New Orleans 7-Day Itinerary — Quick Answer
As of 2026- Trip length
- 7 days
- Est. cost / person (mid, ex-flights)
- $2,100,000
- Budget–luxury
- $1,040,000–$3,860,000
As of 2026, the recommended New Orleans 7-day route runs Day1 French Quarter + Café du Monde + jazz · Day2 Garden District + Commander's + Preservation Hall · Day3 WWII Museum + Swamp + Steamboat · Day4 Oak Alley + Whitney Plantation + Galatoire's · Day5 Bywater + Treme + Willie Mae's + Cochon · Day6 Cajun Country (Lafayette + Breaux Bridge + Vermillionville zydeco) · Day7 Baton Rouge (Louisiana State Capitol + USS Kidd + LSU) + MSY departure, grouping the must-see sights with minimal backtracking. Estimated cost per person (excluding flights) is around $2,100,000 on a mid-range budget. Days 1-5 = the 5-day core (French Quarter + Garden District + WWII Museum + Plantations + Treme/Bywater). Day 6 = Cajun Country day trip (Lafayette + Breaux Bridge + Vermillionville living history museum + Cajun lunch with zydeco). Day 7 = Baton Rouge (Louisiana State Capitol tallest in US + USS Kidd WWII destroyer + LSU campus) + MSY airport departure.
7-Day Total Budget at a Glance
Budget
$1,040,000
Per person, flights excl.
Mid-Range
$2,100,000
Per person, flights excl.
Luxury
$3,860,000
Per person, flights excl.
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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule
French Quarter + Café du Monde + jazz
French QuarterActivities
- 09:00 Café du Monde (1862, 24/7) breakfast — beignets + chicory café au lait 1 hour
The 1862-founded institution at Decatur + St Ann, across from Jackson Square. Three powdered-sugar beignets ($4.99) + chicory café au lait ($3.79). 24/7/365 open except Christmas. Best 07:00-10:00 (locals' breakfast hour, no queue) or 23:00-02:00 (no queue + magic). Avoid 11:00-15:00 = 30-60 min tourist line.
Cost: $8 with tax TIP: Cash speeds the order (dedicated cash line). Don't wear black (sugar leaves permanent marks). Don't inhale before biting (sugar in lungs is real). Only the French Market flagship is the real one — airport/casino branches are franchises. - 10:30 French Quarter walking — Jackson Square + St Louis Cathedral + Royal Street 3 hours
The 1718 colonial grid preserved as a 13×6-block walkable core. Start at Jackson Square (free street artists, tarot readers, horse-drawn carriages), enter St Louis Cathedral (1727, oldest US continuously active Catholic cathedral, free, daily 8:30-16:00). Walk Royal Street north to Esplanade for the elegant art-gallery + antique side of the Quarter — quieter than Bourbon.
Cost: Free; carriage tours $20-25 TIP: Morning 9-11 AM is best (cool + no crowds). Royal Street 300-400 blocks for galleries + buskers. Cornstalk Hotel (915 Royal) + Lalaurie Mansion (1140 Royal) are signature photo stops. Cobblestones — wear sneakers. - 13:30 Lunch at Coop's Place (Cajun, locals' #1) 1.5 hours
French Quarter Cajun canonical at 1109 Decatur — cash only + 21+ (no kids ever). The Coop's Taste Plate ($16) samples 5 dishes (rabbit + sausage jambalaya, Cajun fried chicken, smothered rabbit, crawfish étouffée, red beans + rice). 50% cheaper than tourist Quarter restaurants.
Cost: $16-30 TIP: Cash only. 21+ only. Counter seating; queue 30-45 min Fri-Sat dinner but faster at lunch. Order the rabbit + sausage jambalaya — best in the Quarter. - 15:30 Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop (1722, oldest US bar) + Pat O'Brien's Hurricane 2 hours
Walk 6 blocks north to 941 Bourbon for Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop — built 1722, the oldest continuously operating bar in the United States. Candlelit + no electric lights. Order a Voodoo Daiquiri ($12). Then walk back to Pat O'Brien's (718 St Peter, 1933) for the Hurricane cocktail invented here in the 1940s — $15 in the hurricane-lamp glass.
