Find secret beaches, islands, ancient sites and the best local tables nearby.
New York City packs five boroughs, 8.3 million residents, more than 200 languages and 400 years of history into 302 square miles you can cross on the subway with a single tap. Manhattan is the iconic skyline; Brooklyn the creative engine; Queens the most linguistically diverse place on earth; the Bronx the birthplace of hip-hop and home of the Yankees; Staten Island the quiet ferry ride past the Statue of Liberty.
This is a local-first guide to all of New York City: the Statue of Liberty, Empire State Building, Times Square and Broadway, Central Park and the Metropolitan Museum, MoMA, the 9/11 Memorial and One World Observatory, the High Line, the Brooklyn Bridge, DUMBO, Williamsburg, Prospect Park, Flushing, Astoria, Long Island City, Arthur Avenue and the Hudson Valley — organised by borough and by season. Every recommendation is paired with the best local tables nearby, bookable on Woltaro with a small refundable deposit that comes straight back to your card when you sit down to eat.
Last updated by the Woltaro editors. Facts sourced from NYC & Company and the US Census.
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Four ready-to-copy plans depending on how many days you have and what you love.
5 days
Classic New York
Statue of Liberty & 9/11 → Empire State + Times Square + Broadway → Central Park + The Met → High Line + Chelsea → Brooklyn Bridge walk + DUMBO. Perfect first-timer plan.
4 days
Food-lover's NYC
Katz's + LES dumplings → Flushing dim sum + Sichuan → Brooklyn pizza pilgrimage (Di Fara, Lucali) → Midtown Michelin tasting.
3 days
Brooklyn deep-dive
Williamsburg smokehouse + Greenpoint Polish → Prospect Park & Park Slope → DUMBO waterfront dinner with the skyline.
7 days
NYC + Hudson Valley
4 nights NYC (all five boroughs) + 2 nights Hudson Valley (Storm King, Beacon, Hudson town) — a farm-to-table extension by train.
New York food to try
From a $1 slice at 3am to a $500 Midtown tasting — the dishes worth planning a meal around, and where to book them.
America's most famous monument and the immigration gateway that welcomed 12 million arrivals — best seen on the first ferry of the day.
Eat Nearby
The Fulton by Jean-Georges
Seaport seafood
Cipriani Wall Street
Landmark Italian
Midtown Manhattan
Empire State Building
5th Ave & 34th St
The Art Deco icon — 86th-floor open-air deck and 102nd-floor glass observatory. Sunset slots book out weeks ahead.
Eat Nearby
Keens Steakhouse
Mutton chop since 1885
Koreatown BBQ
32nd St · late-night
Midtown Manhattan
Times Square & Broadway
42nd–47th St, Broadway
The Crossroads of the World — 40+ Broadway theaters within walking distance. Book shows via official theater sites or TKTS discount booth.
Eat Nearby
Joe Allen
Broadway pre-theater classic
Sardi's
Caricatures & Manhattan cocktails
Upper Manhattan
Central Park & The Met
59th–110th St
843 acres in the middle of Manhattan — Bethesda Terrace, Bow Bridge, Sheep Meadow — plus the Metropolitan Museum on its eastern edge.
Eat Nearby
Tavern on the Green
Iconic in-park dining
The Loeb Boathouse
Lakefront lunch
Midtown Manhattan
MoMA & 5th Avenue
W 53rd St
Van Gogh's Starry Night, Monet's Water Lilies, Picasso's Demoiselles — the modernist canon under one roof. Free Friday evenings.
Eat Nearby
The Modern
Michelin · adjacent to MoMA
Le Bernardin
Three Michelin · seafood
West Side Manhattan
The High Line & Chelsea Market
Gansevoort St to 34th St
Elevated park on a former freight rail line — 1.5 miles of gardens, art installations and skyline views ending at Hudson Yards.
Eat Nearby
Cookshop
Farm-to-table Chelsea brunch
Los Tacos No. 1
Chelsea Market cult tacos
Lower Manhattan
9/11 Memorial & One World Observatory
180 Greenwich St
The twin reflecting pools where the Towers stood, plus the observatory on top of the new One World Trade Center — the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere.
Eat Nearby
Manhatta
60th floor · Danny Meyer
Nobu Downtown
Tribeca institution
DUMBO, Brooklyn
Brooklyn Bridge & DUMBO
Walk from City Hall to Brooklyn
The 1883 Gothic-arch bridge is the classic NYC walk — end at Brooklyn Bridge Park with the Manhattan skyline behind you and DUMBO's cobblestones ahead.
