Chicago vs New York · Observation Deck Comparison

Chicago vs New York Observation Decks: The 2026 Head-to-Head

New York has five famous observation decks; Chicago has two. So which city actually gives you the better view from the top — and the better deal? We put Skydeck Chicago and 360 Chicago head-to-head against the Empire State Building, Top of the Rock, One World Observatory, Edge, and Summit One Vanderbilt on the four things that matter: height, price, signature features, and crowds.

Book Skydeck Chicago
Chicago skyline at sunset with Willis Tower at center, viewed from above the Lake Michigan shoreline
The Chicago skyline from above — Skydeck Chicago at Willis Tower is the highest observation deck in the United States, taller than every equivalent in New York.

New York has five famous observation decks and Chicago has two — but more options doesn't automatically mean better. On the four metrics that actually determine value — height, price, signature features, and crowd experience — the comparison is much closer than you'd expect, and Chicago wins more categories than most visitors realize. Here's the full breakdown.

Pоwered by GetYourGuide.Join our travel affiliate program

The short version

Chicago wins on height, price, value, and crowds. New York wins on variety and on the most theatrical, photo-driven experiences. If you're going up in Chicago, you're getting more altitude for less money with The Ledge thrown in free.

  • Tallest deck in the US: Skydeck Chicago (1,353 ft) — taller than every New York deck.
  • Cheapest major deck: Chicago, from ~$30. New York starts higher and climbs faster.
  • Best NY deck for spectacle: Summit One Vanderbilt (immersive art) or Edge (open-air glass floor).
  • Best NY deck for history: Empire State Building — the iconic open-air 86th floor.
  • Better passes: Chicago CityPASS covers both decks; no single NYC pass covers more than two.

Other experiences you might enjoy

If this comparison has you leaning toward Chicago, start with Skydeck Chicago at Willis Tower — the tallest deck in the US — and 360 Chicago at 875 N. Michigan Avenue for the Magnificent Mile view and CloudBar. A Chicago CityPASS bundles both alongside the city's top museums and an architecture river cruise. Browse current availability and tours below.

The decks at a glance

Seven decks across two cities — here's how they line up before we go deeper:

Deck City Floor / Height From (adult) Signature feature
Skydeck Chicago Chicago 103rd / 1,353 ft ~$32 The Ledge glass boxes — free with entry
360 Chicago Chicago 94th / 1,000 ft ~$30 TILT platform + CloudBar
One World Observatory New York 102nd / 1,268 ft ~$31 Tallest NYC deck; harbor views
Empire State (102nd) New York 102nd / 1,250 ft ~$79 combo Iconic open-air 86th + enclosed top deck
Edge New York 100th / 1,131 ft ~$39–49 Open-air angled glass floor
Summit One Vanderbilt New York 91st / 1,063 ft ~$44 Mirrored-room art + glass elevator
Top of the Rock New York 70th / 850 ft ~$45 Open-air; The Beam & Skylift

Prices are 2026 "from" figures and shift by date and demand — verify before booking.

Height: Chicago wins

The single highest observation deck in either city is Skydeck Chicago, on the 103rd floor of Willis Tower at 1,353 feet — the highest in the United States, and taller than every New York deck. The closest NYC contenders are One World Observatory (1,268 ft) and the Empire State Building's enclosed 102nd-floor top deck (1,250 ft), both roughly 100 feet lower.

Chicago's 360 Chicago sits lower at 1,000 feet, above only Top of the Rock (850 ft) among the majors — but it isn't competing on altitude; its draw is the lakefront view, TILT, and CloudBar. If raw height is what you want, Skydeck is the tallest publicly accessible perch in the country, with views reaching up to 50 miles across four states on a clear day. Winner: Chicago.

