REVIEW · ORLANDO
The Orlando Sightseeing Flex Pass: 20+ Incredible Attractions & Helicopter tour
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A sightseeing plan that changes with your mood.
This Orlando Flex Pass is built for easy hopping: you pick how many attractions you want to visit (2, 3, 4, or 5) and then use your mobile pass within 30 days for free admission. The mix is wide enough to cover classic Orlando stops and fun offbeat choices.
Two things I really like: first, the pass is simple to use once it’s activated, with an instantly downloadable mobile ticket. Second, the included variety means you can build a day around aquarium time, a brainy escape room, or something loud and arcade-style without paying each ticket separately. One thing to watch: some pass details and attraction availability can be confusing, so I’d double-check what’s actually on your specific mobile pass before you plan your big days.
In This Review
- Key Points at a Glance
- How You Choose Your 2, 3, 4, or 5 Attractions in 30 Days
- International Drive Without the Car: The 7-Day Trolley Add-On
- Stop-by-Stop: What Each Included Attraction Actually Feels Like
- Old Town Kissimmee (about 1 hour)
- The Escape Game Orlando (about 1 hour)
- Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition (about 1 hour)
- WonderWorks (about 1 hour)
- Señor Frog’s Orlando (about 1.5 hours)
- Wild Florida Airboats & Gator Park (about 2 hours)
- Madame Tussauds Orlando (about 1 hour, pass admission free in the sample)
- SEA LIFE Orlando Aquarium (about 1 hour, pass admission free in the sample)
- The Orlando Eye at ICON Park (about 1.5 hours, pass admission free in the sample)
- Chocolate Kingdom – Factory Adventure Tour (about 1.5 hours, pass admission free in the sample)
- Dave & Buster’s – Arcade (about 2 hours, pass admission free in the sample)
- Helicopter Tour: The Part That Needs Reservations
- Price and Value: When This $64 Pass Makes Sense
- Practical Tips That Make It Feel Easy Instead of Complicated
- Use your phone for addresses and timing
- Check hours, especially around holidays
- Plan around reservations
- Expect the unexpected
- Who This Orlando Flex Pass Works Best For
- Should You Book This Orlando Sightseeing Flex Pass?
- FAQ
- How much does the Orlando Sightseeing Flex Pass cost?
- How long is the pass valid once I start using it?
- What do I choose when I buy the pass?
- Is the helicopter tour included, and what are the reservation rules?
- Does the pass include trolley access?
- Do I need reservations for other included activities besides the helicopter?
- Can I cancel for free?
Key Points at a Glance

- Pick your pace: choose 2, 3, 4, or 5 attractions, then spread them across a 30-day window.
- Mobile ticket convenience: purchase online and download immediately, then present at entry.
- International Drive trolley included: get 7-day hop-on hop-off access along the corridor.
- Big family options: you can mix museums, theme-leaning attractions, and kid-friendly fun in the same pass.
- Helicopter tour needs planning: reservations are required, with a credit card hold and a 300 lb weight limit (max 100 travelers).
- Do a quick check before you go: some people report confusion between what’s advertised and what’s actually available on the pass.
How You Choose Your 2, 3, 4, or 5 Attractions in 30 Days

This pass works like a choose-your-own-adventure, but with real-world rules you should know up front. At booking, you select how many included attractions you want—2, 3, 4, or 5—and your pass stays valid for the remainder of those selections over roughly 30 days. The pass activates the first time you use it, then you’ve got that 30-day countdown to finish your chosen options.
What that means for you: if you arrive in Orlando and want flexibility, you can wait a few days before committing to your best mix of sights. If you’ve got a crowded schedule (theme parks, dinner shows, day trips), you can stash the pass for a slower day when everyone’s legs need a break.
You’ll also want to pay attention to “free admission” versus “included” language for each stop. In the example itinerary, several attractions show the pass covering admission directly, including places like Madame Tussauds, SEA LIFE Orlando, The Orlando Eye, Chocolate Kingdom, and Dave & Buster’s. Other stops clearly list included admission as well. The big practical takeaway: once you’ve got the mobile pass in your phone, you can treat it like a ticket bundle—show it at entry and move on.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Orlando
International Drive Without the Car: The 7-Day Trolley Add-On

