🇺🇸 Your Custom Itinerary

3-Day NYC Itinerary (First Timers): Manhattan essentials — Central Park, Times Square, Brooklyn Bridge, museums, pizza, and nightlife in a tight 3-day plan.

Your first time in New York City is a sensory overload in the best way possible. This 3-day itinerary covers the iconic highlights — the Statue of Liberty, Central Park, Times Square at night, the Brooklyn Bridge at golden hour — while leaving room for the city's legendary food scene. Dollar pizza at 2am, a perfect bagel for breakfast, cheesecake that lives up to the hype. You'll ride the subway like a New Yorker by day two.

Duration: 3 Days
Dates: April 1 – 3, 2026
Budget: $150–300/day
Pace: Fast-paced
Best for: First-time visitors, couples, solo travelers

⚡ Before You Go — Essentials

🚇 Get an OMNY Card (or Tap Your Phone)

NYC's subway costs $2.90/ride. After 12 rides in a week, the rest are free. Use Apple Pay, Google Pay, or any contactless card — no MetroCard needed. Download the MTA app for live subway times.

👟 Wear Walking Shoes

You'll walk 15,000-20,000 steps per day. Comfortable sneakers are non-negotiable. Skip the fashion shoes for sightseeing days.

🗽 Book Statue of Liberty Ferry Early

Statue City Cruises is the ONLY official ferry operator. Book at least 2 weeks ahead at statuecruises.com. Scammers in Battery Park will try to sell you 'VIP tickets' — ignore them.

💡 Top of the Rock > Empire State Building

Top of the Rock at Rockefeller Center has better views (you can see the Empire State Building from there). It's also cheaper and less crowded. Book sunset time slots.

🍕 Dollar Pizza Is a Rite of Passage

NYC dollar slices ($1-1.50) are genuinely good. 2 Bros Pizza and 99 Cent Fresh Pizza have locations across Manhattan. It's not gourmet, but it's the authentic New York experience.

📱 Offline Subway Map

Download the NYC subway map offline or use Citymapper — cell service is spotty underground. Know your Uptown vs. Downtown direction before entering the station.

Day 1 Battery Park · Financial District · 9/11 Memorial · Brooklyn Bridge

Lower Manhattan & the Statue of Liberty

Start with the icons — the Statue of Liberty, the 9/11 Memorial, and the Brooklyn Bridge at sunset. Lower Manhattan packs the most emotional punch of any neighborhood in the city.

Morning

Bagel Breakfast at Leo's Bagels

Start your NYC trip the right way — with a proper New York bagel. Leo's in the Financial District makes them fresh, boiled-then-baked in the traditional style. Get an everything bagel with scallion cream cheese.

📍 3 Hanover Square, Financial District
💲 $5-8 per bagel with cream cheese
⏰ Opens 7am — get there early to beat the line

Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island

Take the first ferry from Battery Park (9am departure — arrive by 8:30am for security). Visit Ellis Island first for the Immigration Museum with fewer crowds, then Liberty Island. The whole circuit takes about 3-4 hours. Even if you don't go up into the crown, the views of Manhattan from the water are spectacular.

📍 Battery Park, Castle Clinton departure point
💲 $24.50 reserve ticket (includes ferry + both islands + audio tour)
💡 Crown access ($24.50 extra) sells out months ahead — the pedestal access is more realistic for most visitors
Take the first ferry out. By noon, the lines at security are insane and Liberty Island is shoulder-to-shoulder.— r/travel
Don't buy tickets from anyone on the street in Battery Park. Statue City Cruises (statuecruises.com) is the only legitimate operator.
Afternoon

9/11 Memorial & Museum

Walk from Battery Park through the Financial District to the 9/11 Memorial — the twin reflecting pools where the towers stood. The memorial plaza is free and deeply moving. The underground museum ($29) is one of the most powerful museum experiences in the world, but be prepared emotionally — give yourself at least 2 hours.

