Georgia Aquarium exterior
The new Asian small-clawed otter habitat opens to the public on Saturday. — WACN 21 Illustration

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Georgia Aquarium triples the size of its otter exhibit ahead of the World Cup, betting big on a tourism summer

The aquarium's most ambitious renovation since 2020 opens to the public Saturday, in time for the World Cup tourism surge. The new exhibit adds a second otter species and triples the visitor capacity.

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The Georgia Aquarium will open a three-times-larger expansion of its otter exhibit to the public Saturday, the aquarium announced Wednesday — the first major renovation of an animal habitat since the Sea Lion Reef opened in 2020.

The expansion is timed for the FIFA World Cup 2026, which begins in Atlanta on June 15 and is expected to draw more than 700,000 visitors to the city’s downtown attractions over four weeks.

“We are betting on Atlanta’s biggest tourism summer in a generation. The otter exhibit has been one of our most popular since it opened, and tripling its size lets us do more with both the animals and the guests.”

— Brian Davis, Georgia Aquarium president and CEO

What’s new

The expansion replaces the aquarium’s existing North American river otter habitat with a three-zone exhibit that adds:

  • Asian small-clawed otters — a smaller species native to Southeast Asia, new to the aquarium’s collection
  • A larger deep-water swim tank for the river otters
  • An underwater viewing window for both species
  • Three times the visitor capacity of the previous exhibit
  • Two new keeper-talk stations that will host daily programming

The expansion cost the aquarium about $8.5 million, funded entirely from the aquarium’s operating budget, Davis said.

What’s the same

The existing North American river ottersOtto, Biscuit, and Puck — will continue to live in the exhibit alongside the new arrivals. Three Asian small-clawed otters will arrive from the Bronx Zoo later this month under a breeding-loan agreement, the aquarium said.

The popular underwater feeding demonstration will return at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. daily, with a new twilight feeding added at 5 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays during the summer.

Why now

The aquarium is one of Atlanta’s most-visited ticketed attractions, drawing about 2.5 million visitors in a typical year. The aquarium’s leadership says the expansion was already on the calendar — but that the timing, coinciding with the World Cup, presented an opportunity the aquarium couldn’t pass up.

“The World Cup brings a kind of visitor to Atlanta we don’t normally see — first-time international visitors, families who have never been to the city. We want their first impression to be unforgettable.”

— Brian Davis, Georgia Aquarium president and CEO

The aquarium has also added multilingual signage throughout its galleries, in Spanish, Portuguese, French, and German, in preparation for the tournament.

What else is new this summer

The aquarium has also announced several other additions for 2026:

  • The return of Glow Nights, an adults-only after-hours event with cocktails and live music, on the third Friday of every month from June through September
  • A new “Sharks After Dark” evening program on Saturdays in July and August
  • Expanded behind-the-scenes tour offerings, including a new beluga encounter

Tickets for the new otter exhibit go on sale Saturday at georgiaaquarium.org.


Kira Tomlinson covers Atlanta’s food, arts, and family scene for WACN 21. Reach her at ktomlinson@wacn21.com.