with a timed Mansion entry ticket, or choose a guided half-day format from Washington, DC if you want transport included, better pacing, and less queue stress.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Timed entry tickets

Best if you want a self-paced estate day with your own Mansion slot, plus access to gardens, museums, and grounds.
George Washington's Mount Vernon: Entry Ticket
4.6(41)
 
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George Washington's Mount Vernon Gardens & Grounds Admission
4.3(340)
 
viator.com
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Bike Rental to Mount Vernon
 
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Washington DC:Sightseeing & Mount Vernon Admission Admission
 
getyourguide.com
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Guided tours from Washington, DC

Choose these tours if you want narration, transport convenience, and structured stops that often include Old Town Alexandria.
George Washington's Mount Vernon Tour & Old Town Alexandria
4.2(20)
 
getyourguide.com
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Washington DC: Mount Vernon Half-Day Tour
4.3(12)
 
getyourguide.com
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Private Mt. Vernon/Arlington Cemetery Tour for up to 10 Guests
5.0(29)
 
viator.com
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George Washington's Mount Vernon Private Guided Tour
4.3(67)
 
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See all Guided tours from Washington, DC

Mount Vernon day trips

Use this format when you want Mount Vernon as part of a broader day with coach transfer and additional regional stops.
Old Town, Alexandria and Mount Vernon Private Tour
4.9(83)
 
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Mount Vernon Historical Walking Tour with Transportation from DC
4.2(21)
 
viator.com
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6 tips for visiting the Mount Vernon

1
Reserve your Mansion slot early
If your date is fixed, lock your Mansion time in advance. On busy weekends, first available slots can be more than two hours after arrival. Booking early keeps your day smooth, so you spend time in the estate and not in line.
2
Use waiting time on the grounds
If your Mansion slot is later, start with the gardens, outbuildings, and museum first. That route keeps momentum, and you can still arrive at the Mansion line right on time. This avoids stop-start frustration and keeps the visit enjoyable.
3
Skip car stress from downtown
From central Washington, DC, a practical no-car route is Metro Yellow Line to Huntington Station, then Fairfax Connector bus 101 for about 20 minutes to the gate. If your priority is low-friction arrival, this option is usually calmer than traffic on the George Washington Memorial Parkway.
4
Use the one-hour closing backup
If your day runs late and you buy admission within one hour of closing, your ticket can be validated for next-day return. This small safety net is a great micro-hack for traffic-heavy days around Alexandria, and it keeps your trip from feeling rushed.
5
Wear shoes for uneven paths
If comfort is your priority, wear supportive shoes and plan short breaks between the Mansion, tomb, and farm zones. Historic paths are uneven in parts, and distances add up fast on humid afternoons near the Potomac River. That way you stay focused on the experience, not on fatigue.
6
Pair one downtown stop only
If you also want classic DC monuments, pair Mount Vernon with one major stop like Lincoln Memorial or National Air and Space Museum, not both in a rushed block. A one-pair plan keeps transfer stress low and gives you real time on site. So you end the day satisfied, not overbooked.

How to plan a Mount Vernon day from Washington, DC

A good plan here is simple: choose your format first, then build timing around your Mansion slot.

Pick the format that matches your start point

If you are already in Old Town Alexandria, a timed entry ticket usually gives you the most flexibility. If you start in central Washington, DC and want less logistics, guided formats with transport can save energy early in the day. Matching format to starting point is the easiest way to reduce friction.

Build your arrival around the Mansion line

Your Mansion ticket time is the key anchor at Mount Vernon. Arrive at the estate entrance about 30 minutes before your slot, then move through security and walk to the Mansion line on time. This pacing avoids stressful rushing and keeps the rest of your estate route predictable.

Route the estate from high energy to low

A practical flow is Mansion first, then museum galleries, then gardens and the farm while energy is still strong, with a slower river-facing finish near the piazza. Distances across the grounds feel longer by afternoon, especially in summer heat by the Potomac River. This order helps you keep the best moments when your attention is highest.

Add one nearby pairing with clear intent

If your priority is civic landmarks, pair Mount Vernon with Lincoln Memorial. If you prefer museum depth, pair it with National Museum of African American History and Culture or National Air and Space Museum. One clear pairing keeps transfers realistic for the DC area and leaves buffer time if traffic on the George Washington Memorial Parkway slows down.

Ticket and tour formats at Mount Vernon

Inventory here splits clearly between self-paced entry, guided formats, and broader day trips, so your best pick depends on transport, pace, and context depth.

Timed entry tickets for flexible pacing

Best for independent visitors who want to spend real time in the estate zones that matter most to them. You control your order around the Mansion slot and can stretch your stop at gardens, museum spaces, or the riverside view. Choose this when your priority is flexibility over narration. Book now.

Guided tours with Alexandria context

Great when you want historical framing, structured timing, and fewer transport decisions. Many guided products combine Mount Vernon with a drive through Old Town Alexandria, which adds narrative context without extra planning. Choose this if you want a smoother first visit. Book now.

