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New York in 7 Days — City Plus East Coast Day Trips

NYC essentials + Brooklyn + Philadelphia OR Washington DC + Hudson Valley

Seven days adds two East Coast day trips to the comprehensive NYC itinerary. Days 1-5 cover Manhattan + Brooklyn. Day 6: Philadelphia OR Washington DC (both 1.5h-3h by Amtrak; DC is the longer commitment with more depth). Day 7: Hudson Valley (Cold Spring, Beacon, Hyde Park) — 1-hour Metro-North train into the Hudson River landscape that inspired the 19th-century Hudson River School painters.

A full week is enough to actually understand New York. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$685

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$1,450

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$3,345

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Liberty, 9/11, Wall Street, Brooklyn Bridge

Statue of Liberty · 9/11 Memorial · Wall Street · Brooklyn Bridge

Activities

  1. 08:30 Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island ferry 3-4 hours

    Built 1886. Ferry from Battery Park to Liberty Island then Ellis Island. The Statue's pedestal (with the original 1903 'New Colossus' poem by Emma Lazarus) and crown access ($24+) require advance booking. Ellis Island processed 12 million immigrants 1892-1954 — the Immigration Museum is the deeper destination

    Cost: $24 ferry round-trip; $24 pedestal; $24+ crown access TIP: Book online via StatueCruises.com 1-2 months ahead for crown access. The ferry is the only way to reach the islands. The Staten Island Ferry (free) passes the Statue without stopping — a budget-traveler alternative for the photo only.
  2. 12:30 Lunch — Pier A or Wall Street neighborhood 1.5 hours

    Pier A Harbor House (waterfront) or Stone Street pedestrian alley (historic 17th-century cobblestone street with multiple bar-restaurants). The Wall Street area is dense with chain restaurants but Stone Street is the local pick

    Cost: $25-45 TIP: Stone Street is closed to traffic and packed with outdoor seating in good weather. Adrienne's Pizzabar on Stone Street is the local favorite.
  3. 14:30 9/11 Memorial & Museum 2-2.5 hours

    Built 2011 on the World Trade Center site. Two reflecting pools (the 'Voids') marking the original tower footprints, surrounded by 2,983 inscribed names. The museum (separate ticket) tells the day-of story with recovered objects and oral histories. Allow 1.5-2 hours for the museum

    Cost: Memorial free; Museum $33 TIP: Book museum tickets online to avoid the queue. The museum is emotionally heavy — appropriate for adults and teens, not young children. The memorial plaza itself is free 24/7.
  4. 17:00 Wall Street walking 45 min - 1 hour

    The Charging Bull statue (1989), Fearless Girl (2017), Federal Hall (where George Washington was inaugurated 1789), Trinity Church. The historic financial district takes 30-45 minutes to walk. Most stops are free; the NYSE is no longer publicly accessible

    Cost: Free TIP: The Charging Bull is at the intersection of Broadway and Morris Street. The Fearless Girl was moved in 2018 to face the NYSE building. Photos of both are the iconic shots.
  5. 18:30 Brooklyn Bridge sunset walk 1-1.5 hours

    Built 1883. 1.1-mile (1.8 km) pedestrian walkway across the East River. The most-photographed bridge in New York. Walk Manhattan-to-Brooklyn for the sunset facing back at the skyline. Best 30 min before sunset through 30 min after

    Cost: Free TIP: Stay on the pedestrian level (top); the lower deck is for cars and bikes. Pause at the cable junction points (towers) for the best photos. The Manhattan-facing direction is the better photo angle.
  6. 20:00 Dinner — DUMBO or Williamsburg 2 hours

    DUMBO (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) has Juliana's Pizza or Grimaldi's at the Brooklyn-Manhattan Bridge intersection. Or take Q train to Williamsburg for Peter Luger or Lilia. The DUMBO option is the bridge-immediate dinner

    Cost: $30-150 depending on choice TIP: Juliana's is the more modern of the two DUMBO pizzerias; Grimaldi's is older and more institutional. Peter Luger requires 2-3 week advance reservations.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or Ess-a-Bagel before ferry

Midtown or near ferry · $7-15

Substantial — Day 1 starts with the ferry (no food on Liberty Island). Ess-a-Bagel with everything bagel + scallion cream cheese + lox is the iconic NYC morning ($14). Or hotel buffet.

Lunch

Stone Street pedestrian alley

Financial District · $25-45

Adrienne's Pizzabar for the historic cobblestone-street pizza experience. The Dead Rabbit (around the corner) for the high-end Irish pub atmosphere.

Dinner

Juliana's (DUMBO) or Peter Luger (Williamsburg)

Brooklyn · $30-200

Juliana's coal-oven pizza for the casual Brooklyn dinner after Brooklyn Bridge walk. Peter Luger porterhouse for the splurge (book 2-3 weeks ahead).