Eat Nearby
The River Café
Under-the-bridge fine dining
Grimaldi's
Coal-oven pizza pilgrimage
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
Williamsburg — Bedford Ave & the Waterfront
L train · Bedford Ave
Brooklyn's creative epicenter — smokehouses, natural-wine bars, vintage shops on Bedford Ave and the Domino Park waterfront looking back at Manhattan.
Eat Nearby
Peter Luger
Since 1887 · dry-aged porterhouse
Lilia
Missy Robbins · handmade pasta
Park Slope, Brooklyn
Prospect Park & Park Slope
Grand Army Plaza
Olmsted & Vaux's other masterpiece (after Central Park) — 526 acres, plus brownstone Park Slope with some of Brooklyn's best neighborhood restaurants.
Eat Nearby
Al Di Là Trattoria
Neighborhood Venetian
Convivium Osteria
Rustic Italian-Mediterranean
Flushing, Queens
Flushing — Asia in Queens
7 train, last stop
New York's biggest and best Chinatown — hand-pulled noodles, Sichuan hot pot, Taiwanese beef noodle soup and Flushing's legendary dim sum at Nan Xiang.
Eat Nearby
Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao
Soup dumpling royalty
Szechuan Mountain House
Mala-forward Sichuan
Astoria, Queens
Astoria — Greek Queens
N/W train · Astoria
The largest Greek community outside of Greece — grilled octopus, whole fish and family-run tavernas along Ditmars Blvd, plus Egyptian, Bangladeshi and Colombian streets.
Eat Nearby
Taverna Kyclades
Whole grilled fish · Astoria classic
MP Taverna
Modern Greek by Michael Psilakis
Long Island City, Queens
Long Island City & MoMA PS1
7 train · Vernon-Jackson
Postindustrial waterfront with the best skyline view of Manhattan — Gantry Plaza State Park at sunset, MoMA PS1 in a converted school, and Casa Enrique's Michelin taqueria.
Eat Nearby
Casa Enrique
Michelin · Mexican
M. Wells Steakhouse
Québécois-Americana
The Bronx
Yankee Stadium & Arthur Avenue
4/B/D train · 161st St
Baseball's most storied stadium, plus Arthur Avenue — the real Little Italy — for handmade pasta, pork stores and old-school red-sauce joints.
Eat Nearby
Roberto's
Arthur Ave · handmade pasta
Mario's
Since 1919 · Neapolitan red-sauce
The Bronx
Bronx Zoo & Botanical Garden
2/5 train · Bronx Park
The largest metropolitan zoo in the US next door to the 250-acre New York Botanical Garden — a full day out from Midtown by subway.
Eat Nearby
Zero Otto Nove
Arthur Ave · Neapolitan pizza
Staten Island
Staten Island Ferry & St. George
Free ferry from Whitehall Terminal
The best free ride in New York — 25 minutes past the Statue of Liberty with the full Lower Manhattan skyline behind you. Come back on the same boat.
Eat Nearby
Enoteca Maria
Grandmothers of the world cook
Denino's Pizzeria
Since 1937 · thin-crust legend
Hudson Valley (day trip)
Hudson Valley — Storm King & Beacon
90 min by Metro-North train
500-acre Storm King sculpture park, Dia:Beacon's minimalist warehouse and Beacon's Main Street farm-to-table restaurants — the best day-trip escape from NYC.
Eat Nearby
Kitchen Sink Food & Drink
Beacon farm-to-table
Ella's Bellas
Beacon gluten-free bakery
Boroughs of New York City
Every borough has its own energy, food scene and pace. Pick your base — most trips combine two or three.
Manhattan
The island that made New York — Times Square, Central Park, MoMA, the Empire State, the High Line, Wall Street and dinner in the Village, Chelsea or the Upper East Side.
Brooklyn
New York's creative heart — Williamsburg wine bars and smokehouses, DUMBO waterfront, Park Slope brownstones, Coney Island boardwalk and Brighton Beach borscht.
Queens
The most linguistically diverse place on earth — Astoria Greek, Flushing Chinese, Jackson Heights Indian & Colombian, Long Island City skyline views and Michelin taquerias.
The Bronx
Yankee Stadium, Arthur Avenue's real Little Italy, the Bronx Zoo and the Botanical Garden — a subway ride from Midtown but a completely different city.
