REVIEW · CLIFTON HILL
Niagara Falls, Canada: Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass
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Six attractions on one Clifton Hill ticket.
This pass is a tidy way to tackle the loud, bright strip near Niagara Falls, with Niagara SkyWheel views plus a handful of hands-on attractions within a short walk.
I like the value angle because one bundled price covers six different admissions that would add up fast if you pay one by one. I also like the variety: you get the big scenic ride on the SkyWheel and then multi-sensory fun like Zombie Attack, which leans into a Cajun-culture, New Orleans bayou vibe.
One consideration: each attraction is once only, so if lines stack up (or the SkyWheel is delayed by weather), you may not finish everything in the time you planned.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Plan Around Before You Go
- Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass: How This Works in Real Time
- Niagara SkyWheel: The Best-Value View on the Strip
- Zombie Attack and the New Orleans Bayou Mood: What’s It Like?
- Movieland Wax Museum: Movie Memories, Mixed Results
- Dinosaur Adventure Golf or Wizards Golf: Skill, Chaos, and Crowd Flow
- Ghostblasters Dark Ride and Toy Store 4D Ride: Short Thrills With Big Effects
- Timing Your Day: The Real 3-Hour Strategy on Clifton Hill
- Price and Value: When $28 Actually Feels Like a Bargain
- Where This Fun Pass Shines (and Where It Might Frustrate)
- Should You Book the Niagara Falls Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass?
- FAQ
- Where do I redeem the printed voucher for the pass?
- What attractions are included in the Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass?
- Can I visit an attraction more than once with the Fun Pass?
- Are there height requirements for the attractions?
- Does the Niagara SkyWheel operate in all weather?
- Are unaccompanied minors allowed?
Key Things I’d Plan Around Before You Go

- Six admissions, one pass: All set up around a walkable Clifton Hill circuit near the Falls.
- SkyWheel is your anchor: Day or night views, with specific height rules for kids riding alone.
- Zombie Attack has real height limits: Minimum 36 inches to take part.
- You choose the “either-or” activities: Dinosaur Adventure Golf vs Wizards Golf, plus Toy Store 4D Ride vs Carnival Chaos.
- Weather can pause the wheel: Winds and very cold temps can stop Niagara SkyWheel operations.
- Quality swings by stop: The SkyWheel and some thrills land well; a wax museum or a dark ride may feel less worthwhile for some ages.
Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass: How This Works in Real Time

Clifton Hill is basically Niagara Falls fun, concentrated into a single busy strip of rides, games, and cartoonish attractions. This Fun Pass is built for that reality: grab one bundled ticket and bounce between six included places without doing the math each time you want to try something.
The pass is priced at $28 per person and is sold with an estimated 3-hour experience window. That doesn’t mean you’ll do all six in exactly three hours every time; it just gives you a reasonable planning frame, especially if you hit the most popular stops early.
One more rule that matters a lot: each attraction can be visited once only. So you’re not building a slow afternoon where you repeat favorites; you’re making smart choices and moving.
Niagara SkyWheel: The Best-Value View on the Strip

If you only do one thing, the Niagara SkyWheel is the one that makes people happy across ages. The views work in any light: you can see Niagara Falls by day, or go back later for the night glow and lights.
You’ll redeem your printed voucher at booth 1 at the base of the Niagara SkyWheel, 4960 Clifton Hill, Niagara Falls, Ontario. Plan to go there first because that’s your easiest starting point and it puts you at the most iconic attraction right away.
A couple practical height notes:
- Kids must be at least 42 inches to ride the SkyWheel alone.
- Children under 42 inches must be accompanied by an adult.
Also, the SkyWheel is weather-sensitive. It won’t operate if winds are over 50 km/h or if temperatures drop below -15°C. On a cold or gusty day, you should keep your schedule flexible, because that wheel is your best “anchor” for timing.
Many visitors describe the ride as looping around multiple times, and they call out the view as the payoff. If your group wants photos and a sense of scale, this is where you’ll get it.
Zombie Attack and the New Orleans Bayou Mood: What’s It Like?

After the views, the pass shifts into full attraction-mode with Zombie Attack. This one is described as a multi-sensory adventure with 6D graphics, and it’s guided in a way that taps into Cajun culture.
The story framing is part of the fun. The experience is positioned as exploring the New Orleans bayou through an immersive wilderness-style encounter, led by professional guides who bring that Cajun spirit into the show.
There’s one non-negotiable safety limit: you must be at least 36 inches tall to participate. If you’re traveling with smaller kids, this is the detail that can change your day, so I’d confirm before you commit.
In terms of ride feel, this is the stop that tends to create big laughs and big reactions. If your group likes horror-comedy style thrills, this is usually the moment that feels most memorable, not just a quick diversion.
Movieland Wax Museum: Movie Memories, Mixed Results

The Movieland Wax Museum is where the pass slows down a bit and shifts from motion to looking. It’s meant to let you see stars of movie classics and current hits in wax form, right in the middle of the Clifton Hill fun zone.
This is also the stop where expectations matter most. One common theme in feedback is that some wax figures don’t match the people you’d expect, which can make it feel less impressive than the photos on other attractions would suggest.
Still, it can be a decent breather between louder rides. If your group enjoys quirky, pop-culture photo ops even when they’re imperfect, you’ll likely enjoy the time. If you’re picky about likeness and polish, treat this one as the flexible slot in your plan.
Dinosaur Adventure Golf or Wizards Golf: Skill, Chaos, and Crowd Flow

