If you're staying near Disneyland and want to see Hollywood, Beverly Hills, or Venice Beach, you've probably already realized the problem: there's no easy way to get there on your own. LA is a driving city. The distances are real. And most visitors who try to figure it out on their own spend half their day in traffic, parking garages, or waiting for an Uber surge to calm down.

I've been guiding tours from Anaheim to LA since 2012. I've heard every version of this question. And the honest answer is that most of the "obvious" solutions — rent a car, take the Metro, Uber between stops — aren't as practical as they look. Here's an honest breakdown of every option, so you can decide what's right for your trip.

Why Most People Struggle with This

The Myth

"I'll just rent a car — it can't be that hard."

The Reality

Hollywood to Santa Monica on a weekday morning takes 45 minutes to over an hour. Parking in Hollywood is a 20–30 minute ordeal on a good day, and street parking near the Walk of Fame doesn't really exist. By the time most self-driving visitors find a spot, they've burned 90 minutes without seeing anything.

The Myth

"I'll take the Metro — faster than driving."

The Reality

Getting from Anaheim to Hollywood via Metrolink and Metro Rail takes 2–3 hours with transfers. That's 4–6 hours of transit for a round trip — more than half your day gone before you've experienced anything.

The Myth

"I'll Uber between neighborhoods — simple."

The Reality

Uber between four or five LA neighborhoods adds up fast — easily $120–$200+ for the day once surge pricing kicks in during peak hours. You still have no guide, no local knowledge, and no one to handle logistics.

Your Options, Ranked Honestly

Guided Day Tour with Hotel Pickup Best Option

A guided small-group tour picks you up at your hotel, takes you to 5–6 iconic stops across LA, and drops you back at your hotel at the end of the day. You don't navigate, park, or figure out timing — your guide handles everything while you enjoy the city.

ProsPickup from your hotel · All stops in one day · Local guide with insider knowledge · No parking stress · Best value for the full LA experience
ConsLess spontaneous than self-driving · Must follow group schedule
Rental Car Works, With Caveats

If you're comfortable driving in heavy traffic and patient with parking, a rental car gives you full flexibility. It works best if you're only going to one or two stops and have a lot of time to spare.

ProsFully flexible schedule · Can stop wherever you want
Cons$60–$120/day rental cost + insurance · Parking $20–$40 per stop · LA traffic is genuinely brutal · No local knowledge
Rideshare (Uber / Lyft) Acceptable for 1–2 Stops

Fine if you're going to just one destination and coming straight back. Not practical for a multi-stop LA day — the cost and wait times add up quickly.

ProsNo driving required · Door-to-door convenience
Cons$40–$70 per trip with surge · Long waits in tourist areas · Expensive across multiple stops
Public Transit (Metrolink + Metro) Not Recommended for Tourists

Technically possible, but takes so long that it isn't practical for a day trip. LA's public transit system isn't designed to take visitors from Anaheim to multiple tourist destinations efficiently.

ProsCheapest option · No parking needed
Cons2–3 hours each way · Multiple transfers · Limited coverage in tourist areas · Not practical with luggage or families

What a Perfect LA Day Looks Like

If you go with a guided tour, here's what a well-run day actually looks like from start to finish:

  • Morning pickup — Your driver arrives at your Anaheim hotel between 8–9 AM. No scrambling, no transit confusion. Everyone's relaxed before the day even starts.
  • Griffith Observatory — First stop, before the crowds. This is where you see the Hollywood Sign up close, with a panoramic view of the entire LA basin laid out below you.
  • Hollywood Boulevard — Walk of Fame, TCL Chinese Theatre, Dolby Theatre. Your guide tells you which stars actually mean something and where the best photos are taken.
  • Beverly Hills & Rodeo Drive — A drive through the neighborhood, a stop on the most famous shopping street in California. Even if you're not shopping, the architecture alone is worth it.
  • The Grove — Lunch break at the best outdoor dining area in LA. Everyone eats on their own, comes back refreshed, and the afternoon energy is always better for it.
  • Santa Monica Pier — The Pacific Ocean. The end of Route 66. The famous Ferris wheel. One of those views that actually lives up to the expectation.
  • Venice Beach — The boardwalk, Muscle Beach, the street performers, the murals. A completely different energy from Hollywood — and a perfect way to end the day.
  • Return to Anaheim — Dropped back at your hotel, tired in the best possible way, with a full day's worth of memories.

Ready to book your Anaheim to Hollywood day tour?

Hotel pickup from the Anaheim resort area. Small groups. Local expert guide. Hollywood, Beverly Hills, Santa Monica & Venice Beach — all in one day.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is your cancellation policy?

Free cancellation up to 48 hours before your tour. Will accommodate for extraordinary conditions.

Is it worth going to Hollywood from Anaheim?

Absolutely. Hollywood, Beverly Hills, and the beach cities are very different from Anaheim. If you have even one extra day, most visitors say the LA day trip was the best decision of the entire vacation.

What hotels do you pick up from?

We cover hotels in Buena Park and throughout the Anaheim Disneyland resort area. Our standard tour picks up from hotels within about 1.5 miles of Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm. Staying outside the area? No problem — you can meet us at one of the resort area hotels. If you need parking, just let us know and we'll help you find free parking nearby.

Can I do Hollywood AND the beach in one day from Anaheim?

Yes — our full-day tour covers Griffith Observatory, Hollywood Boulevard, Beverly Hills, The Grove, Santa Monica Pier, and Venice Beach. It's a full day, but it's designed to give you enough time at each stop without rushing.

M
Mike — Lead Guide, AMG Tours & Coach Guiding tours from Anaheim since 2012

Mike has been navigating LA's neighborhoods with visitors from every country since 2012. He has driven this route in traffic, in sunshine, in rare LA rain, and in every combination of group dynamic imaginable. His philosophy: the best tour day is the one where nobody checks the time because they're too busy actually enjoying it.