Staten Island
The free ferry ride past the Statue of Liberty, Enoteca Maria's grandma-cooks concept, and the North Shore's under-visited waterfront.
Hudson Valley (day trip)
90 minutes north by Metro-North — Storm King sculpture park, Dia:Beacon, farm-to-table Main Streets in Beacon, Cold Spring and Hudson.
New York borough by borough
Detailed local guides — when to go, what to do, and where to book your table nearby.
Region guide
Manhattan
The 13-mile island that most visitors picture when they say 'New York' — Midtown's skyscrapers, Central Park in the middle, the Village downtown, and Wall Street at the tip.
Best time to visit
April–June and September–October: crisp, sunny, 15–25°C — the city at its best.
Where to base yourself
Midtown
West Village
East Village
Chelsea
Upper East Side
Harlem
Seasonality
Spring (Mar–May)
Cherry blossoms in Central Park, 12–22°C, rooftops reopening.
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Hot 26–34°C and humid. Free concerts, Shakespeare in the Park, restaurant week.
Autumn (Sep–Oct)
The sweet spot — 15–24°C, foliage in Central Park, US Open, NYFW.
Winter (Nov–Feb)
Cold −2 to 8°C, holiday windows, ice skating at Rockefeller and Bryant Park.
What to do
Central Park + The Met + a Broadway show.
Statue of Liberty ferry + 9/11 Memorial + One World Observatory.
High Line walk from Gansevoort to Hudson Yards, dinner in Chelsea.
MoMA + rooftop cocktail at The Peninsula or Refinery.
Eat nearby
Book a Midtown steakhouse or a West Village Italian for post-show dinner — the best NYC tables fill weeks ahead.
Three to four days covers the icons (Central Park, Empire State, Times Square/Broadway, MoMA, 9/11 Memorial, Statue of Liberty).
How far ahead should you book restaurants in Manhattan?
Popular Midtown, West Village and Chelsea tables fill 2–4 weeks ahead. A Woltaro deposit locks the seat.
Region guide
Brooklyn
The country's fourth-largest city if it were on its own — brownstones, waterfront, wood-fired pizza, natural-wine bars and a coastline that ends at Coney Island.
Best time to visit
May–June and September–October: the outer boroughs are outdoor boroughs.
Where to base yourself
Williamsburg
DUMBO
Brooklyn Heights
Park Slope
Bushwick
Greenpoint
Seasonality
Spring (Mar–May)
Prospect Park cherry blossoms, Smorgasburg opens in April.
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Rooftops, waterfront, Coney Island — 25–32°C and full of festivals.
Autumn (Sep–Oct)
Best month — Park Slope stoops, Prospect Park foliage, patio season into October.
Winter (Nov–Feb)
Cold 0–8°C but the wine bars, natural-wine restaurants and smokehouses are cozy.
What to do
Walk across the Brooklyn Bridge into DUMBO at golden hour.
Williamsburg: Bedford Ave shops + Domino Park + a Peter Luger porterhouse.
Prospect Park + Brooklyn Museum + brownstone Park Slope dinner.
Coney Island boardwalk + Nathan's + Brighton Beach borscht in winter.
Eat nearby
Book a Williamsburg or Park Slope table for dinner — Brooklyn's best restaurants sell out days ahead in summer.
By subway (L, F, A, C, R, 2/3, 4/5) or on foot across the Brooklyn Bridge. Uber is also cheap on the bridge.
Is Brooklyn safe at night?
Yes — Williamsburg, DUMBO, Park Slope, Brooklyn Heights, Greenpoint and Cobble Hill are as safe as most of Manhattan. Standard city awareness applies late at night.
Region guide
Queens
The most ethnically diverse urban area on the planet — 138 languages spoken in the schools. This is where locals eat: Greek in Astoria, Chinese in Flushing, Indian in Jackson Heights.
Best time to visit
May–October for outdoor dining in Astoria and LIC; year-round for Flushing's food halls.
Is Arthur Avenue better than Manhattan's Little Italy?
For most locals, yes. Arthur Ave is where actual Italian-American families still shop and eat. Manhattan's Mulberry St is largely a tourist strip now.
Region guide
Staten Island
The forgotten borough — but the free ferry ride past the Statue of Liberty is the single best free thing in New York, and the Italian-American food scene is a hidden gem.
