The 8 top spots in New York City every first-timer should hit — with addresses, subway directions, hours, ticket prices, and tips you'd only know if you've been.
New York City is the kind of place you've "seen in movies a thousand times" — but standing in Times Square for real still hits different. Skyscrapers piercing the sky, a Central Park bigger than some small cities, world-class museums, and Broadway shows that change your life. We curated 10 must-see spots for first-time NYC visitors, with addresses, Subway directions, and insider tips like best off-peak hours and which ticket bundle actually saves money.
Ranked by popularity and time-value — from world-class landmarks to corners locals love. Each spot includes address, transit, hours, and a tip.
🗽 Icon1
France's 1886 gift — Lady Liberty standing tall on an island in NYC harbor that you've seen in countless movies. Ferry from Battery Park; plan a full day if going up Pedestal/Crown (book months ahead) — or shoot it for free from the Staten Island Ferry.
🏙️ Observation2
1931 Art Deco icon, still NYC's most classic skyline view. 86th floor is open-air 360° · 102nd is glass-enclosed. If you pick one observatory, do Empire State at sunset and wait until the city lights up — worth every dollar.
🌳 Park3
3.4 sq km mid-city park (bigger than Monaco!) — lakes, meadows, classic stone bridges. Must-sees: Bow Bridge · Bethesda Terrace · The Mall · Strawberry Fields (John Lennon memorial). Rent a bike to loop it in half a day.
🌃 Icon4
Million-bulb signage, giant LED screens everywhere, 350,000 daily walkers — at least one visit to see why it's called "Crossroads of the World." Honestly meh by day, electric by night. The TKTS booth nearby sells discounted Broadway tickets (30–50% off).
🌉 Bridge5
1883 suspension bridge that became NYC's symbol. Walk from Manhattan to Brooklyn in ~30 min (1.8 km). Skyline views both ways stunning at sunrise and sunset. Brooklyn end drops you in DUMBO — indie neighborhood + legendary Grimaldi's pizza.
🕊️ Memorial6
9/11 Memorial on Ground Zero — two parts: Memorial (twin reflecting pools where towers stood · free) and Museum (underground · $33 ticket). It's heavy. Plan 2–3 hours for the museum.
🏛️ Museum7
The largest art museum in the Western Hemisphere · 2M+ works from Ancient Egypt to Impressionism. Honestly, a whole day isn't enough — pick 3 wings you care about. Egyptian wing (Temple of Dendur) and European Paintings are must-sees.
🎭 Show8
37 theaters on Broadway between 41st–53rd St — world-class musicals like Hamilton, Wicked, The Lion King, Aladdin. Premium seats $200–400, but TKTS Times Square booth gives 30–50% off day-of, and Rush Tickets go for $40–60 if you're lucky.
3–4 days for the 10 spots in this guide · 5–7 days if you want day trips and a more relaxed pace.
24/7 Subway is unbeatable in NYC
Budget $80–120/day (hostel + street food + free attractions) · Mid-range $200–300/day (3-star hotel + casual restaurants + 2 attractions) · Luxury $500+/day
May–June and Sep–Oct have the best weather · skip Jan–Feb (snow)
Central Park · MET (free for kids) · Statue of Liberty ferry
New York City is one of the most rewarding US cities for international visitors — a mix of history, art, food, and culture that lives up to the hype. Every attraction in this guide is curated from real traveler reviews and verified by the Wherebest team to be accurate for 2026.
If you haven't sorted accommodations yet, check our full New York City travel guide covering neighborhoods, recommended restaurants, and pre-trip prep — or start by booking a hotel in the neighborhood closest to the attractions you most want to see to maximize your time each day.
Open our full New York City travel guide for accommodations, food, and planning — or book a hotel in the neighborhood closest to the attractions you want to visit most.