Price: Chicago wins, and it isn't close

Deck for deck, Chicago is cheaper to go up than almost every New York equivalent. Both Chicago decks start around $30–32. In New York, only One World Observatory matches that ($31), and it's an indoor deck. Everything else costs more for general admission — the Empire State from $44 (and $79 for the full 86th-plus-102nd combo), Top of the Rock at $45, Summit around $44–47, and Edge roughly $39–49 on dynamic pricing — with premium and skip-the-line tiers climbing well past $100.

There's also a value detail that's easy to miss: at Skydeck, The Ledge is included free in the base ticket. In New York, the headline features are almost always paid add-ons stacked on an already higher entry price. Winner: Chicago.

Signature features: New York's strongest category

This is where New York earns its reputation. The current NYC lineup is a parade of engineered thrills:

  • Summit One Vanderbilt is less an observation deck than an immersive art experience — mirrored infinity rooms, "Levitation" glass skyboxes that jut out over Madison Avenue, and "Ascent," a glass elevator on the outside of the building rising to 1,210 feet. Named North America's Leading Tourist Attraction at the 2024 World Travel Awards.
  • Edge is the highest outdoor sky deck in the Western Hemisphere, cantilevered from the 100th floor with an angled glass floor and outward-leaning glass walls — plus City Climb, which harnesses you to the building's exterior for $185 or more.
  • Top of the Rock added "The Beam" (sit on a recreated 1932 ironworker's beam that lifts and rotates) and "Skylift" (an open-air platform that rises above the 70th floor).
  • The Empire State Building counters with history and its iconic open-air 86th-floor deck — named the world's #1 attraction in Tripadvisor's 2024 Travelers' Choice Awards.

Chicago answers with two genuinely distinctive draws: The Ledge, the glass boxes that extend 4.3 feet out from the 103rd floor (free with admission), and TILT, which tips you 30 degrees out over the Magnificent Mile, plus CloudBar — Chicago's highest bar. It's a shorter list than New York's, but it punches well above its price. Winner: New York on sheer variety; Chicago on value-per-feature.

Crowds and experience: Chicago is the calmer visit

New York's marquee decks are busy — Summit, Edge, and the Empire State's 86th floor in particular draw heavy crowds, with sunset and weekend slots selling out and queues that can run over an hour at peak times. The Empire State has historically drawn around four million visitors a year. Skydeck Chicago sees roughly 1.7 million, and 360 Chicago — open until 11 p.m. with a sit-down bar — tends to be the most relaxed deck of them all.

You'll still want to book ahead in summer, but a Chicago deck at a quiet hour is a genuinely calmer experience than a packed NYC sunset slot. Winner: Chicago.

The verdict

Chicago wins on height, price, value, and crowds. New York wins on variety and on the most theatrical experiences. If you want the highest view, the famous Ledge, shorter lines, and a significantly lower price, Chicago's Skydeck and 360 Chicago are the smarter choice — you get more altitude and a better deal, with The Ledge thrown in free. New York's decks are worth the premium if the experiential spectacle is the point: Summit's mirrored art rooms and Edge's open-air glass floor have no real Chicago equivalent.

For most travelers, the takeaway is simple — Chicago delivers the better core observation-deck experience for the money, while New York sells spectacle at a spectacle price.

Skydeck Chicago — America's highest observation deck

At 1,353 feet on the 103rd floor of Willis Tower, Skydeck is the tallest observation deck in the United States — taller than every New York equivalent. The Ledge glass balconies are included in every ticket. 4.6 stars from over 4,700 reviews. Free 24-hour cancellation.

Pоwered by GetYourGuide.Join our travel affiliate program

Not sure whether to pick Skydeck or 360 Chicago? See our full Skydeck vs 360 Chicago comparison for the side-by-side on price, hours, features, and which suits your trip best.

City passes compared

If you're visiting several attractions, a pass changes the math — and here too, Chicago is the better deal for deck-focused travelers.

In Chicago, a single CityPASS ($144 adult / $114 child, valid nine consecutive days) covers Skydeck with Expedited Entry (fixed) and lets you add 360 Chicago as one of your selectable choices — so one pass can cover both decks plus Shedd Aquarium, the Field Museum, and others. The smaller Chicago C3 ($109 adult) lets you pick any three attractions, including both decks. See our Chicago CityPASS guide for the full breakdown.