📍 180 Greenwich Street
💲 Memorial plaza: free. Museum: $29 adults
⏰ Allow 1.5-2 hours for the museum

Wall Street & Charging Bull

A quick walk through the Financial District past the New York Stock Exchange, Federal Hall (where George Washington was inaugurated), and the famous Charging Bull sculpture on Broadway. It's a 15-minute photo-op detour, not an all-day affair.

📍 Bowling Green, Broadway
💲 Free
💡 The Fearless Girl statue has moved to the NYSE entrance
Lunch
Shake Shack (original location)
The original Shake Shack in Madison Square Park is a pilgrimage for burger lovers, but the Financial District location saves you the trek uptown. A ShackBurger, crinkle fries, and a shake is the quintessential NYC fast-casual meal.
📍 200 Broadway · 💲 $15-20 per person
Evening

Walk the Brooklyn Bridge at Sunset

Time your Brooklyn Bridge walk for golden hour — the views of Lower Manhattan with the sun setting behind it are some of the most photographed in the world. Start from the Manhattan side (entrance near City Hall) and walk the mile across to DUMBO on the Brooklyn side.

📍 Brooklyn Bridge pedestrian entrance near City Hall
💲 Free
⏰ Walk takes 30-45 minutes — start about an hour before sunset

DUMBO & Brooklyn Bridge Park

Once you're in Brooklyn, explore DUMBO (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass). Walk to the famous Washington Street photo spot where the Empire State Building is perfectly framed by the Manhattan Bridge arch. Then stroll along Brooklyn Bridge Park's waterfront with Manhattan's skyline glittering across the river.

📍 Washington Street & Water Street, DUMBO
💲 Free
💡 Jane's Carousel in the park is a beautifully restored 1922 carousel ($2/ride)
Dinner
Juliana's Pizza
Opened by Patsy Grimaldi — the original coal-oven pizza legend — Juliana's in DUMBO serves some of the best Neapolitan-style pizza in the city. The margherita with fresh mozzarella is perfection. There's usually a line but it moves fast.
📍 19 Old Fulton Street, DUMBO · 💲 $18-24 per pizza
Walk the bridge Manhattan→Brooklyn, not the other way. You want the skyline in front of you as you approach Brooklyn, and at sunset it's absolutely magical.— r/travel
After Juliana's, walk to Pebble Beach in Brooklyn Bridge Park for a nighttime skyline view. It's one of the best free views in the city.
Day 2 Central Park · Rockefeller Center · Times Square · Broadway

Midtown & Central Park

The heart of Manhattan — a morning in Central Park, world-class art at the Met, sunset views from Top of the Rock, and a Broadway show to cap the night.

Morning

Central Park Morning Walk

Start your day with a walk through Central Park — 843 acres of green space in the middle of Manhattan. Enter at the southeast corner (59th & 5th Ave) and walk through The Mall, Bethesda Terrace and Fountain (the most photographed spot in the park), and Bow Bridge. In April, the cherry blossoms along the Bridle Path and around the Reservoir are in full bloom.

📍 Enter at Grand Army Plaza (59th & 5th Ave)
💲 Free
⏰ 2-3 hours for a good exploration of the southern half

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Met is one of the greatest art museums on Earth — 5,000 years of art spanning every culture and continent. With only a couple of hours, hit the highlights: the Egyptian Temple of Dendur, the European Paintings galleries (Vermeer, Monet, Van Gogh), and the rooftop garden with Central Park views. Don't try to see everything — you literally can't in one visit.

📍 1000 Fifth Avenue (at 82nd Street)
💲 $30 adults (pay-what-you-wish for NY residents)
⏰ Allow 2-3 hours minimum. Opens at 10am.
Breakfast
Russ & Daughters
The legendary appetizing shop has been serving since 1914. Their classic — everything bagel with hand-sliced lox, cream cheese, capers, and onion — is arguably the best bagel in New York City. Worth the trek to the Lower East Side before heading uptown, or hit the café at the Jewish Museum on the Upper East Side.
📍 179 E Houston St (original) or 1109 5th Ave (museum café) · 💲 $15-20
Don't try to 'do' all of Central Park. The southern half (below 72nd) has all the greatest hits — Bethesda Fountain, Bow Bridge, The Mall, Strawberry Fields. The northern half is beautiful but you don't need it on a short trip.— r/AskNYC
The Met's pay-what-you-wish policy is only for NY/NJ/CT residents. Everyone else pays the $30 entry fee — but it's worth every penny.
Afternoon