Golf at Clifton Hill is more about playfulness than precision, and the pass gives you an either-or choice: Dinosaur Adventure Golf or Wizards Golf. Both keep the theme going without requiring a ton of coordination, which is great for mixed-age groups.
This stop is also a good “group reset” after the dark rides. You get movement, fresh air if you’re near open areas, and a quick way to keep everyone busy without the big scary stuff.
One potential drawback to watch for: some people noted there weren’t staff consistently present on the course, and that other visitors sometimes cut across or run onto greens. That doesn’t mean it’s always like that, but it’s a cue for you: keep your pace controlled, watch for foot traffic, and don’t assume someone will manage the chaos for you.
If you want a calmer experience, try to go at a less crowded time. If you’re okay working around noise and people, it’s a fun-themed break.
Ghostblasters Dark Ride and Toy Store 4D Ride: Short Thrills With Big Effects
Ghostblasters Dark Ride is the “blast away ghosts” moment on your list. It’s positioned as a dark ride, so you should expect a short burst of motion, special effects, and a kid-friendly horror-comedy vibe.
This is another stop where age matching matters. Some feedback suggests it can feel more geared toward younger children, and for older kids it may not hold attention as long. If your group includes teens, I’d treat Ghostblasters as a warm-up, not the headline of the whole day.
The Toy Store 4D Ride (or Carnival Chaos, depending on what you pick) is where the pass brings the 4D energy. Expect motion + effects, the kind that gives your group a reason to react even if they’re not huge ride people.
One practical tip: if one of the either-or options is closed when you arrive, you’ll want a Plan B fast. The pass structure is designed to get you moving, but your day can still wobble if an attraction isn’t operating.
Timing Your Day: The Real 3-Hour Strategy on Clifton Hill

The pass says 3 hours, and that’s a helpful guideline if you want to fit it into a day that also includes Niagara Falls viewpoints. But I’d plan like lines are part of the entertainment.
A few situations can stretch your timeline:
- The most popular attractions can have lines that feel longer than the ride itself.
- Some experiences are short enough that the wait becomes the main event.
- The SkyWheel can be delayed or paused by weather, which affects the whole timing chain.
My advice is simple: start with the SkyWheel first, then go straight into the higher-energy indoor experiences. That way you’re not fighting crowds when you still need the headline views.
If you only have an hour and a half, you still can make the pass work, but you’ll likely end up doing fewer than six stops. The “once only” rule makes that decision real. So pick the ones that fit your group’s energy and skip the ones that don’t.
Also, if your group includes kids, keep height rules top of mind. Zombie Attack and SkyWheel have different minimums for participation and solo rides, and you don’t want to arrive and find out you can’t join in.
Price and Value: When $28 Actually Feels Like a Bargain

At $28 per person, the Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass is clearly aimed at families and groups that want options without constant add-ons. The big selling point is that it can save money versus buying each attraction separately, and the savings claim is built around the idea that these admissions stack quickly.
But here’s the honest nuance: some visitors felt they didn’t save much because the pass price can be similar to what you see at kiosks on Clifton Hill. Even then, the pass can still be worth it because it bundles decision-making. You’re less likely to waste time pricing out each ticket and arguing about which ride to do next.
So I’d think of the value in two ways:
- Cost savings: when bundled admissions undercut buying individually.
- Time savings: when your group gets a straightforward way to access multiple attractions close together.
If you’re a solo adult who wants one or two highlights, you might feel the pass is more than you need. If you’re traveling with kids (or a mixed group with different tastes), it usually makes the day easier and less stressful.
Where This Fun Pass Shines (and Where It Might Frustrate)

This pass works best when your group is comfortable with the Clifton Hill style: bright, loud, and packed with choices. It’s also ideal when you want a “greatest hits” sampler—SkyWheel views, a big action ride, a dark ride, a themed golf course, and a pop-culture stop.
It may frustrate you if your group hates lines or wants long stays at each attraction. Short rides plus waiting time can feel like the day goes too fast, and since each stop is once only, you can’t burn off time by repeating favorites.
It can also disappoint if your group is very particular about quality for the wax museum. And for Ghostblasters, older kids may want something more intense or longer, since some feedback suggests it can skew toward younger audiences.
Should You Book the Niagara Falls Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass?
Book it if you want a walkable bundle of major Clifton Hill attractions, and especially if you’re traveling with kids who will enjoy the 4D and 6D-style thrills. It’s a good way to avoid decision fatigue and keep the day flexible around what feels fun in the moment.
Skip or reconsider if you’re only interested in one or two stops, if you’re visiting during harsh weather (because the SkyWheel can stop), or if your group hates the idea of attractions being single-use. If you’re traveling at a peak time, start with the SkyWheel and make your next choice fast.
If you do book, bring the printed voucher, plan your route with the once-only rule in mind, and treat it as a fun sprint rather than a slow museum-style afternoon.
FAQ
Where do I redeem the printed voucher for the pass?
You redeem your printed voucher at booth 1 at the base of the Niagara SkyWheel, 4960 Clifton Hill, Niagara Falls, Ontario L2G 3N4.
What attractions are included in the Clifton Hill 6 Attraction Fun Pass?
The pass includes admission to Niagara SkyWheel, Zombie Attack, Movieland Wax Museum, Dinosaur Adventure Golf or Wizards Golf, Ghostblaster’s Dark Ride, and Toy Store 4D Ride or Carnival Chaos.
Can I visit an attraction more than once with the Fun Pass?
No. Each attraction can be visited once only.
Are there height requirements for the attractions?
Yes. You must be at least 36 inches tall to participate in Zombie Attack. For the Niagara SkyWheel, children must be at least 42 inches to ride alone, and children under 42 inches must be accompanied by an adult.
Does the Niagara SkyWheel operate in all weather?
No. The Niagara SkyWheel will not operate if winds are more than 50 km/h or if the temperature falls below -15°C.
Are unaccompanied minors allowed?
No. Unaccompanied minors are not allowed for this activity.