Cost: $25-40 in drinks TIP: 21+ photo ID. Lafitte's atmosphere best after dark (candles). Pat O'Brien's St Peter Street patio with fire fountain is the canonical photo. Hurricane is sweet — order 1, not 3 (5+ oz rum). - 18:00 Carousel Bar pre-dinner cocktail (Hotel Monteleone) 1 hour
Walk to Hotel Monteleone (214 Royal). The Carousel Bar (1949) is the world's first rotating bar — 25-seat circular merry-go-round completing one rotation every 15 minutes. Order the Vieux Carré cocktail (invented here 1937, $16, rye + cognac + sweet vermouth + Bénédictine + Peychaud's). Literary lore: Faulkner, Hemingway, Capote, Tennessee Williams.
Cost: $16-22 TIP: Bar seats are the experience — wait 15-30 min weekend evenings. Hotel lobby open to non-guests. Vieux Carré is the bar's signature; Sazerac is the second pick. Free piano lobby music most evenings. - 19:30 Dinner at Antoine's (1840, oldest US family restaurant) 2.5 hours
Walk to Antoine's (713 St Louis, 1840) — the oldest continuously family-run restaurant in the United States, now in its 5th generation. Order Oysters Rockefeller (invented here 1899, recipe still a Foucauld family secret, $16), Pompano en Papillote, soufflé potatoes, Baked Alaska. 14 historic dining rooms across one French Quarter block.
Cost: $80-150 per person TIP: Reservation 2-4 weeks ahead. Jacket required for men at dinner. Request the 1840 Room (original). Try the 25¢ classic-cocktail lunch special at lunch if you'd rather lighten the bill. Alternate pick: Brennan's (1946, $80-120) for Bananas Foster invented 1951. - 22:00 Frenchmen Street live jazz (Marigny) — Spotted Cat + dba + Three Muses 2.5 hours
10-min walk east from Jackson Square along Decatur into the Marigny neighborhood. 4 blocks with 12+ live-music venues. Spotted Cat (623 Frenchmen, no cover, traditional jazz), Snug Harbor (626 Frenchmen, modern jazz $25-35), dba (618 Frenchmen, eclectic, no cover most nights), Three Muses (536 Frenchmen, jazz + small plates).
Cost: Free entry most; $5-15 drinks; $5-10 tip jar per band TIP: Best after 21:00 when second sets begin. Cash $20 in singles for tip jars. The real-deal jazz Bourbon Street pretends to be. Walk back in a group after 23:00.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Café du Monde (1862, beignets + chicory)
French Quarter / French Market · $5-8
The 1862 NOLA institution — 3 beignets + chicory café au lait + sugar everywhere.
Lunch
Coop's Place (Cajun, locals' #1)
French Quarter · $16-30
Cash only + 21+. Coop's Taste Plate samples 5 Cajun classics — rabbit-sausage jambalaya is the order.
Dinner
Antoine's (1840) or Brennan's (1946)
French Quarter · $80-150
Antoine's for the oldest US family restaurant + Oysters Rockefeller invented here, or Brennan's for the Bananas Foster tableside flambé.
All Day 1 sites walking inside French Quarter + Frenchmen Street 10-min walk east. No transit needed. Uber back from Frenchmen to hotel after 23:00 = $7-10.
DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Garden District + Commander's + Preservation Hall
Garden DistrictActivities
- 09:30 St Charles Streetcar (1835, world's oldest) — Canal Street to Garden District 45 min
Board at Canal + Carondelet ($1.25 one-way, or $3 Jazzy Pass day-pass on the RTA Le Pass app). 50-minute end-to-end ride to Audubon Park; get off at Washington Avenue (35 min) for the heart of the Garden District. The 1835 line is the world's oldest continuously operating streetcar. Sit on the right (outbound) for the best mansion views.
Cost: $1.25 / $3 day pass TIP: Buy Jazzy Pass on the RTA Le Pass app before boarding (saves coin fumbling). Pull cord at the stop before yours (drivers don't auto-announce). Service runs 24/7. - 10:30 Garden District walking — Anne Rice mansion + Sandra Bullock + 1830s antebellum 2 hours
1832-platted neighborhood of Greek Revival + Italianate antebellum mansions. Anne Rice's 'Witching Hour' setting + her actual former home at 1239 First Street. Sandra Bullock (2425 Coliseum), John Goodman, Trent Reznor (2727 Coliseum) still own homes here. Self-guided walk: 1st Street + 3rd Street + Prytania (3 hours covers it).
