An hour-by-hour plan — Coca-Cola + Georgia Aquarium · MLK Center + High Museum + BeltLine · a Stone Mountain day trip · with Southern soul food and a total budget, built for your first time in Atlanta.
Honestly, a lot of people only pass through Atlanta because it's "the world's busiest airport" — but this is the heart of the American South, home to the World of Coca-Cola (the soda was born here), the Georgia Aquarium (the largest in the Western Hemisphere), the birthplace of Martin Luther King Jr., and Stone Mountain — a giant granite dome. Three days is the sweet spot: all the in-city icons plus a full day-trip out of town.
Each stop notes how to get there (MARTA/Uber/walk) and the cost — Atlanta is a car city, so getting around mixes MARTA + Uber.
A museum telling the story of the world's most famous soda (born in Atlanta in 1886) — the secret formula in a vault, a working bottling line, and the highlight Taste It! room where you sample 100+ flavors from around the world (a strange Italian sweet vs Japanese Coke). Ticket $20, allow 1.5-2 hours. Right next to the Aquarium at Pemberton Place.
🎟️ See Atlanta tickets →The largest aquarium in the Western Hemisphere — the highlight is the whale sharks (the only place in America with them) in a 6.3-million-gallon tank + manta rays + beluga whales + a dolphin show. Ticket $40-45 (cheaper online + skip the line), allow 2.5-3 hours. A standout for families.
Lunch at the Sweet Auburn Curb Market (a food hall since 1924 — Grindhouse burgers / soul food) or The Varsity (the world's largest drive-in, chili dogs since 1928). Walk Centennial Olympic Park, built for the 1996 Olympics — the Fountain of Rings where kids run through the water.
The CNN Studio Tour closed permanently (2024), but you can photograph the HQ exterior. Then ride SkyView Atlanta, a 200-foot Ferris wheel by Centennial Park ($16), for a city view. Or the College Football Hall of Fame ($25) if you're into sports.
A Midtown institution since 1945 — fried chicken + collard greens + mac & cheese + cornbread + sweet tea, with real Southern hospitality ($25-35). Alternative: Busy Bee Cafe (soul food MLK used to eat). Finish with peach cobbler.
The Sweet Auburn neighborhood, Dr. King's birthplace — visit the Birth Home (free, reserve a same-morning walk-in slot), Ebenezer Baptist Church (where he preached), the King Center + the tombs of Dr. King & Coretta beside a reflecting pool. All free, allow 2-2.5 hours — the most important civil-rights site in America.
The Southeast's leading art museum — a bright white Richard Meier building. Collections of American + European art + folk art + photography. Ticket $18, allow 1.5-2 hours. Part of the Woodruff Arts Center next to Midtown.
A hip food hall in the old Sears building (1926) on the BeltLine — pick Hop's Chicken (Nashville hot chicken), W.H. Stiles Fish Camp (Southern seafood), Botiwalla (Indian). Go up to Skyline Park on the roof (a rooftop carnival + city views, $10).
Walk or rent a bike on the Atlanta BeltLine — an old railway turned into a 22-mile walking-cycling loop around the city. The Eastside Trail (Ponce City → Piedmont Park) is the famous stretch with murals + art installations + craft breweries. Enter Piedmont Park, Atlanta's central park, for the best skyline view.
Dinner at Fox Bros Bar-B-Q (Atlanta-style BBQ brisket + ribs $25-35) or Krog Street Market (an alternative food hall). Finish with craft beer at New Realm Brewing (a rooftop on the BeltLine) or Monday Night Brewing. The Old Fourth Ward has a great evening vibe.
Uber ~$35-45 (40 minutes) or drive to Stone Mountain, east of the city — the largest single mass of exposed granite in the world (825 feet above the plain). Parking is $20/day (if you drive). Buy an Adventure Pass at $40 for the rides, or enter free and hike it yourself.
Two ways up: the Summit Skyride cable car ($16 round trip, 5 minutes) or the 1-mile Walk-Up Trail (45 minutes to 1 hour, fairly steep, free). The summit gives a 360° view of the Atlanta skyline + the Appalachian foothills. It's windy up top — bring a layer.
Lunch in the park (the Memorial Hall café or The Marketplace). Explore — the Scenic Railroad circles the mountain (5 miles, $16), Historic Square (19th-century homes), or a walk around the lake. Big picnic lawns. Note: the bas-relief carving on the cliff face (a Confederate memorial) is a historically contested site.
Uber back to Downtown/Midtown ~$35-45. Drop bags at the hotel + freshen up. If you have energy left, stop at Jackson Street Bridge (the most famous Atlanta skyline photo spot — the angle from The Walking Dead) at golden hour.
Finish with international food on Buford Highway (Atlanta's best immigrant strip — Korean/Vietnamese/Mexican/Chinese, delicious and cheap $15-25), or fine dining in Midtown at Bones / Aria. Cap it with a rooftop at Nikolai's Roof or Polaris (the revolving dome over Atlanta).
Estimated from the plan above · hotel costs assume a shared double room (split by 2) · excludes flights.
* Atlanta is roughly 35-45% cheaper than NYC, especially on hotels. To save more: stay in Decatur/East Atlanta or a hostel for 40% less. MLK Center + Centennial Park + the BeltLine + Piedmont Park are free to walk. Flights not included.
Click a pin to see which day each stop falls on.
This plan stays in Downtown/Midtown both nights — Wherebest has hand-picked hotels near MARTA + the attractions, with prices compared across 3 sites.