Transit:

Hotel → Battery Park: 1 train to South Ferry, or 4/5 to Bowling Green (10 min). Ferry: 15-20 min to Liberty Island. Statue/Ellis return → 9/11 Memorial: 10-min walk. Wall Street → Brooklyn Bridge entrance: 15-min walk via Park Row. Brooklyn Bridge walk → DUMBO: 1 hour walk total. Subway to Manhattan: F train at York Street. Day 1 transit: $2.90 per ride; $5.80 round-trip.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $65 Mid $130 Luxury $350
DAY 2

Times Square, MoMA, Central Park, Broadway

Top of the Rock · MoMA · Central Park · Broadway show

Activities

  1. 08:30 Top of the Rock observation deck 1-1.5 hours

    30 Rockefeller Plaza (built 1933). 70th-floor observation deck with views in all directions — Empire State Building to the south, Central Park to the north. Better than the Empire State Building for one reason: the Empire State is in the view. Recommended over Empire State for first-time visitors

    Cost: $48 (varies by time slot) TIP: Book online for timed entry. Sunrise slots (the earliest) have the best photos and shortest queues. The Edge at Hudson Yards is the newer alternative with a glass-floor outdoor deck.
  2. 10:30 MoMA (Museum of Modern Art) 2-3 hours

    Founded 1929. Houses Van Gogh's Starry Night, Picasso's Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, Warhol's Campbell's Soup Cans, Monet's Water Lilies (one of the largest in the world). Six floors. The most-influential modern art museum in the world

    Cost: $30 adult; free Fridays 4-8 PM (timed entry) TIP: Book timed entry online. Friday free hours have 1-hour queues — not worth the wait. Allow 2.5+ hours; skipping floors leaves you frustrated. The 5th floor (painting and sculpture) has the iconic works.
  3. 14:00 Lunch — Midtown food hall or Halal Guys 1 hour

    Urbanspace Vanderbilt (food hall at Grand Central area) or The Halal Guys at 53rd & 6th (original cart). Quick mid-day fuel before Central Park

    Cost: $10-25 TIP: The Halal Guys chicken & lamb combo over rice ($10) is the iconic NYC street food. Urbanspace Vanderbilt has 20+ vendors including ramen, tacos, banh mi.
  4. 15:00 Central Park walk 2-2.5 hours

    Built 1857-1873. 843 acres (3.4 km²). The Bow Bridge, Bethesda Fountain (with the angel statue), Central Park Mall (the tree-lined promenade in countless movies), The Lake, Strawberry Fields (John Lennon memorial). A complete loop takes 3 hours; a casual 2-hour walk hits the highlights

    Cost: Free TIP: Enter from 5th Avenue at 59th Street (the south side) and walk north. Bethesda Terrace is the photo destination. Conservatory Garden (formal gardens, north end) is the underrated quiet spot.
  5. 17:30 Fifth Avenue shopping (optional) 1-1.5 hours

    Bergdorf Goodman, Tiffany & Co flagship, Apple Store (the glass cube at 59th & 5th), Saks Fifth Avenue. The most-photographed shopping avenue in America. Mostly window-shopping for tourists

    Cost: Free walking TIP: The Tiffany flagship and the Apple Store cube are the photo destinations. The Plaza Hotel (corner of 5th & 59th) lobby is free to enter — the iconic Eloise setting.
  6. 19:00 Pre-show dinner — Theater District 1.5 hours

    Restaurant Row (W 46th St between 8th & 9th) has 40+ restaurants designed for pre-Broadway-show dining. Tipping is 18-22%. Reservations essential pre-show (6-7 PM)

    Cost: $50-100 TIP: Joe Allen, Becco, Sardi's are the classic theater-district choices. Most offer pre-theater prix-fixe menus at $45-65. Reservations on Resy or OpenTable.
  7. 20:00 Broadway show 2.5-3 hours

    A Broadway show is essential NYC. Hamilton, Wicked, The Lion King, MJ The Musical, & Juliet — major productions run nightly. Off-Broadway productions are 30-50% cheaper. The Lincoln Center area has the opera and ballet alternatives

    Cost: $80-300 (varies by show + day + seat) TIP: TKTS booth in Times Square sells day-of discounted tickets (30-50% off). The Hadestown, MJ The Musical, and & Juliet are the harder-to-get titles. The 'rush' lottery system (apply day-of for $40-60 tickets) is the budget play.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Tompkins Square Bagels or Sadelle's brunch

East Village or SoHo · $10-30

Tompkins Square Bagels for the rainbow bagel photo. Sadelle's for the bagel tower brunch (book 2 weeks ahead). Both are signature NYC mornings.

