Right, I’ll be honest with you – when my partner first suggested spending the equivalent of £30-odd each on an observation deck in New York, I was sceptical. We’d done The Shard back home. I genuinely thought: how different can it really be? Turns out, quite a lot different. One World Observatory sits at the top of One World Trade Center – 102 floors, 1,776 feet above lower Manhattan – and it delivers something that’s hard to explain until you’re standing there looking at it.
We visited last October on a clear day, which – I learned very quickly – is absolutely everything when it comes to observation decks. The views stretched for miles. The Hudson, the East River, the Statue of Liberty looking surprisingly small in the middle distance. My partner, who is not a soppy person at all, went quiet for a good five minutes. That, more than anything else, told me this place was worth the price of entry.
What Actually Happens When You Arrive
The experience starts before you’re anywhere near the top. You board a high-speed elevator that takes you 102 floors in just 47 seconds – and while that sounds like a fun fact rather than an actual experience, they’ve turned the ride itself into something genuinely clever. The walls show a compressed time-lapse of New York’s skyline growing from a small settlement into the city it is today. It’s the sort of thing you think will feel gimmicky, and then you find yourself completely absorbed. Twenty seconds in, you’ve forgotten you’re in a lift.
Then comes the Sky Portal. An 18-foot circular floor of glass that looks straight down to the streets of lower Manhattan below you. I stepped on it without thinking and immediately got that stomach-drop feeling. My partner stood at the edge, looked at me, looked at the floor, and firmly shook her head. Also a valid response, honestly.
The main observation deck wraps around the full 360 degrees. Floor-to-ceiling glass, no poles obstructing the view, and enough space that it doesn’t feel crushingly crowded – at least it didn’t when we went. Interactive screens around the deck let you zoom into the streets below, pull up landmark information, get a real sense of the city’s geography from above. If you’re visiting with children, this works particularly well. My niece, who is eight and constitutionally unimpressed by anything, spent twenty minutes on one of those screens without once complaining.

Standing up there looking north, the density of the city is genuinely staggering. You can trace Central Park as a green rectangle in a sea of buildings. The Chrysler Building and Empire State – which dominate Midtown from street level – look almost delicate from this distance. It’s one of those shifts in perspective that you carry with you for the rest of the trip.
If you want to see it all for yourself, the easiest way is to book your tickets in advance online – more practical detail on that below.
The Food Situation (Better Than Expected)
There’s a restaurant and a bar up there – One Dine and Sky respectively. And yes, my first instinct was tourist trap. Mediocre food at a 200% markup because where else are you going to go? But it’s actually pretty good. The quality is there, and eating with that view is the kind of experience you genuinely don’t forget.
We had cocktails at Sky rather than a full sit-down meal – partly budget, partly because we had dinner plans in the West Village later. But I’d genuinely consider the dining package on a return visit. Sunset timing from that height must be spectacular, and combining dinner with your observatory ticket works out more economical than booking each separately.

Practical Tips for UK Visitors
A few things I genuinely wish someone had told me:
- Book ahead, always. Walk-up queues can be brutal in peak season. Pre-booking your tickets online gets you straight to the elevator. It’s one of those small logistical wins that makes the whole day smoother.
- Check the forecast first. If your NYC itinerary has any flexibility, save OWO for your clearest day. A cloudy visit is still pleasant enough, but the views – which is the entire point – are dramatically better when visibility is good.
- Go mid-morning on a weekday. Crowds build significantly in the afternoon and on weekends. Getting there around 10am means you get the space and light without battling tour groups.
- Getting there is easy. Fulton Street station is a short walk away, served by several subway lines. From Midtown it’s roughly 20 minutes on the A or C. Nothing complicated.
- Allow more time than you think. We planned 90 minutes and ended up staying almost two and a half hours. Between the elevator experience, the Sky Portal, the observation deck itself, and a couple of cocktails at Sky, there’s more to it than a quick look-and-leave.
The Honest Verdict
Is One World Observatory worth it for UK visitors? Yes. Clearly, or I wouldn’t be writing about it at this length. The combination of the elevator journey, the Sky Portal, and those 360-degree views is something genuinely difficult to replicate elsewhere in the city. Is it expensive? Also yes – particularly when you’re translating dollars to pounds and feeling every cent of it. But if you’ve already committed to flying across the Atlantic for a New York trip, this belongs on the short list.
One admitted flaw: you exit through the gift shop. Literally forced to walk through it on the way out. It’s heavy-handed in a way that slightly deflates the atmosphere of what was otherwise a really lovely afternoon. Minor gripe, but worth knowing.
Beyond the views and the experience, there’s something harder to articulate – One World Trade Center carries real weight. It’s a statement of resilience, built where it is for reasons that everyone understands. Standing at the top of it, looking out over the city, you feel that. It’s not just an observation deck. It’s something a bit more significant than that, and visiting with that context adds a layer you don’t always expect from a tourist attraction.
Plan a clear morning, book your tickets in advance, and give yourself a proper couple of hours up there. You won’t regret it.