Cost: Free; guided tours $25-35 TIP: Best mornings 10-12. Pair with Garden District Book Shop (2727 Prytania) for the literary stop. Take Magazine Street parallel for boutique shopping after. - 12:30 Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 guided tour (1833 above-ground tombs) 1 hour
1833 above-ground tomb cemetery a block from Commander's Palace — Anne Rice set 'Interview with the Vampire' burial scenes here, her own family tomb is the most-visited. Closed for restoration 2020-2024, reopened with guided-tour-only access via Save Our Cemeteries (the preservation nonprofit, proceeds fund restoration).
Cost: $20-30 guided tour TIP: Book Save Our Cemeteries 1-2 weeks ahead. Modest dress (cemetery). Do not touch tombs or leave Xs (vandalism is why it closed). Tour ends right at Commander's Palace front door. - 13:30 Commander's Palace (1893) Sunday jazz brunch + 25¢ martinis 2.5 hours
1893-founded turquoise Victorian mansion — Brennan family flagship since 1974, James Beard Outstanding Restaurant 1996 + 2018. Sat-Sun jazz brunch with table-side trio. 25¢ martini lunch special (3 limit). Order turtle soup au sherry, pecan-crusted Gulf fish, bread pudding soufflé.
Cost: $50-80 brunch (vs $80-150 dinner) TIP: Reservation 4-8 weeks ahead (Sun brunch books out monthly). Smart-casual; jacket suggested after 18:00. Request the Garden Room (courtyard view). Lunch is the value play — same menu, 30-40% cheaper than dinner. - 16:30 Magazine Street boutique walk + Sucré macarons 2 hours
Walk down Magazine Street 6 miles of pre-Civil War shotgun shops + Italianate storefronts + 500+ boutiques, antiques, art galleries, cafés. Best stretches: 2800-3700 (Garden District boutiques) and 4500-5500 (Audubon area antiques). Stop at Sucré (3025 Magazine) for the city's best macarons ($3 each).
Cost: $15-50 in shopping + treats TIP: Magazine Street bus #11 runs the length back to Canal ($1.25). Coquette (2800 Magazine) is the chef-driven Southern alternative for late lunch. Boutique stores 10:00-18:00 most days. - 19:00 Casual dinner at Mother's (1938) — debris po'boy + jambalaya 1.5 hours
Streetcar back to CBD or 15-min walk. Mother's Restaurant (401 Poydras, 1938) — the canonical debris po'boy ($14, slow-cooked beef in gravy on French bread) + jambalaya + red beans + rice. CBD walking-distance casual after Commander's.
Cost: $14-25 TIP: Cafeteria-style queue moves fast (30 min standard). Cash + card OK. Mother's has been a NOLA institution since 1938 — Anthony Bourdain-approved. Alternative: Acme Oyster House (724 Iberville) for chargrilled oysters. - 21:30 Preservation Hall (1961, traditional NOLA jazz) 1 hour set
Tiny 100-seat candlelit hall at 726 St Peter (French Quarter) — founded 1961 specifically to keep traditional New Orleans jazz alive. No drinks served, no AC, hard wooden benches. 45-min sets at 17:00, 18:00, 20:00, 21:00, 22:00 nightly with rotating Preservation Hall Jazz Band lineups.
Cost: $25-50 advance online TIP: Book the 17:00 or 18:00 set online 1-2 weeks ahead (smaller crowd) or the 21:00 set for after-dinner. Walk-up line forms 60+ min before show. Phones off, no talking. The most authentic jazz hour in America.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel breakfast or Cafe Beignet (Royal St)
French Quarter · $5-15
Light breakfast before the streetcar — save room for Commander's Palace brunch.
Lunch
Commander's Palace (1893) Sunday jazz brunch
Garden District · $50-80
1893 Brennan family flagship + 25¢ martinis + jazz trio + turtle soup canonical.
Dinner
Mother's (1938) — debris po'boy + jambalaya
CBD / Poydras Street · $14-25
1938 cafeteria-style classic — debris po'boy + jambalaya casual after Commander's brunch.