International Drive is where a lot of Orlando action clusters, and the pass includes a 7-day hop-on hop-off trolley along this corridor. That’s a quiet win, especially if you don’t want to fight parking lots or shuttle schedules between attractions.
Here’s how I’d use it: pick one “home base” area on or near International Drive, then use the trolley to pop in and out of the day’s plan. You can keep meals and shopping close by while still hitting attractions that aren’t walkable from your hotel.
Even if you’re renting a car, the trolley can still save time. You spend less energy on traffic timing and more on the day itself—finding the right entrance, grabbing a snack, and getting to the next stop without rushing.
Stop-by-Stop: What Each Included Attraction Actually Feels Like
This pass is marketed as 20+ options, but the included sample lineup tells you a lot about the style of experiences you’re buying into: hands-on, family-friendly, and spread across Orlando’s major “outside the main parks” attractions.
Old Town Kissimmee (about 1 hour)
Old Town is a classic Orlando-era mix of shops, entertainment, and that fun roadside vibe. With the pass covering admission, you can wander without turning it into a pricey detour. If your group likes strolling, people-watching, and casual themed fun, this is a good warm-up stop.
The Escape Game Orlando (about 1 hour)
If you want something active and brainy, this is your move. The pass includes admission for an escape-room style experience, which usually makes time feel shorter because everyone’s focused on solving. One important practical angle: pick a time when you won’t be rushed to catch the next attraction.
Titanic: The Artifact Exhibition (about 1 hour)
This one is a steady, museum-like choice that helps balance the louder stops. If your group has mixed ages or different interests, Titanic is a dependable “everyone can enjoy this” option. Plan on giving it the full hour rather than treating it like a quick photo stop.
WonderWorks (about 1 hour)
WonderWorks is built for hands-on, goofy learning. It’s not just a museum pass cover—it’s the kind of place where kids burn energy and adults still find things worth trying. Go with the attitude that you’ll play a little, not just look.
Señor Frog’s Orlando (about 1.5 hours)
This isn’t a theme park ride. It’s a themed restaurant, which means you’re buying a meal plus atmosphere. It can work well as a scheduled anchor in the day—food, then keep going with the pass.
I like this type of included stop because it prevents that common Orlando problem: everyone gets hungry at random times and you end up paying extra for convenience. With Señor Frog’s covered, you can build around it.
Wild Florida Airboats & Gator Park (about 2 hours)
This is the “real Florida” choice: nature preserve scenery, airboat-style wildlife viewing, and a look at the Central Florida Everglades area. If your group likes animals and outdoor time, this is one of the best ways to break up a week of indoor attractions.
You’re spending about two hours here, so treat it like a real half-block of your day. Wear shoes that can handle outdoor ground, and plan for Florida weather—because even when you’re having fun, you want to be comfortable.
Madame Tussauds Orlando (about 1 hour, pass admission free in the sample)
This is the selfie-and-imagination stop. The experience is designed around iconic celebrity figures and a lot of photo moments. It’s also a solid choice when your schedule includes a mix of adults and kids who all want something playful.
SEA LIFE Orlando Aquarium (about 1 hour, pass admission free in the sample)
Aquariums are a strong travel value because they scale well by age: kids get the big creatures, adults get the hands-on moments and tunnel viewing style. The pass covers admission here too, so you can focus on experiencing rather than counting pennies per exhibit.
If you’re visiting with kids, this is a good “cool down” option between hotter, busier stops.
The Orlando Eye at ICON Park (about 1.5 hours, pass admission free in the sample)
A 400-foot observation wheel gives you a classic “from above” view of Central Florida. This is a timing-sensitive stop in the sense that the best photos often depend on visibility and light. Plan on taking your time inside the cabin, and don’t treat it like a quick wait-and-go.
Chocolate Kingdom – Factory Adventure Tour (about 1.5 hours, pass admission free in the sample)
This is a sweet, interactive-style tour. Even if you’re not a hardcore chocolate fan, the appeal is usually the show format and family-friendly pacing. It’s also a nice contrast to animal and science attractions—something themed but lighter.
Dave & Buster’s – Arcade (about 2 hours, pass admission free in the sample)
This is one of the best “energy management” stops in the pass lineup. You can let kids burn off energy, and adults can join in without needing a ticket upgrade. The sample details matter here: passholders receive a $20 Powercard with 100 game chips. The activation fee is included for NEW Powercards.
If your group tends to argue over what to play, you’ll appreciate having credits provided. It turns the arcade into a set value instead of a constant add-on.
Helicopter Tour: The Part That Needs Reservations

The helicopter tour is the big headline feature, and it’s also the one you have to plan most carefully.
What’s clearly stated:
- Reservations are required
- You’ll provide a credit card to hold your place
- You won’t be charged unless you fail to keep your reservation
- 300 lb maximum weight per person
- Max 100 travelers for the activity
That credit-card hold piece matters because it changes how you should book. I’d only lock in a helicopter slot when you’re confident your schedule can hold. And since this is Orlando, weather can always play a role—so avoid booking this as the one activity you absolutely cannot miss.
One more value note from real use: at least some pass users found the helicopter worked as an extra on top of the number of attractions they selected. That can make the overall deal feel dramatically better. Still, don’t assume that’s true for every exact bundle. Check your specific pass terms so you know what’s included for your booking.
Also, keep expectations realistic. In one reported experience, the flight felt short compared to what people expected from the offer. You can handle this by treating the helicopter as a special add-on, not a long ride—then you’re less likely to feel disappointed.
Price and Value: When This $64 Pass Makes Sense