Private formats for families and small groups

Choose private options if your group includes children, older travelers, or visitors who need frequent pace adjustments. Private timing makes it easier to align pickup windows, rest stops, and photo moments on a longer day around Alexandria and the estate. This format trades price for control. Book now.

Day trips when Mount Vernon is one chapter

Use day-trip formats if your goal is to cover multiple DC-area highlights in one booking. They are efficient when you want transport handled and can accept less unstructured estate time in exchange for broader coverage. Great for first-time visitors with limited days. Book now.

History of Mount Vernon in four turning points

What you see today is the result of ownership changes, preservation choices, and recent restoration phases that still shape how the estate feels on site.

1734 to 1761: from family house to Washington home

The house built in 1734 by Augustine Washington became the basis of the Mansion you visit today. George Washington leased the estate in 1754 and formally became owner in 1761, then expanded both house and grounds over decades. On site, that layered growth is why the estate feels lived-in rather than staged.

1799: the estate becomes a national memory site

George Washington died at Mount Vernon on December 14, 1799. In the years after his death, visitors began coming specifically to see where he lived and was buried, and that pilgrimage pattern still shapes crowd flow around the Mansion and tomb areas today.

1853 to 1860: rescue and public opening

The Mount Vernon Ladies' Association was founded in 1853, agreed purchase terms in 1858, and took possession on February 22, 1860. That campaign is treated as a foundational moment in U.S. historic preservation, and it explains why so much of the broader landscape, not only the house, is protected today.

2023 to 2026: restoration and next-phase reopening

Recent conservation phases include major Mansion exterior work completed in 2023, with additional interior-focused work and gallery renewal continuing into 2026. In practice, you visit a site that is both deeply historic and actively maintained, which is why current planning details can change by season.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much time should I plan for Mount Vernon?

For most visits, plan at least 3 hours. Many guests stay around 4 hours once they add the Mansion, gardens, museum spaces, and river viewpoint.
Read more.

Do I need a separate Mansion time ticket?

Yes. Entry to the Mansion uses an assigned time, whether you book online or buy at the gate. Arrive at the estate entrance about 30 minutes before your Mansion slot so you can clear entry and walk over without stress.
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How long is the Mansion tour itself?

The Mansion tour usually lasts around 15 to 25 minutes, depending on visitor volume. Your full estate day is longer because most people add gardens, museum areas, and the tomb.
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Is parking available, and is it free?

Yes. Visitor parking at Mount Vernon is free, with lots on both sides of the George Washington Memorial Parkway. From most spaces, the walk to the entrance is roughly 5 to 8 minutes.
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Can I reach Mount Vernon by public transport?

Yes. A common route is Metro Yellow Line to Huntington Station, then Fairfax Connector bus 101 to the entrance in about 20 minutes. It is a practical option if you want to avoid driving.
Read more.

Is Mount Vernon wheelchair accessible?

Key visitor buildings are accessible, and the first floor of the Mansion is accessible. Free standard wheelchairs are available first come, first served, and seasonal shuttles include a wheelchair lift.
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What are the key bag and item rules?

Bags larger than 41x41x20 cm (16x16x8 in) are not allowed, and smaller bags are inspected at entry. Food and drinks other than water are not allowed on the estate, and tripods or selfie sticks are prohibited.
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Can I bring dogs or strollers?

Leashed dogs are allowed on the estate grounds, but not inside the Mansion. Strollers are welcome on the grounds, yet you need to park them before entering the Mansion tour line.
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General information

opening hours

Estate hours (retrieved 2026-03-03):
- April to October: 9 am to 5 pm
- November to March: 9 am to 4 pm

Mount Vernon is open 365 days a year. The museum stays open for 30 minutes after estate closing. The Distillery and Gristmill runs Saturday and Sunday from 10 am to 5 pm, April to October.

tickets

Grounds Pass prices (retrieved 2026-03-03):
- Adults (12+): from $30
- Youth (6-11): from $16
- Children (0-5): free

General admission includes the historic area, gardens, outbuildings, museums, and audio tour. Entry to the Mansion requires an assigned time, and reserving early is recommended.

address

George Washington's Mount Vernon
3200 Mount Vernon Memorial Highway
Mount Vernon, VA 22121
United States

website

how to get there

Mount Vernon is about 24 km (15 mi) south of Washington, DC and about 13 km (8 mi) south of Alexandria. A common public transport route is Metro Yellow Line to Huntington Station, then Fairfax Connector bus 101 (about 20 minutes). Visitor parking is free.

accessibility

Accessible parking is available in all visitor lots, with curbside drop-off near the traffic circle. The first floor of the Mansion is accessible, and standard wheelchairs are available free on a first-come basis at the Ford Orientation Center. Seasonal shuttles include a wheelchair lift, but they do not stop directly at the Mansion.

security

Bags larger than 41x41x20 cm (16x16x8 in) are not allowed on the property, and smaller bags are inspected on arrival. Outside food and drinks are not allowed except water. Weapons, tripods, and selfie sticks are prohibited.
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