Best time to visit
May–October for the ferry ride and the North Shore waterfront.
Where to base yourself
St. George
Tompkinsville
New Dorp
Rosebank
Seasonality
Spring (Mar–May)
Snug Harbor's Chinese Scholar's Garden reopens, mild ferry weather.
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Warm ferry decks, South Beach boardwalk, Sri Lankan Tompkinsville festival.
Autumn (Sep–Oct)
Foliage in Snug Harbor, cool ferry decks with the harbor still sparkling.
Winter (Nov–Feb)
Bundle up — the ferry ride is even more atmospheric on a snowy dusk.
What to do
The free Staten Island Ferry (both directions) at sunset.
Snug Harbor Cultural Center + Chinese Scholar's Garden.
Denino's Pizzeria + Ralph's Italian Ices — Staten Island classics.
Enoteca Maria — every night a different immigrant grandma cooks.
Eat nearby
Book Enoteca Maria for the grandma-of-the-week menu, or Denino's for a pie you'll remember.
Yes — completely free, 24/7, every 30 minutes. It's the best-value tourist attraction in New York.
Region guide
Hudson Valley (day trip)
90 minutes north of Grand Central by Metro-North train — Storm King's 500-acre sculpture park, Dia:Beacon's minimalist warehouse and Beacon's farm-to-table Main Street.
Best time to visit
May–October: the outdoor sculpture parks are the whole point, and fall foliage (mid-Oct) is world-famous.
Where to base yourself
Beacon
Cold Spring
Hudson
Rhinebeck
Seasonality
Spring (Apr–May)
Bloom season, 12–22°C, Storm King opens for the year.
Summer (Jun–Aug)
Warm 24–30°C, farm stands, river swims at Cold Spring.
Autumn (Sep–Oct)
Peak foliage mid–late October — one of the best fall drives in the US.
Winter (Nov–Feb)
Storm King closes; Dia:Beacon and Hudson town stay open with cozy tavern dinners.
What to do
Storm King Art Center (Apr–Nov) + Dia:Beacon on the same trip.
Cold Spring: hike Breakneck Ridge + lunch on Main Street.
Beacon Main Street: Dia + farm-to-table dinner + Hudson River sunset.
Hudson town: antique shops + a night at a Warren St bistro.
Eat nearby
Book a Beacon or Hudson farm-to-table dinner for after Storm King or Dia — weekend tables sell out.
How do I get to Storm King from NYC without a car?
Metro-North Hudson Line from Grand Central to Beacon (90 min), then a short taxi or seasonal shuttle. Or take the Coach USA Storm King bus from Port Authority.
When to visit New York City
New York City is a year-round destination — but each season plays to different strengths.
Weather, crowds and recommended activities by season in NYC
Period
Weather
Crowds
Best for
Mar – Apr
Cool 5–18°C, cherry blossoms
Medium
Central Park bloom, museums, no humidity
May – Jun
Warm 18–28°C, patios open
High
Rooftops, High Line, waterfront Brooklyn
Jul – Aug
Hot & humid 26–34°C
Medium
Free concerts, Shakespeare in the Park, Coney Island
Sep – Oct
Ideal 15–24°C, foliage late Oct
High
The sweet spot — US Open, NYFW, Hudson Valley leaves
Nov – Feb
Cold −2–8°C, occasional snow
Medium
Holiday windows, ice skating, Broadway matinees, museum days
How restaurant booking works
A small refundable deposit locks your seat and protects the restaurant from no-shows.
1
Search
Pick your city, date and party size — Woltaro shows tables that are actually free.
2
Confirm with a refundable deposit
A small deposit locks your seat. It's held safely until you dine.
3
Dine — deposit returned
Show up, enjoy your meal, and the deposit is refunded in full.
Frequently asked questions
Everything travellers ask us about New York and Woltaro reservations.
What are New York City's must-see landmarks?
The Statue of Liberty, Empire State Building, Times Square & Broadway, Central Park, the Metropolitan Museum, MoMA, the 9/11 Memorial, One World Observatory, the Brooklyn Bridge and the High Line are the ten most first-time visitors want to see.
How many days do you need in New York City?
Four to five days covers the Manhattan icons, one full Brooklyn day and one outer-borough food day (Queens or the Bronx). A week lets you add a Hudson Valley day trip and a repeat-visitor neighborhood like Harlem or Long Island City.
When is the best time to visit New York City?