Day 2: St Charles Streetcar $3 Jazzy Pass day-pass covers both directions. Magazine Street walking + bus #11 back. Preservation Hall walking from CBD (15 min).
DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
WWII Museum + Swamp + Steamboat
WWII + SwampActivities
- 09:00 National WWII Museum opening (TripAdvisor #1 US museum) 5 hours
TripAdvisor + USA Today #1 US museum since 2018. 5 pavilions covering Pacific, European, Home Front, Road to Berlin, Road to Tokyo. Founder Stephen Ambrose chose New Orleans because the Higgins Boats used at D-Day were built here. Free shuttle from French Quarter (Decatur St every hour).
Cost: $35.50 + $7 4D film; 2-day pass $40 (best deal) TIP: Buy the 2-day pass ($40, only $4.50 more) — 1 day rushes it. Beyond All Boundaries 4D film at 10:00 or 13:30 essential. Final Mission USS Tang submarine simulation +$7. Liberation Pavilion (2023) is the new must-do. - 14:00 Lunch at American Sector (Emeril Lagasse, on-site) 1 hour
Museum's on-site restaurant by Emeril Lagasse. Pulled-pork po'boy $14, gumbo $12, fried chicken sandwich $16. Avoid leaving the museum complex — you'll lose 1+ hour to walking.
Cost: $20-30 TIP: Outside dining seasonal. Beat 12:30-13:30 lunch crowd by eating at 14:00. - 15:30 Honey Island Swamp tour (alligators + Spanish moss + Cypress) 4 hours total with transit
Pre-booked Honey Island Swamp tour with hotel pickup (Cajun Encounters $50-70). 45 min east of NOLA. 90-min flatboat with Cajun guide. Alligators (3-10 sightings average), herons, snapping turtles, Spanish-moss-draped Cypress swamp.
Cost: $50-80 with hotel pickup TIP: March-October is peak (gators sluggish below 16°C). Bring sunscreen, hat, DEET bug spray. Long sleeves. Don't dangle fingers in water. Hotel pickup is the simple way. - 20:00 Steamboat Natchez sunset dinner cruise (Mississippi + Dixieland jazz) 2 hours
Last authentic Mississippi sternwheeler (built 1975) — 2-hour sunset cruise from Toulouse Street Wharf with live Dukes of Dixieland jazz, Creole buffet, Calliope steam organ pre-departure concert (audible across the French Quarter).
Cost: $90-130 dinner cruise TIP: Reservation 1-2 weeks ahead. Board 15 min before departure. Walk 10 min from Jackson Square. Sunset cruise is the honeymoon pick over the day cruises. Alternate cheaper option: Acme Oyster + Frenchmen Street final jazz walk. - 23:00 Final Café du Monde + Mississippi Riverfront walk 45 min
Walk back to Café du Monde for the final 23:00 beignet visit (no queue at this hour) + sit on the Moonwalk steps facing the Mississippi for one last NOLA moment.
Cost: $8 TIP: 23:00 is the quietest Café du Monde hour. Moonwalk is the official name of the riverside promenade. Steamboat Natchez's calliope concert may still be audible if you pause to listen.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel breakfast or Cafe Beignet
French Quarter · $5-15
Quick before the WWII Museum opening at 09:00.
Lunch
American Sector (Emeril Lagasse, inside WWII Museum)
Warehouse District · $20-30
Don't leave the museum complex — Emeril's on-site restaurant covers lunch in 1 hour.
Dinner
Steamboat Natchez sunset dinner cruise (Dixieland jazz)
Mississippi River / Toulouse Street Wharf · $90-130
Last authentic Mississippi sternwheeler + Creole buffet + live jazz — the canonical NOLA farewell.
Day 3: WWII Museum 15-min walk from French Quarter (or free shuttle from Decatur every hour). Swamp tour hotel pickup included. Steamboat Natchez boards at Toulouse Street Wharf (walk from Jackson Square 10 min).
DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Oak Alley + Whitney Plantation + Galatoire's
Plantation dayActivities
- 08:00 Pre-booked plantation tour pickup (Oak Alley + Whitney combo) 1.5 hours drive
Combo tour pickup from French Quarter hotel. 90-min drive west on I-10 to River Road. Plantations were sugar economy on the Mississippi River; River Road has 17 surviving plantation houses.