In New York, no single major pass covers more than two of the five decks. The New York CityPASS ($164 adult) includes the Empire State Building, with Top of the Rock as its only other deck option — Edge, One World, and Summit aren't on it. Go City passes cover the Empire State, Top of the Rock, Edge, and One World, but Summit One Vanderbilt is excluded from every major NYC pass and must be booked separately. Deck-hopping in New York means buying several expensive tickets; in Chicago, one pass does it.

Chicago CityPASS — both decks + museums in one bundle

Skydeck Chicago with Expedited Entry (fixed) and 360 Chicago as a selectable option, plus Shedd Aquarium and your choice of Field Museum, MSI, Art Institute, or Adler. Valid nine consecutive days. Free 24-hour cancellation.

Pоwered by GetYourGuide.Join our travel affiliate program
Questions travelers usually ask

Chicago vs New York Observation Decks FAQ

Which is taller, Willis Tower Skydeck or the Empire State Building?
Skydeck Chicago is taller. Its observation deck sits on the 103rd floor at 1,353 feet, while the Empire State Building's highest deck (the enclosed 102nd floor) is at 1,250 feet and its famous open-air deck (86th floor) is at 1,050 feet. Skydeck is the highest observation deck in the United States.
What is the highest observation deck in the US?
Skydeck Chicago, on the 103rd floor of Willis Tower at 1,353 feet, is the highest observation deck in the United States — taller than every New York deck, including One World Observatory (1,268 feet) and the Empire State Building's 102nd floor (1,250 feet).
Are Chicago observation decks cheaper than New York's?
Yes, generally by a wide margin. Both Chicago decks start around $30–32, and Skydeck includes The Ledge free. In New York, only One World Observatory ($31) matches that price; the Empire State, Top of the Rock, Summit, and Edge all cost more for general admission, with premium tiers running past $100.
Which New York observation deck is best?
It depends on what you want. One World Observatory is the tallest and best for harbor and Statue of Liberty views; Top of the Rock has the cleanest classic skyline photo; Edge is the dramatic open-air glass floor; Summit One Vanderbilt is the immersive art experience; and the Empire State Building is the iconic, historic open-air deck. There's no single winner — they're priced and themed differently.
Does the New York CityPASS include all the observation decks?
No. The New York CityPASS includes the Empire State Building, and Top of the Rock is its only other observation-deck option. Edge, One World Observatory, and Summit One Vanderbilt are not on the standard CityPASS — and Summit is excluded from every major New York pass, so it must be booked separately.
Skydeck or the Empire State Building — which should I visit?
If you're choosing between cities, Skydeck is taller (1,353 vs 1,250 feet), cheaper (from $32 vs $44+), includes The Ledge glass boxes free, and is usually less crowded. The Empire State Building wins on history and its iconic open-air deck. For altitude and value, Skydeck; for the classic New York landmark experience, the Empire State.
Can I visit both Skydeck and 360 Chicago in one day?
Yes. Plan about 2 to 3 hours at Skydeck (including the Ledge wait) and 1 to 1.5 hours at 360 Chicago. The buildings are 1.5 miles apart — a 30-minute walk or 10 to 15 minutes on the L. A Chicago CityPASS covers both in one bundle. For a full day-by-day itinerary, see our things to do in Chicago guide.

Going up in Chicago?

If this comparison has you leaning toward Chicago, the next step is picking between the two decks — or bundling both. Skydeck Chicago at Willis Tower is the tallest in the US and includes The Ledge; 360 Chicago at 875 N. Michigan has the better skyline photograph and CloudBar. A Chicago CityPASS covers both alongside the city's top museums. An architecture river cruise adds the ground-level view before you go up. Browse current availability below.

This page may contain affiliate links. If you book through them, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. That support helps us keep this guide updated.