5th Avenue & St. Patrick's Cathedral

Walk down 5th Avenue from the Met — you'll pass some of the world's most famous shops (Tiffany's, Saks, Bergdorf Goodman). Stop at St. Patrick's Cathedral, a stunning Neo-Gothic church that's free to enter. Even if you're not religious, the vaulted ceilings and rose window are breathtaking.

📍 5th Avenue, 82nd to 50th Street
💲 Free (window shopping counts)
💡 St. Patrick's Cathedral: 5th Ave & 50th Street

Top of the Rock (Sunset)

Book a sunset time slot at Rockefeller Center's observation deck. At 70 stories up, you get a 360-degree view of Manhattan — Central Park to the north, the Empire State Building to the south, and the Hudson River to the west. Most New Yorkers agree: this is the best observation deck in the city.

📍 30 Rockefeller Plaza
💲 $43 adults
⏰ Book sunset time (around 7pm in April) at topoftherocknyc.com
Lunch
Xi'an Famous Foods
Hand-ripped noodles and spicy cumin lamb that have achieved legendary status in NYC. The 45th Street Midtown location is a quick stop before your afternoon sightseeing. The liang pi (cold skin noodles) and the spicy cumin lamb hand-pulled noodles are must-orders.
📍 45th St, Midtown · 💲 $10-14 per bowl
Top of the Rock beats Empire State Building every time. You see the ESB from Top of the Rock, plus Central Park. The ESB views are just... more buildings.— r/travel
Evening

Times Square

Love it or hate it, Times Square at night is something every first-time visitor should experience once. The sensory overload of neon lights, massive billboards, and crowds from every corner of the world is uniquely New York. Walk through, take your photos, soak it in — then get out. Don't eat here (tourist trap prices, mediocre food).

📍 Broadway & 7th Avenue, between 42nd and 47th Streets
💲 Free
⏰ 20-30 minutes is plenty. Visit after dark for full effect.

Broadway Show

Seeing a Broadway show is a quintessential NYC experience. Current hits include The Great Gatsby, Hamilton, Wicked, and The Outsiders. For last-minute discount tickets, try the TKTS booth in Times Square (up to 50% off same-day shows) or the TodayTix app. Show up an hour early for the best selection.

📍 Theater District, 41st–54th Streets between 6th and 8th Avenues
💲 $60-200+ depending on show and seats
💡 TKTS booth opens at 3pm for evening shows — the line is long but moves fast
Dinner
Joe's Pizza
The classic New York slice. Joe's has been a Greenwich Village institution since 1975, and their plain cheese slice is as close to pizza perfection as it gets — thin, crispy, foldable, with just the right amount of grease. The Carmine Street original is worth the walk from the Theater District.
📍 7 Carmine Street, Greenwich Village · 💲 $3.50 per slice
Don't eat in Times Square. Seriously. Walk 3 blocks in any direction for better food at half the price. The chains in Times Square are somehow worse than their regular locations.— r/AskNYC
If you can't get Broadway tickets, Off-Broadway shows are often just as good. Sleep No More, Stomp, and Blue Man Group are all fantastic.
Day 3 Greenwich Village · Chelsea · High Line · SoHo · Little Italy

Museums, Greenwich Village & the High Line

Explore the neighborhoods that give NYC its soul — bohemian Greenwich Village, the elevated High Line park, foodie haven Chelsea Market, and a farewell dinner in Chinatown.

Morning

Greenwich Village Walking Tour

Greenwich Village is NYC's bohemian heart — the neighborhood of Bob Dylan, the Stonewall Inn, and Washington Square Park. Start at the iconic Washington Square Arch, watch street performers and NYU students in the park, then wander the tree-lined streets. Every block has character: comedy clubs, jazz bars, tiny bookshops, and some of the best food in the city.

