Things to Do in New York

New York is the city that never sleeps for a reason: there is always something happening at every hour in every neighbourhood. The skyline from the Brooklyn Bridge at night, a pastrami sandwich at Katz's Deli, the Met in the morning before the crowds, and a jazz set in the Village — New York delivers the world's best urban experiences at every price point.

Central Park & the Met Museum Brooklyn Bridge walk High Line & Chelsea Market MoMA Times Square at night (briefly)

Daily Budget Guide

Budget

$100–150

Hostel + street food

Mid-range

$200–350

3-star + restaurants

Luxury

$500–1500+

5-star + fine dining

Top Activities & Experiences

1

Metropolitan Museum of Art

cultureMid-rangeSuggested $30 (pay-what-you-wish for NY State residents)
4–6 hours

The largest art museum in the Western Hemisphere: Egyptian Temple of Dendur, European Paintings (Vermeer, Rembrandt, El Greco), the American Wing, and the roof garden with skyline views. Budget at least half a day.

Tip: Go on a weekday morning for the Egyptian wing and European Paintings before school groups arrive. The roof garden (free with admission, seasonal) has Central Park and skyline views.
2

Central Park

natureFreeFree
2–6 hours

843 acres of designed landscape in the heart of Manhattan: Bethesda Fountain, the Reservoir, Strawberry Fields (John Lennon memorial), Belvedere Castle, and in spring and autumn, some of the world's best urban foliage. One of the great urban design achievements in history.

Tip: Rent a CitiBike ($15/day) and cycle the perimeter (6 miles) or the car-free interior roads. The Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir loop (1.6 miles) is the quintessential New York morning run.
3

Brooklyn Bridge Walk

natureFreeFree
45 min each way

Walk across one of the world's most beautiful bridges from Manhattan (City Hall) to DUMBO, Brooklyn. The view back to lower Manhattan — One World Trade Center, the East River, the skyline — is the most iconic view of New York.

Tip: Walk Manhattan → Brooklyn in the morning (light behind you, facing the skyline). Return via the Manhattan Bridge for different views. DUMBO's Washington Street arch framing the bridge is the most photographed spot in Brooklyn.
4

The High Line

natureFreeFree
1–2 hours

A 1.45-mile elevated park built on a disused freight railway line above Chelsea and Hudson Yards: wild plantings, art installations, city views, and some of the best architecture-watching in New York. Open year-round, 7am–10pm.

Tip: Start at the Gansevoort St entrance (southern end) and walk north to the Vessel at Hudson Yards. The Whitney Museum is at the southern entrance — combine both in a morning.
5

MoMA (Museum of Modern Art)

cultureMid-range$30 general admission (free Friday 5:30–9pm)
3 hours

The world's most important modern art collection: Van Gogh's Starry Night, Monet's Water Lilies (room-sized paintings), Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans, and major photography collections.

Tip: Go on Friday evening (free 5:30–9pm) — the main galleries are busy but the architecture, design, and film collections are quieter. The Starry Night is always the busiest room — go early.
6

One World Trade Center Observatory

cultureSplurge$44 adults
1.5 hours

The 360° view from the 100th–102nd floors of the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere: Manhattan's grid, the Statue of Liberty, four states on a clear day, and the most powerful view of New York from above.

Tip: Book online (cheaper). Go in the late afternoon — the sunset view over New Jersey with the city coming alive is exceptional. The view is better than the Empire State Building on a clear day.
7

Smorgasburg Food Market

foodMid-rangeFree entry, budget $20–40 for food
2 hours

America's largest weekly open-air food market: 100 food vendors every Saturday in Williamsburg (spring–autumn) and Sunday in Prospect Park. The venue for food trends — ramen burgers, chicken fried rice omelettes, Korean BBQ, and spectacular desserts.

Tip: Williamsburg (East River Park) has the best views and the most vendors. Go by 11am before the queues build. Free waterfront views of Manhattan across the river.
8

Jazz in the West Village

nightlifeMid-range$20–40 cover + drinks minimum
Evening

The most concentrated live jazz neighbourhood outside New Orleans: Village Vanguard (Miles Davis, Coltrane, Bill Evans all recorded live albums here), Blue Note, Smalls (late night, $25 all-night pass), and Fat Cat. An authentic New York evening.

Tip: Village Vanguard (Monday nights are dedicated to Vanguard Jazz Orchestra) and Smalls are the most authentic. Book ahead for Village Vanguard — it sells out. Smalls has no cover before midnight.

Free Things to Do in New York

  • Central Park
  • High Line
  • Brooklyn Bridge walk
  • Staten Island Ferry (free, best views of Statue of Liberty)
  • Staten Island Ferry (Statue of Liberty views, free)

Best Areas to Explore

Lower East Side / East Village

Best food scene, dive bars, independent shops, Katz's Deli

West Village / SoHo

Jazz clubs, boutiques, the best people-watching in Manhattan

Brooklyn — Williamsburg / DUMBO

Hip restaurants, Smorgasburg, best Manhattan skyline views

Upper West Side

The Met, Central Park, Lincoln Center, residential Manhattan

Harlem

Gospel Sunday, soul food, jazz history, authentic NYC neighbourhood

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I get around New York?

The subway is the best option ($2.90 per ride, OMNY contactless payment works with any card or phone). An unlimited 7-day MetroCard is $34. Taxis and Uber are expensive but available. Walking is best for neighbourhoods — Manhattan is laid out on a grid and is very walkable.

Is New York expensive?

Yes, one of the world's most expensive cities. Budget $100–150/day without accommodation (street food + lunch + dinner + one attraction + subway). Mid-range: $200–350/day. Costs to know: subway $2.90, drip coffee $3–5, deli sandwich $12–18, sit-down dinner $25–50 per person without drinks, beer $8–14.

What are the best free things in NYC?

Staten Island Ferry (free, passes Statue of Liberty), Central Park, High Line, Brooklyn Bridge walk, free Friday evening at MoMA (5:30–9pm), street art in Bushwick (open-air gallery), the observation deck of 30 Rock (cheaper than One WTC), and the 9/11 Memorial pool (free, outdoor).

When is the best time to visit New York?

April–June (Central Park in bloom, pleasant temperatures 15–22°C) and September–November (autumn foliage, less humid). Summer (July–August) is very hot and humid (35°C+) but great for outdoor events. December for Christmas lights and the Rockefeller tree — cold but magical. January–February is cheapest.