Cost: $120-180 combo tour incl pickup TIP: Book combo tour (Cajun Encounters, Gray Line) 1-2 weeks ahead. Tours combine both for 8-9 hour day. DIY rental car = $80-120 for both + gas, but tour easier. - 10:00 Oak Alley Plantation (1837 Greek Revival + 28-oak alley canopy) 2 hours
1837 Greek Revival sugar plantation on River Road. Iconic 28-oak alley canopy planted 1700s by an earlier settler. Filmed locations for 'Interview with the Vampire', Beyoncé's 'Déjà Vu' video, and 'Twelve Years a Slave'. Enslaved-people exhibit added 2014 contextualizes the antebellum aesthetic.
Cost: $25 self-tour included in combo TIP: The classic oak-alley shot is from the river-side levee looking back at the house. Big House tour is 25 min; allow 60+ min for the enslaved-people exhibit + grounds. - 12:30 Lunch — plantation café or on-tour stop 1 hour
Most combo tours include a Cajun lunch stop ($15-25). Oak Alley's own restaurant serves jambalaya, gumbo, po'boys. Eat before Whitney (Whitney's pace is emotionally heavy + you won't want to eat after).
Cost: $15-25 TIP: Hydrate (River Road is hot + humid + outdoor). - 14:00 Whitney Plantation (the only US plantation told from the enslaved peoples' perspective) 2 hours
Opened 2014 by attorney John Cummings on $8M of his own money — the only US plantation museum focused entirely on the lives of the enslaved. 90-minute walking tour through first-person narratives + memorial walls + the church + slave cabins still standing. Most emotionally heavy day of your NOLA trip.
Cost: $35 included in combo TIP: Pair with Oak Alley the same day for the contrast in narratives — Whitney shows what Oak Alley sanitizes. Capacity-limited 75 per tour (combo tours reserve). Skip kids under 12. - 17:30 Return drive to French Quarter (1.5 hours) 1.5 hours
Plantation tours typically return 17:00-18:30 to French Quarter hotels.
Cost: Included in tour TIP: Nap option for the drive back — the day is heavy. - 19:30 Galatoire's (1905) French Creole dinner — Friday lunch is a local ritual 2.5 hours
Galatoire's at 209 Bourbon (1905) is the canonical French Creole institution. Friday lunch (no reservation accepted for 1st floor — line forms 09:00 with locals' families holding spots all morning, 4-hour ritual). Dinner Tue-Sat reservation-friendly. Order shrimp rémoulade, Trout Meunière Amandine, soufflé potatoes, crème brûlée.
Cost: $60-120 TIP: Dinner reservation 2nd floor 1-2 weeks ahead. Jacket required for men at dinner. The 1st-floor Friday lunch line is a local-culture experience worth knowing about but hard to crash as a tourist.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel breakfast (early tour pickup)
French Quarter · $5-15
Quick before 08:00 plantation tour pickup.
Lunch
Oak Alley plantation café or on-tour Cajun stop
River Road / Oak Alley · $15-25
Eat before Whitney — heavy emotional pace afterward.
Dinner
Galatoire's (1905) French Creole canon
French Quarter / Bourbon Street · $60-120
Order Trout Meunière Amandine + shrimp rémoulade + the soufflé potatoes.
Day 4: Plantation tour with hotel pickup (round-trip 3h driving). Walking + Uber for evening Galatoire's.
DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Bywater + Treme + Willie Mae's + Cochon
Bywater + TremeActivities
- 09:30 Bywater walk — colorful shotgun houses + Crescent Park Mississippi-front 2 hours
Uber 10 min east from French Quarter to Bywater (artist + LGBTQ+ neighborhood of pastel shotgun houses). Walk Royal Street + Dauphine Street for the iconic photo-perfect colorful houses. End at Crescent Park (Piety Street entrance) — the new 1.4-mile Mississippi-front linear park with the Rusty Rainbow bridge.
Cost: Uber $8 + free walking TIP: Best mornings 9-11 for soft light on pastel houses. Crescent Park is free + uncrowded weekday mornings. Daytime only solo (Bywater quiet at night). - 11:30 Bywater brunch at Bacchanal Wine (courtyard live music) 1.5 hours
Bacchanal Wine (600 Poland Ave, Bywater) — wine shop + back-courtyard restaurant with live jazz nightly + brunch Sat-Sun 11:00-15:00. Order the cheese plate ($28 picks 4 cheeses from 100+ options) + a glass of natural wine. Anthony Bourdain favorite.
