| SusanWilson |
May 31st, 2005 09:49 AM |
Here's the deal with "stored value cards". The sites do not show a comparative pricing grid to really understand how much you are saving. The cards are sold in one, two, three, five, seven day options, which require a user to really think about how much they can, or want to do in one day. These cards sometimes list areas of a city which are free -- and include out of area tours which eat up an entire day. Here's the alternative: buy a CityPass. CityPass covers the top six attractions in major cities, gives users a minimum of NINE leisurely days (Boston's is valid all year), and in San Francisco, CityPass includes unlimited cable car rides, light rail and the muni bus for seven days, along with a bay cruise, art museums, science museum, aquarium, etc. CityPass saves 50% and lots of time standing in box office lines. $42 for adults, $34 for kids 5-17. CityPass can be purchased online (you receive the actual booklets, not a voucher that must be redeemed somewhere like other programs), at the Visitor's Center at the Cable Car turnaround at Powell & Market Streets (a great stop to get all kinds of info), or at any of the major attractions. You won't find any other pass sold at these attraction.
How do I know? I work for CityPass.
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