📍 Start at Washington Square Park
💲 Free
⏰ 1.5-2 hours of wandering

Washington Square Park

The beating heart of the Village. The marble arch was built in 1892 to commemorate George Washington's inauguration. On any given day, you'll find jazz musicians, chess hustlers, dog walkers, and performance artists. It's the most New York scene that isn't a tourist attraction — it's just real city life happening.

📍 5th Avenue & Waverly Place
💲 Free
💡 The chess tables in the southwest corner are legendary — challenge a local if you dare
Breakfast
Buvette
A tiny, charming French-inspired gastronome in the West Village. The steamed eggs with herbs and the tartine (open-faced sandwich) are beautiful and delicious. The space is intimate — expect to wait on weekends, but it's worth it for the atmosphere alone.
📍 42 Grove Street, West Village · 💲 $15-25
Greenwich Village is best explored without a plan. Just walk. You'll stumble on something amazing every two blocks — a jazz club, a hidden garden, the best cookie you've ever had.— r/AskNYC
Afternoon

The High Line

This elevated park built on a former freight rail line is one of New York's best urban innovations. Walk the 1.45-mile path from the Meatpacking District to Hudson Yards, passing through gardens, public art installations, and architecture with views of the Hudson River and the city skyline. In April, the spring plantings are just starting to bloom.

📍 Enter at Gansevoort Street (south) or 34th Street (north)
💲 Free
⏰ 45-60 minutes end to end, more if you linger

Chelsea Market

A block-long food hall in a former Nabisco factory (where the Oreo was invented). Browse dozens of food vendors — from lobster rolls at The Lobster Place to tacos at Los Tacos No. 1. It's also a great spot to pick up souvenirs and gifts. The High Line entrance at 16th Street drops you right at the market.

📍 75 9th Avenue (between 15th and 16th Streets)
💲 $10-20 per person for food
💡 Los Tacos No. 1 is the standout — get the adobada or nopal taco

SoHo Exploring

Walk south from Chelsea Market through the cobblestone streets of SoHo — NYC's trendiest shopping district. The cast-iron architecture is beautiful even if you're not shopping. Prince Street and Broadway are the main drags, but duck into the side streets for galleries and independent boutiques.

📍 SoHo: roughly Houston to Canal, Broadway to 6th Ave
💲 Free to browse (your credit card may disagree)
💡 Prince Street Pizza's pepperoni square is famous for a reason
Lunch
Los Tacos No. 1 (Chelsea Market)
Authentic Mexican tacos that regularly top 'best tacos in NYC' lists. The corn tortillas are made fresh in front of you. The adobada (marinated pork) and the nopal (cactus) tacos are outstanding. Cash only, lines move fast.
📍 Chelsea Market, 75 9th Ave · 💲 $4-5 per taco
Chelsea Market on a Saturday is packed. Go early or on a weekday if you can. The food is great but the crowds can be overwhelming.— r/newyorkcity
The High Line is best walked south-to-north (Gansevoort → 34th) — you end at Hudson Yards which connects to the subway at 34th Street.
Evening

Little Italy & Chinatown

Walk through what remains of Little Italy (mostly Mulberry Street between Canal and Broome) — it's touristy but the atmosphere is fun for a stroll. Then cross Canal Street into Chinatown, which is vibrant, authentic, and packed with incredible food. The contrast between the two neighborhoods in the span of a block is fascinating.

📍 Mulberry Street (Little Italy) → Canal Street → Mott Street (Chinatown)
💲 Free to walk
💡 Little Italy is mostly for ambiance now — save your appetite for Chinatown

Final Night Out

For your last evening, pick your vibe: catch live jazz at Blue Note in Greenwich Village (classic NYC), grab cocktails at a speakeasy like Please Don't Tell (PDT) in the East Village (enter through a phone booth in a hot dog shop), or take in the Manhattan skyline one more time from the East River waterfront.