Cost: $25-50 TIP: First-come courtyard seating. Cash + card OK. Live music starts ~14:00 Sat-Sun. Alternative: Pizza Delicious (617 Piety) for $4 NY-style slice. - 13:30 Willie Mae's Scotch House (Treme, 1957, America's Best Fried Chicken) 1.5 hours including queue
Uber 10 min to Treme. 1957 soul-food cabin — three-time James Beard 'America's Classic' winner + Food Network 'America's Best Fried Chicken' + Anthony Bourdain's go-to NOLA spot. Brined + dredged + cast-iron-skillet fried. $20-30 for 3-piece + red beans + cornbread.
Cost: $20-30 TIP: Uber both ways ($10 each way — do NOT walk after dark). Queue 45 min standard; doors open 11:00 so arrive 10:45 or 13:00 for the second wave. Cash + card. Family-style sharing (one bird = 4 people). - 15:30 Louis Armstrong Park + Congo Square (Treme jazz roots) 1.5 hours
10-min walk from Willie Mae's to Louis Armstrong Park — 32-acre park at the edge of Treme honoring NOLA's most famous son. Congo Square inside is the actual spot where enslaved Africans were allowed to gather Sundays in the 1700s-1800s to drum, dance and trade, planting the roots of jazz, blues, gospel, and rock.
Cost: Free TIP: Daytime only (Treme blocks one street over can get rough). Sunday Congo Square drum circles 15:00-19:00 are free + open mic. Pair with the New Orleans Jazz Museum 1.2 km away ($8) if you have time. - 17:30 Final Café du Monde beignets + French Market walk 1.5 hours
Uber back to French Quarter. Final 30-min Café du Monde visit + walk the 200-year-old French Market (1791) for souvenirs.
Cost: $10-30 souvenirs TIP: French Market open 09:00-18:00 daily. Souvenir mix of trinkets + actual local crafts (Mardi Gras masks, voodoo dolls, hot sauces). - 19:30 Farewell dinner at Cochon (Donald Link Cajun) + final Frenchmen jazz walk 3 hours
Cochon (930 Tchoupitoulas, Warehouse District) — James Beard winner Donald Link's whole-hog Cajun farmhouse. Order the Louisiana cochon de lait + boudin balls + Boucherie meat plate. Walk to Frenchmen Street for the final 1-hour jazz set after dinner.
Cost: $70-110 TIP: Reservation 1-2 weeks ahead. Don't over-eat — leave room for Frenchmen Street one last band visit. Walk back to hotel in groups after 23:00.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Bacchanal Wine (Bywater courtyard brunch)
Bywater · $25-50
Cheese plate + natural wine + live jazz courtyard — Anthony Bourdain favorite.
Lunch
Willie Mae's Scotch House (Treme fried chicken)
Treme · $20-30
1957 James Beard America's Classic — best fried chicken in America.
Dinner
Cochon (Donald Link Cajun) + Frenchmen Street jazz walk
Warehouse District + Marigny · $70-110
James Beard Cajun farmhouse + cochon de lait + boudin balls before final Frenchmen jazz set.
Day 5: Bywater Uber out + walk + Treme Uber roundtrip (do NOT walk Treme after dark). Final Cochon walking from French Quarter. Final Frenchmen 10-min walk.
DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Cajun Country (Lafayette + Breaux Bridge + Vermillionville zydeco)
Cajun Country day tripActivities
- 08:00 Drive to Lafayette (2 hours I-10 west) or pre-booked Cajun Country tour 2 hours drive
Cajun Country = the Acadian-French region of southwest Louisiana centered on Lafayette. The actual home of Cajun culture (vs French-Spanish Creole NOLA). Rental car easier ($60-90/day + gas) than the few available tours. 2-hour drive each way on I-10 west.
Cost: $80-120 rental + gas TIP: Avoid Friday afternoon return traffic. Music tip: tune to KRVS 88.7 Lafayette for Cajun + zydeco radio on the drive. - 10:30 Vermillionville Living History Museum (Acadian + Creole + Native American) 2 hours
23-acre living-history museum on Bayou Vermilion in Lafayette. Costumed interpreters demonstrate 1765-1890 Acadian + Creole + Native American crafts (blacksmithing, weaving, boat-building, cooking). Sunday afternoon zydeco dance is the highlight if you can time it.