At $64, this pass can be a great deal, but only if you use it with intention. The best value usually comes when you:
- pick attractions that match your group’s actual interests
- use the pass early enough that you still have flexibility for timing
- build a plan where you finish multiple inclusions without extra cross-town travel
The pass can pay off fast because several included attractions are not “tiny” ticket items. An aquarium, an observation wheel, an escape room, and an adventure-style nature experience add up in cash pricing. If you land on 3, 4, or 5 attractions you truly want, the pass feels like a money-saver rather than a hassle.
Where value can wobble:
- if you end up forced into reserving time slots you don’t want
- if one or two attractions aren’t available on your dates
- if you misunderstand what your specific pass covers
I also think the “marginal savings” vs “real savings” gap depends on how flexible you are. If you’re the type who can shift an itinerary day-by-day, you’ll get better results than someone who already has every hour locked in.
Practical Tips That Make It Feel Easy Instead of Complicated

This pass is designed to be mobile-first, and that’s good news. But it only works smoothly if you do a little prep.
Use your phone for addresses and timing
In real use, an app helped people find addresses for each activity. Download the associated Orlando sightseeing app if it’s offered in your booking materials, and keep it handy offline if possible. It cuts the stress of last-minute “Where exactly is this entrance?” moments.
Check hours, especially around holidays
Entry process and opening hours can vary, especially near holidays. So even when your pass is valid, don’t assume every attraction runs the same daily schedule. I recommend checking each place the day before you plan to go, not the morning of.
Plan around reservations
The helicopter is reservation-only, and the pass info also says advanced reservations may be made for some tours included on the pass. In practice, that can mean more calls, more confirmations, and more waiting on hold than you want. To stay sane, schedule one “admin” block on a travel day to handle bookings.
Expect the unexpected
A few people described frustration when an activity wasn’t available as described, or when the promised experience didn’t match what they expected. To protect yourself, verify your exact attraction list right after purchase and keep a backup attraction plan in mind.
Who This Orlando Flex Pass Works Best For

This pass is a strong match if you’re traveling with mixed ages and want variety without building everything around one theme park. It’s also a good fit if you want to avoid nickel-and-dime pricing. And if your group likes having options, the pass’s flex format is the right mindset.
It may feel less ideal if:
- you need a highly predictable schedule down to the hour
- you dislike reservation-based experiences
- you’re counting on every listed attraction being available at exactly the time you want
If you want low-cost structure with enough freedom to adjust, this pass can do that job.
One more note: service animals are allowed, and the experience is described as suitable for most people. It’s also near public transportation, which can help if you’re not driving everywhere.
Should You Book This Orlando Sightseeing Flex Pass?

I’d book it if you want a budget-friendly way to hit a mix of Orlando attractions over a month, and you’re willing to do a quick check of your exact included spots. The best-case scenario feels like real savings: you use multiple admissions that would cost money if purchased one by one, and you toss in the International Drive trolley for easy movement.
I would hesitate if you’re the kind of traveler who hates uncertainty. The pass depends on attraction availability and on reservations for the helicopter. If you can handle that with a bit of homework, you’ll likely enjoy the flexibility. If you can’t, you may end up feeling like you paid for plans that didn’t land perfectly.
If you do book, I’d make this your rule: verify the attractions on your mobile pass, then build your schedule around the most important ones first. Use the flexibility for the rest. That’s how this deal turns from a bundle into a smooth trip.
FAQ
How much does the Orlando Sightseeing Flex Pass cost?
The pass price listed is $64.
How long is the pass valid once I start using it?
The pass activates the first time you use it, and then you have 30 days to use the remaining choices.
What do I choose when I buy the pass?
You select how many attractions you want to visit within the 30-day period: two, three, four, or five.
Is the helicopter tour included, and what are the reservation rules?
Reservations are required for the helicopter tour. You’ll need a credit card to hold your place, and it won’t be charged unless you fail to keep your reservation. There is a 300 lb maximum weight per person, and the helicopter activity has a maximum of 100 travelers.
Does the pass include trolley access?
Yes. It includes a 7-day hop-on hop-off trolley option along International Drive.
Do I need reservations for other included activities besides the helicopter?
Some tours included on the pass may require advanced reservations. The pass information also notes that entry processes and hours can vary by attraction.
Can I cancel for free?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. If you cancel within 24 hours of the experience start time, the amount paid is not refunded.





























