REVIEW · NEW YORK CITY
NYC: Private Home Alone 2 Stretch Limousine Tour with Pizza
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If you love Home Alone 2, this one feels like a cheat code. You get a private stretch limo and a real shot at seeing major NYC movie backdrops without the hassle of buses and crowds. It’s also one of the few family-friendly tours where the car ride is the point, not just transportation.
I especially like the combo of filming locations (think Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, Central Park, Radio City Music Hall) plus a mid-tour pizza moment that lands like a scene. I also like that the driver handles both the logistics and the story, with English/Spanish support and lots of enthusiasm—drivers like Washington, Herman, and Chris have turned this into a true family highlight.
One thing to weigh: NYC traffic is real, especially around major holiday moments. On at least one packed day, the route got shortened and the tour experience felt more like a couple key stops than a full sweep.
In This Review
- Key Things That Make This Limo Tour Work
- A 3-Hour Kevin McCallister Moment, Built for Families
- The Movie Stops: Empire State, Rockefeller Center, Central Park, Radio City
- Empire State Building: the skyline “wow” factor
- Rockefeller Center: holiday-energy potential
- Central Park: the calm contrast in the middle of the city
- Radio City Music Hall: classic New York spectacle
- Pizza in the Limo: Why One Pie Matters More Than You Think
- The Chauffeur Is the Show: Names Matter Here
- Price and Value: $959 for Up to 7
- Timing in NYC: When Traffic Changes the Movie Route
- What’s Included vs. Not (and the Champagne Question)
- Should You Book This Home Alone 2 Stretch Limo Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the NYC Home Alone 2 stretch limousine tour?
- What is the price for the tour?
- What stops or locations will we see?
- What’s included in the tour price?
- Is there a tour guide included?
- What languages are available for the driver?
- Is champagne included?
Key Things That Make This Limo Tour Work

- Private limo time for up to 7: you’re not sharing the vehicle with strangers.
- Major movie landmarks: Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, Central Park, Radio City Music Hall.
- Hot cheese pizza during the ride: a simple included treat that changes the mood.
- Driver-led storytelling and flexibility: some drivers stop for photos and share scene context.
- Long enough to feel like an outing: a full 3 hours, not a quick hit-and-go.
A 3-Hour Kevin McCallister Moment, Built for Families

This tour is designed to make a family feel special fast. You start with hotel pickup and drop-off, then spend the next 3 hours rolling through Manhattan in a stretch limousine—warm, comfy, and way more fun than trying to see these spots with kids in regular traffic.
The best part is that the ride feels like a theme outing. You’re not just checking boxes; you’re doing a slow tour with time to look up, point, and take photos at stops when the driver says it’s workable. For kids, the limo matters. For adults, the limo matters too—because sitting still while someone else drives through NYC stress is a big quality-of-life upgrade.
Also, the tour is private, so the vibe stays “your group.” That matters on days when you’d normally lose time to waiting, squeezing, and herding. If you’re traveling with grandparents or you want a calmer pace than walking tour intensity, this format is a great fit.
The Movie Stops: Empire State, Rockefeller Center, Central Park, Radio City

You’ll hit the big-name locations that people recognize instantly, even if they’re not hardcore fans. The tour calls out these filming spots: Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, Central Park, and Radio City Music Hall. In plain terms, that’s a lineup that gives you NYC at its most cinematic.
Here’s how each one tends to land during a limo tour:
Empire State Building: the skyline “wow” factor
The Empire State is the kind of sight that makes everyone look up. From a limo window, you still get that immediate sense of scale—especially if you time your photos when the angle is good and the car has a moment to pause. It’s also a landmark that feels like a reward stop. Kids usually get the big reaction here.
Rockefeller Center: holiday-energy potential
Rockefeller Center is famous for crowds—and that’s exactly why timing matters. If your visit lines up with heavy seasonal activity, you may feel the squeeze in travel time. But when it’s moving smoothly, you get a clean look at a place that feels like it belongs in a movie montage.
Central Park: the calm contrast in the middle of the city
Central Park is a good reset. Even when you’re viewing it from the road, it changes the feel of the tour from “downtown rush” to something more open and scenic. This is the location where I’d expect adults to appreciate the visual breathing room, and kids to enjoy seeing a completely different NYC mood.
Radio City Music Hall: classic New York spectacle
Radio City gives you that postcard New York energy. It’s also an easy “spot” for photos because the building is so distinctive. If your group wants a final memorable landmark that feels unmistakably NYC, this is usually where the tour ends with momentum.
Practical tip: since this is a car tour, you’ll get the best results when you’re ready to move quickly at each photo stop. Wear layers, keep phones charged, and be ready to step out fast if the driver offers it.
Pizza in the Limo: Why One Pie Matters More Than You Think

Pizza is included as 1 pie of hot cheese pizza, along with soft drinks. It’s not a gourmet upgrade. It’s better than that: it’s timed to be a moment. Getting pizza while you’re still out in the city keeps the experience from turning into “we saw things, now we’re tired.”
In one booking, the pizza surprised kids so much that it felt like the real magic was the treatment—not just the food. That makes sense. When you’re already in a movie-world setting, pizza becomes part of the story your family tells afterward.
One note to plan around: a single pie for a group can be a little tight depending on ages and appetites. If you’re traveling with bigger kids or teenagers, you might want to eat a real meal before or plan a follow-up snack after the tour.
The Chauffeur Is the Show: Names Matter Here