Cost: $10-15 adult TIP: Sun 13:00-16:00 free zydeco dance with live band — the canonical Cajun cultural experience. Combo with Acadian Cultural Center next door (free, NPS site). - 13:00 Lunch at Prejean's (Cajun seafood + live Cajun music daily) 1.5 hours
Prejean's at 3480 NE Evangeline Thruway, Lafayette — Cajun seafood + live Cajun band daily 19:00-22:00 (lunch is quieter). Order crawfish étouffée, fried alligator, blackened catfish.
Cost: $25-40 TIP: Lunch quieter than dinner. Try the boudin appetizer ($8) as a Cajun-rice-sausage primer. - 15:00 Breaux Bridge — 'Crawfish Capital of the World' + St Martin Parish 1.5 hours
20-min drive east to Breaux Bridge (population 8,000, official 'Crawfish Capital of the World'). Walk Main Street antique shops + the iconic Café Des Amis closed since 2014 (still photogenic exterior). Crawfish boil culture peaks March-May.
Cost: Free walking + shopping discretionary TIP: Saturday Zydeco Breakfast at Buck & Johnny's Pizzeria (07:30-10:30) is the local-culture must-do if your Day 6 is Saturday. Crawfish boils March-May only. - 17:00 Return drive to French Quarter (2 hours) 2 hours
I-10 east back to NOLA. Hits NOLA 19:00-19:30 for late dinner.
Cost: Included in rental TIP: Stop at Cajun Crackers or Atchafalaya Basin Welcome Center on I-10 westbound (mile marker 121, free) for the iconic basin photo. - 20:30 Late dinner at Bayona (Susan Spicer, French Quarter chef-driven) 2 hours
Bayona at 430 Dauphine — Chef Susan Spicer (one of NOLA's founding female celebrity chefs, James Beard winner). 1830s Creole cottage. Order the cream of garlic soup (signature since opening), grilled duck breast, lemongrass shrimp.
Cost: $60-100 TIP: Reservation 1-2 weeks ahead. Quieter dinner after a long day of driving + zydeco.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel breakfast (early start)
French Quarter · $5-15
Quick before 08:00 Cajun Country drive.
Lunch
Prejean's (Lafayette Cajun seafood + music)
Lafayette · $25-40
Crawfish étouffée + fried alligator + boudin appetizer.
Dinner
Bayona (Susan Spicer chef-driven)
French Quarter · $60-100
Cream of garlic soup signature + grilled duck breast.
Day 6: Rental car ($80-120/day + gas) — 4 hours total driving I-10 west + east. Music tip KRVS 88.7 Cajun radio.
DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Baton Rouge (Louisiana State Capitol + USS Kidd + LSU) + MSY departure
Baton Rouge + departureActivities
- 08:30 Drive to Baton Rouge (1.5h I-10 west) — Louisiana State Capitol 2 hours including drive
1.5-hour drive west of NOLA on I-10. Park downtown at the Louisiana State Capitol — 1932 art deco, 34 floors, 137m tall, the tallest US state capitol building. Built by populist governor Huey Long (assassinated here 1935). Free observation deck on the 27th floor (must-do).
Cost: $60-100 rental + gas / Greyhound $25 one-way alternative TIP: Free observation deck 09:00-16:00 daily. Huey Long was assassinated in the marble basement corridor (a guide point on tours). - 11:30 USS Kidd Veterans Museum (WWII destroyer on Mississippi) 1.5 hours
Permanently moored USS Kidd Fletcher-class destroyer (1943-1964) — fought at Iwo Jima + Okinawa + the kamikaze hit that killed 38 sailors. Self-tour the entire ship + Veterans Museum onshore.
Cost: $15 ship + museum combo TIP: Best for WWII history buffs who weren't satisfied by the NOLA WWII Museum. Combo with Louisiana State Capitol = 4 hours in downtown Baton Rouge. - 13:30 Lunch at Tony's Seafood Market & Deli (Baton Rouge local institution) 1 hour
Tony's at 5215 Plank Road — 60-year Baton Rouge institution + the city's largest seafood market. Hot fried catfish + boiled crawfish (March-July) + sausage links. Lunch counter inside. $15-25.