Late April to mid-June and September to early November — 15–25°C, low humidity and the city outdoors. Winter (mid-Nov to Feb) has cheaper hotels, holiday windows and ice skating but real cold. July and August are hot and humid.
Do I need to book restaurants in New York in advance?
For popular spots — yes. Midtown steakhouses, West Village Italians, Williamsburg dinners and Michelin tastings fill 2–6 weeks ahead. Woltaro locks a table with a small refundable deposit that comes back when you dine.
How does Woltaro's refundable deposit work?
You pay a small deposit when you reserve. When you show up and dine, the deposit is refunded in full to your original payment method. If you don't show up, the deposit compensates the restaurant for the empty seat.
How do I get around New York City?
The subway — 24/7, one flat fare ($2.90), and by far the fastest way through Manhattan and out to Brooklyn and Queens. Use OMNY (tap-to-pay) at the turnstile. Uber/Lyft is fine for late-night outer-borough returns; taxis are best for airport runs.
Which airport should I fly into — JFK, LaGuardia or Newark?
JFK for international long-haul (best transit options via AirTrain + subway or LIRR). LGA for domestic short-haul (closest to Midtown). EWR for European connections and often the cheapest fares. All three have taxis (~$50–80 to Midtown) and rideshare.
Is New York City safe for tourists in 2026?
Yes — statistically one of the safest large US cities. Standard urban awareness applies late at night on empty subway platforms and in Times Square (pickpocketing). Tourist zones during the day are very safe.
How much should I budget for a New York trip?
Rough guide per person per day: budget $180 (hostel, subway, delis, one museum). Mid-range $350 (3-star hotel, mix of sit-down restaurants, a Broadway show). Fine-dining $700+ (4-star hotel, tasting menus, front-row Broadway).
What should I wear in New York?
New Yorkers dress up more than most US cities but not formally — think dark jeans + a nice top for dinner. Comfortable walking shoes are essential (you'll walk 15,000+ steps a day). In summer bring layers for over-air-conditioned interiors.
Do you tip in New York restaurants?
Yes — 18–20% is standard for sit-down service, 15% is the absolute minimum. Some higher-end restaurants now include service (check the bill). $1–2 per drink at a bar. Card tipping is normal everywhere.
Which New York neighborhoods are best for first-time visitors, foodies and couples?
First-timers: Midtown for the icons + West Village for evening walks. Foodies: Flushing, Astoria, Williamsburg, the East Village. Couples: West Village brownstones, Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO waterfront.
Do I need cash in New York?
Not really — cards and Apple/Google Pay work everywhere including the subway (OMNY). Bring $50–100 in small bills for tips, small delis and food carts.
Do Americans, Britons or EU citizens need a visa for New York?
US citizens obviously don't. UK, EU, Australian, NZ and most G7 passport holders travel visa-free under ESTA — apply online at least 72 hours before departure ($21, valid 2 years). Canadian citizens don't need ESTA.
How many days do I need to see all five boroughs?
Realistically, 5–7 days: two–three days in Manhattan, one full day in Brooklyn (DUMBO + Williamsburg + Park Slope), one day in Queens (Astoria + LIC + Flushing), one afternoon in the Bronx (Yankees + Arthur Ave), and half a day for the Staten Island Ferry.
Where should I try New York-style pizza?
Manhattan: Joe's on Carmine, Prince St Pizza, Scarr's. Brooklyn: Di Fara (Midwood), Lucali (Carroll Gardens), Roberta's (Bushwick), L&B Spumoni Gardens (Bensonhurst). All are worth the trip.
Is New York good for families with kids?
Very. Central Park + the Met + AMNH (Natural History) + a Broadway matinee + Coney Island covers a great family week. Most restaurants welcome kids until 8pm; after that book earlier seatings.
How LGBTQ+ friendly is New York City?
Extremely — New York is where the modern LGBTQ+ rights movement started (Stonewall, 1969). The West Village, Hell's Kitchen and Williamsburg are especially welcoming, and Pride (last weekend of June) is one of the world's biggest.
New York or Chicago for a first US city visit?
Choose New York for scale, diversity of neighborhoods, Broadway and the sheer density of world-class restaurants. Choose Chicago for architecture (better skyline tour), deep-dish, blues clubs and a smaller-scale, friendlier feel.
Explored? Now eat like a local.
Reserve a table at hand-picked New York restaurants — a small refundable deposit locks your seat and comes back when you dine.