This is a driver-forward experience. There’s no listed tour guide, but the driver does the guiding—through route choices, photo stops, and storytelling.
I love how many bookings emphasize driver enthusiasm and help. Drivers such as Washington and Herman are repeatedly praised for being friendly, proactive, and excited about the spots. One driver even showed parts of the movie on a phone to help connect what you’re seeing to the scenes.
You also get real-world service details, like the driver texting when close and helping you find the best meeting point. That’s a big deal in NYC. It means less time standing around hoping someone recognizes your face in a crowd.
Language support is listed as English and Spanish. If you’re traveling with Spanish-speaking family, this is worth factoring in because it can turn the ride from “scenic car time” into an actually shared experience.
And here’s a small but practical expectation-setting point: NYC drivers are often efficient. One review flagged that NYC people aren’t nonstop chatty, so don’t plan on a constant show of talking. The ride still works because the vehicle time and landmarks do the heavy lifting.
Price and Value: $959 for Up to 7
The price is $959 per group up to 7, for 3 hours. That sounds steep at first—until you compare it to what you’d spend for a private vehicle plus the hassle of managing timing with kids across several locations.
Here’s why it can be good value:
- You’re paying for privacy, not just transport. Up to 7 people in a limo is a big capacity win for families.
- Hotel pickup and drop-off removes the biggest friction point in NYC sightseeing.
- The experience includes pizza and soft drinks, so you’re not scrambling for lunch mid-tour.
There’s also a valid concern you should acknowledge: the included food is limited (one pie), and on some days traffic can reduce the number of stops you get to see. One booking felt short when holiday congestion kept the tour from visiting as many iconic places as expected.
So the value math comes down to your family setup:
- If you’ve got a family group that can fit seven and you want a memorable holiday activity, it often pencils out.
- If you’re traveling as two or three, you might feel the cost more sharply unless you strongly want the limo factor.
My advice: treat this as a special-occasion splurge. Pick a day when you won’t be rushed, and you’ll get more “I can’t believe we did that” than “we paid for traffic.”
Timing in NYC: When Traffic Changes the Movie Route
NYC doesn’t care about movie scenes. If there’s a major event—like Rockefeller Center tree lighting mentioned in one booking—you should expect heavier traffic and slower movement.
What that means for you in practical terms:
- Photo stops may be shortened or reduced.
- The route might not cover every planned landmark.
- The driver may choose what’s possible within the 3-hour window.
One booking described a situation where only a smaller number of locations were reachable due to holiday traffic. That doesn’t mean the tour is bad—it means you should plan like a realist. If seeing all iconic spots is your top priority, consider scheduling for a day with lighter crowd energy.
If your group is flexible—happy to see the biggest backdrops even if the order changes—this tour still works extremely well. The limo ride and pizza moment can make even a partial route feel like a win.
What’s Included vs. Not (and the Champagne Question)
Included:
- Hotel pickup and drop-off
- Pizza: 1 pie
- Soft drinks
Not included:
- Tour guide
- Champagne
In practice, the driver often fills the “guide” role anyway, sharing context and stopping for photos. So you still get explanation and enthusiasm; it’s just delivered by the chauffeur rather than a separate tour guide.
About champagne: it’s listed as not included, even though one holiday booking referenced champagne being present in the limo. I’d handle this the same way you’d handle any upsell in NYC: if champagne matters to you, confirm ahead of time so you’re not guessing.
Should You Book This Home Alone 2 Stretch Limo Tour?
Book it if:
- Your family loves Home Alone 2 and you want the trip to feel like a story, not a checklist.
- You want a private limo outing with hotel pickup and a clear 3-hour plan.
- You’re traveling with kids (or grandparents) who benefit from less walking and more “staying comfy while sightseeing.”
Consider skipping or adjusting expectations if:
- You’re going during a heavy holiday period and you’d be disappointed if you can’t hit every single filming location.
- You’re very price-sensitive and you’ll feel the cost most when the included food (one pie) doesn’t cover everyone’s needs.
My bottom line: this is a strong pick for turning a NYC day into a family memory. The limo plus the movie-scene energy plus hot pizza creates that rare combo—fun first, logistics handled second.
FAQ
How long is the NYC Home Alone 2 stretch limousine tour?
It runs for 3 hours.
What is the price for the tour?
The price is $959 per group, up to 7 people.
What stops or locations will we see?
You’ll visit famous filming locations including the Empire State Building, Rockefeller Center, Central Park, and Radio City Music Hall.
What’s included in the tour price?
Hotel pickup and drop-off, 1 pie of hot cheese pizza, and soft drinks are included.
Is there a tour guide included?
No. A tour guide is not listed as included.
What languages are available for the driver?
The driver is listed as available in English and Spanish.
Is champagne included?
No, champagne is not included.










