How to Tour the White House
For the most up-to-date information,
call the 24-hour Visitors Office Info Line
at 202-456-7041.
The White House is always closed to tours on
Sunday and Monday.
This information is subject to change without
notice.
Tour Information as of Thursday, January 11:
All tours are operating as scheduled except on:
- Wednesday, January 17 - All tours canceled. Visitors with tickets issued for Wednesday,
January 17, may come on Tuesday, January 16 or Thursday, January 18.
- Friday, January 19 - All tours canceled.
- Saturday, January 20 - All tours canceled.
We regret any inconvenience this may cause.
The White House is open for tours in the morning, Tuesday
through Saturday, and is closed every Sunday and Monday. All White House
tours are free. There are two ways to visit:
Public
Self-Guided Tours The first, and most frequent way, is on a
walk-through tour. These self-guided public tours are scheduled Tuesday
through Saturday, 10 a.m. until 12 noon. Visitors move from room to room at
their own pace; once inside the White House, most take about 15 to 20 minutes.
Visitors usually walk along the ground-floor corridor and look through the
doors of the Vermeil room and Library, walk up stairs to the State floor, and
through the East, Green, Blue, Red, and State Dining rooms and exit from the
north portico lobby. A U.S. Secret Service Tour Officer is stationed in each
room to answer questions.
Free Tickets Needed Only In
Peak Season Free tickets are required
during the peak season from the third Tuesday in March until the Saturday
before Labor Day. The National Park Service distributes the tickets in the
White House Visitor Center, located at the southeast corner of 15th and
E Streets. Look for the three American flags and the blue awnings. The closest
Metrorail station is Federal Triangle (blue and orange lines). Tickets are
timed from 10 a.m. until 12 noon. Advance tickets are not available. They
are issued on the morning of the tour only, on a first-come,
first-served basis starting at 7:30 a.m. The number of tickets for each day is
limited so visitors should arrive as early as possible. Unfortunately, it is
not possible to predict what time one should arrive to guarantee tickets. One
person may obtain up to four tickets. Each person, including children,
requires a ticket. A hand stamp validation is also required. The ticket counter
closes at noon, or earlier if the supply for that day is distributed. Each
ticket indicates when and where you join the line.
At non-peak times, no tickets are needed. The line begins at the
southeast gate. Visitors in line by 12 noon are admitted.
Tour
Orientation All public tours are
significantly enhanced if you first see the orientation and obtain a free
brochure at the White House Visitor Center. The Center is open seven
days a week, from 7:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. Allow between 20 minutes and
1 ½ hours to explore the video and exhibits. The Visitor
Center features many aspects of the White House, including its architecture,
furnishings, first families, social events, and relations with the press and
world leaders, as well as a thirty-minute video. The White House Historical
Association sponsors a sales area. Rest rooms are available, but food service
is not.
Congressional Guided Tour
The second way to visit, if you have at least eight to ten weeks
advance notice, is to contact the local or Washington office of
your Congressional Representative, or one of your Senators, to request
free, reserved tickets for the Congressional guided tours
of the White House. Tours are scheduled Tuesday through Saturday, starting
between 8:15 and 8:45 a.m. Once inside the House, the guided tours
usually take 25 to 35 minutes. Please note that the number of tickets
for the guided tours is very limited. The tours are conducted
in groups of 70, however Members of Congress may only request for groups of 50. You will wait in line to enter the House.
The guided tour narration is appropriate for high school and older.
Groups Use the Bus Zone in
Peak Season
Groups arriving by bus, during the peak season from the third Tuesday
in March until the Saturday before Labor Day, should use the "bus zone"
ticket area; the westbound curb lane of Constitution Avenue between
15th and 17th Streets, northwest. Beginning at 7:30 a.m. on tour days,
National Park Service personnel board buses parked in the zone and distribute
a timed ticket to each person on the bus. About one-third of each day's
tickets are set aside for group tours. The bus zone closes at 9 a.m.,
or earlier if all tickets have been distributed. Buses may not remain
in the zone after tickets have been issued. It is advisable to arrive
early. Groups on buses who wish to tour the White House Visitor Center
may use the loading area in the southbound curb lane of 15th Street.
Mobility-Impaired / Using a Wheelchair
Guests
requiring the loan of a wheelchair should notify the officer at the
Visitors Entrance Building upon arrival.
Wheelchair loans are offered on a first-come, first-served
basis. Reservations are not possible.
Visitors in wheelchairs, or with other mobility disabilities, on the
Congressional guided or self-guided tours, between 8:00 a.m.
and 12 noon, use the same Visitor entrance and, with up to four members
of their party, are admitted without waiting in line and without
tickets.
Visitors in wheelchairs are escorted by ramp from the entrance
level to the ground floor, and by elevator from the ground to the state floor.
Guests generally wait in line with their family or group.
Hearing-Impaired Tours for hearing-impaired
groups may be arranged in advance by writing to the Visitors Office, White
House, Washington, DC 20502. Tours are usually scheduled at 9:30 a.m.,
between the Congressional and public tour times. Participants enter at the East
Appointment gate. A U.S. Secret Service/Uniformed Division Tour Officer
conducts the tour in sign language. Signed tours are available to groups of 8
to 20. Groups are also encouraged to bring their own interpreters.
Signing interpretation is also available for individual
visitors with advance notice. A Congressional office first issues guided
tour tickets to a guest who is hearing-impaired and then contacts the Visitors
Office at least 2 weeks in advance to request interpreter service.
The Visitors Office TDD (telephone device for the deaf) is
202-456-2121. Messages may be left outside normal business hours.
Visually-Impaired Tours for visually-impaired
groups may be arranged in advance by writing to the Visitors Office, White
House, Washington, DC 20502. The tours are usually scheduled at 9:30 a.m.,
between the Congressional and public tour times. Participants enter at the East
Appointment gate. A U.S. Secret Service/Uniformed Division Tour Officer permits
visitors to touch specific objects in the House. Touch tours are currently
available only to groups of 8 to 20, not to individual visitors. Guide animals
are permitted in the White House.
General Tour
Information All White House tours are free. Changes in
tour schedules are occasionally made because of official events. Notice may
not be given until that morning. The Visitors Office 24-hour Information Line
recording at 202-456-7041 provides the most up-to-date information. The
TDD (telephone device for the deaf) is 202-456-2121. Visitors should confirm
tour schedules by calling the information line the night before and the morning
that they plan to visit. It is occasionally necessary to close individual rooms
on the tour; however, notice about closed rooms is not possible.
On-street parking is not available near the White House,
and use of public transportation is strongly encouraged. The closest
Metrorail stations to the White House Visitor Center (southeast corner of 15th
and E Streets) are Federal Triangle(blue and orange lines) and Metro Center
(blue, orange, and red lines).
Public telephones and restrooms are not available at the
White House; the nearest ones are in the Visitor Pavilion on the Ellipse, the
park area south of the White House, and in the White House Visitor Center.
Cameras may be carried after undergoing a security check
as you enter, but taking pictures/videotaping is not permitted inside the White
House.
Strollers are checked with the National Park Service at
the Visitor Entrance.
Prohibited inside are animals (except guide dogs),
oversized backpacks, balloons, beverages, chewing gum, electric stun guns,
fireworks or firecrackers, food, guns or ammunition, knives with blades over 3
inches or 8 centimeters, mace, nunchucks, smoking, or suitcases.
On behalf of The President and Mrs. Clinton,
we hope you enjoy your visit to the White House.
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