📍 Blue Note: 131 W 3rd St · PDT: 113 St Marks Place
💲 Blue Note: $20-40 cover + drinks · PDT: $16-20 per cocktail
💡 PDT requires a reservation on Resy — book ahead. It's worth the novelty.
Dinner
Wo Hop (Chinatown)
An underground Cantonese restaurant on Mott Street that's been open since 1938. Go downstairs (the upstairs location is different, less atmospheric). It's old-school, no-frills, cash-only NYC Chinatown at its most authentic. The chow fun and egg foo young are classics. Open until 4am.
📍 17 Mott Street (downstairs), Chinatown · 💲 $10-15 per dish
Chinatown is where you eat in that neighborhood, not Little Italy. Little Italy is a shell of what it was — Chinatown has the real food, the real energy, the real NYC.— r/FoodNYC
For a perfect NYC nightcap, grab a cheesecake from Eileen's Special Cheesecake in SoHo (17 Cleveland Place). Mini cheesecakes, incredible flavors, open late.

💰 Budget Breakdown

CategoryCostNotes
Accommodation (mid-range hotel)$150–250/nightMidtown or Lower Manhattan; book early for best rates
Subway (OMNY)$2.90/rideFree after 12 rides/week. Budget ~$15-20/day
Statue of Liberty ferry$24.50Book in advance at statuecruises.com
Top of the Rock$43Book sunset time slot online
9/11 Museum$29Allow 2+ hours
Metropolitan Museum of Art$30Pay-what-you-wish for NY/NJ/CT residents
Broadway show$60–200+TKTS booth for up to 50% off same-day
Food (per day)$40–80Dollar pizza to sit-down restaurants
Daily total estimate$150–300Excluding accommodation

🛬 Getting from the Airport

  • JFK: AirTrain to Jamaica Station, then E train to Manhattan (~60 min, $11.25 total)
  • LaGuardia: Free Q70 'LaGuardia Link' bus to subway (~60 min, $2.90)
  • Newark: AirTrain + NJ Transit to Penn Station (~45 min, ~$15)
  • Uber/Lyft from any airport runs $50-80+ with traffic — subway is almost always faster

🏨 Where to Stay

  • First-timers: stay in Midtown (Times Square/Hell's Kitchen area) for central subway access
  • Budget: Pod Hotels, Moxy NYC, HI New York City Hostel
  • Mid-range: Hyatt Place, citizenM, EVEN Hotels
  • Financial District is quieter and often cheaper, with easy subway to everywhere

🚕 Getting Around

  • The subway runs 24/7 and is your best friend — $2.90/ride with OMNY tap-to-pay
  • Citi Bike: $4.49/single ride or $20.49/day pass — faster than buses for crosstown trips
  • Walking is the best way to experience neighborhoods (budget 15,000-20,000 steps/day)
  • Avoid taxis/Ubers unless going between boroughs late at night

💡 Money-Saving Tips

  • NYC CityPASS ($146) covers 5 major attractions at ~40% off
  • Many museums have free/pay-what-you-wish hours (MoMA: Fridays 4-8pm)
  • Central Park, Brooklyn Bridge, the High Line, and Staten Island Ferry are all free
  • The Staten Island Ferry passes the Statue of Liberty — a free alternative if you're on a tight budget

🔒 Safety Tips

  • NYC is one of the safest large cities in the US — use common sense
  • Keep your phone secure on the subway, stay aware in crowded tourist areas
  • The subway is safe at all hours, though less crowded platforms at 2am can feel sketchy
  • Pickpocketing is rare but stay vigilant in Times Square and on packed trains

📅 Best Time to Visit

  • April-June and September-November are ideal — mild weather, fewer crowds
  • April: cherry blossoms in Central Park, pleasant 55-65°F
  • Summer (July-Aug): hot and humid, 85°F+, but rooftop bars are at their best
  • Winter: cold but holiday decorations (Nov-Dec) are magical. Avoid Christmas-New Year's week for crowds.

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