Cost: $15-25 TIP: Avoid 12:00-13:00 lunch rush. Cash + card. - 15:00 Return drive to French Quarter + check-out + MSY airport drop-off 3.5 hours
1.5h drive back to NOLA + hotel check-out + 30-min Uber/Lyft to MSY airport. Allow 3+ hours before international flight check-in (Korean ICN-bound flights typically depart MSY 17:00-21:00 connecting through ATL/DFW/LAX).
Cost: $60-100 rental + $30-40 Uber to airport TIP: Return rental at MSY (most agencies have airport drop-off). TSA security at MSY runs 30-60 min during the 17:00-19:00 international departure rush. - 19:30 MSY airport departure (connections via ATL/DFW/LAX to ICN) Airport + flight
Most ICN-bound flights from NOLA depart MSY 17:00-21:00 with 1-stop connection. Total travel time 18-22 hours back to Seoul.
Cost: $700-1,300 economy from US east coast hubs TIP: Pre-book Lounge access (Priority Pass) if connecting through ATL (4+ hour layover common). Hydrate + walking on long layovers.
Meal Recommendations
Breakfast
Hotel breakfast (early start)
French Quarter · $5-15
Quick before 08:30 Baton Rouge drive.
Lunch
Tony's Seafood Market & Deli (Baton Rouge institution)
Baton Rouge · $15-25
60-year Baton Rouge classic — fried catfish + boiled crawfish (Mar-Jul).
Dinner
MSY airport meal or in-flight
MSY Airport · $15-30
Quick airport meal before international flight.
Day 7: Rental car ($60-100 + gas) to Baton Rouge round-trip + Uber/Lyft to MSY airport ($30-40). Allow 3+ hours airport buffer for international flight.
DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)
Book New Orleans Tours & Tickets
Packing Checklist
- ✓ Type A/B US plug adapter (110-120V) — different from EU/UK/AU 220-240V
- ✓ Light breathable layers (NOLA is humid subtropical year-round; 73-81% humidity Jun-Sep)
- ✓ Compact umbrella + waterproof shoes (Apr-Oct has 7-11 thunderstorm days/month)
- ✓ Comfortable walking shoes — French Quarter + Garden District cobblestones are unforgiving
- ✓ One smart-casual outfit (jacket suggested for men) for Antoine's, Brennan's, Commander's Palace
- ✓ Cash in small bills ($1, $5, $20) for jazz musician tip jars + Coop's Place (cash only) + Lafitte's
- ✓ ESTA visa-waiver application 72+ hours before departure ($21) for Korea/EU/UK/AU/JP passports
- ✓ Travel insurance with hurricane-season coverage if traveling Jun-Nov (Cancel for any reason add-on)
- ✓ Reef-safe sunscreen SPF 30+ (sun exposure on Magazine Street + Steamboat deck)
- ✓ DEET bug spray (mosquitoes year-round in NOLA; essential for swamp tours)
- ✓ Plantation tour: comfortable closed shoes + sun hat (River Road is outdoor + humid)
- ✓ Treme + Bywater: keep voice low + respect the neighborhood (Treme is the actual birthplace of jazz, not a tourist set)
- ✓ Day 4-5 needs extra cash for tour gratuity ($10-20 driver tip) + Willie Mae's cash backup
- ✓ Cajun Country: comfortable shoes + KRVS 88.7 Cajun radio bookmarked for the drive
- ✓ Baton Rouge: walking shoes for Louisiana State Capitol observation deck + USS Kidd ship tour
- ✓ Day 6-7 rental car insurance check (CDW + LDW), Korean driver's license + IDP for US
New Orleans 7-Day Itinerary FAQ
Cajun Country day trip — is it really different from New Orleans? ▼
Baton Rouge — is the Louisiana State Capitol really the tallest US state capitol? ▼
Is 7 days too long in New Orleans? ▼
Steamboat Natchez is on Day 3 — is the dinner cruise vs day cruise worth the upgrade? ▼
Final-day MSY airport logistics — how early? ▼
7-day total cost? ▼
Looking for Different Trip Lengths?
Why you can trust 7-day itinerary
Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.
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