Lunch

The Halal Guys or Urbanspace Vanderbilt

Midtown · $10-25

The Halal Guys at 53rd & 6th (the original cart) is the iconic NYC street lunch. Urbanspace Vanderbilt has 20+ vendors for variety.

Dinner

Theater District pre-show restaurant

Theater District (W 46th-50th between 7th-9th) · $50-100

Joe Allen or Becco for the iconic pre-Broadway dinner. Pre-theater prix-fixe at $45-65. Reserve 1-2 weeks ahead for Saturday evenings.

Transit:

Hotel → Top of the Rock: B/D/F/M to 47-50 Sts–Rockefeller Center. Top of the Rock → MoMA: 5-min walk. MoMA → Central Park: 5-min walk to 5th & 59th. Central Park → Theater District: 15-min walk south. Day 2 transit: $5.80 round-trip on subway.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $105 Mid $230 Luxury $510
DAY 3

SoHo, Greenwich Village, High Line

SoHo shopping · Greenwich Village · High Line · Chelsea Market

Activities

  1. 09:30 SoHo (South of Houston) shopping 2-2.5 hours

    The 19th-century cast-iron district between Houston Street and Canal Street. Independent designer boutiques, flagship stores (Apple, Chanel, Prada, MUJI), the Soho House social club. The cobblestone streets and cast-iron facades are themselves the photo destination

    Cost: Free walking; shopping varies TIP: Spring Street and Prince Street are the main shopping streets. The Apple Store in the former post office building is one of the most-photographed Apple retail spaces. Dominique Ansel Bakery (Cronut inventor) is in SoHo for the dessert break.
  2. 12:00 Lunch — Joe's Pizza or Dominique Ansel 1 hour

    Joe's Pizza on Carmine Street (Greenwich Village, 10-min walk from SoHo) is the canonical NYC slice. Dominique Ansel Bakery in SoHo for the Cronut + DKA dessert lunch

    Cost: $5-25 TIP: Joe's Pizza cash-only, $3.75 for a plain cheese slice. Dominique Ansel Cronut queues 30-45 min for the morning batch; afternoon is calmer.
  3. 13:30 Greenwich Village walking 1.5-2 hours

    The historic bohemian district. Washington Square Park (with the arch, since 1892), the iconic streets where the 1960s folk scene happened (Bob Dylan, Joan Baez), the Friends apartment building (90 Bedford St, exterior only), Comedy Cellar (subway level, the comedy club). Walking-only district

    Cost: Free walking TIP: Washington Square Park is the heart of NYU; usually has street performers and chess hustlers. Comedy Cellar hosts surprise drop-ins by Dave Chappelle, Jerry Seinfeld, Aziz Ansari — check schedule.
  4. 15:30 High Line elevated park 1.5-2 hours

    Built 2009-2014 on an abandoned 1934 elevated railway. 1.45 miles (2.3 km) of elevated park from Gansevoort Street (West Village) to Hudson Yards. Landscaped with native plants and modern art installations. The most-influential urban renewal project of the 2010s — copied globally

    Cost: Free TIP: Walk south-to-north from the West Village. The northern end (Hudson Yards) connects to the Vessel structure ($10 to climb, currently closed for safety review). The 23rd Street section has the best views west to New Jersey.
  5. 17:00 Chelsea Market 1-1.5 hours

    Built 1898 as the Nabisco factory (Oreo invented here 1912), converted 1997 to an indoor food market. 30+ vendors including Lobster Place, Los Tacos No. 1, The Cleaver Co, Sarabeth's. The most-photographed indoor food market in NYC

    Cost: $15-30 TIP: Los Tacos No. 1 (best tacos in NYC) is the queue destination. Lobster Place has fresh seafood + sushi counter. The Chelsea Market is connected to the High Line at the 14th Street entrance.
  6. 19:00 Dinner — Carbone or Lilia 2-2.5 hours

    Carbone (Greenwich Village) for the theatrical Italian-American experience. Lilia (Williamsburg, 30-min subway) for the modern Italian. Both require reservations 2-3 weeks ahead

    Cost: $70-180 TIP: Carbone: open Resy at 9 AM on the dot 30 days in advance. Lilia: 2-3 week advance booking. Walk-in bars at both are realistic alternatives if you can't get a table.
  7. 21:30 Cocktails — PDT or Death & Co 1-1.5 hours

    PDT (Please Don't Tell) is the speakeasy entered through a phone booth inside Crif Dogs hot dog joint. Death & Co is the East Village classic cocktail bar. Both require reservations or 30+ min waits

    Cost: $22-50 TIP: PDT reservation: open Resy at 3 PM the day of. Death & Co: book on Resy 1-2 weeks ahead. Both are the cocktail-revival pilgrimage bars.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or SoHo café

SoHo · $10-25

Café Integral SoHo for Mexican-coffee + pastry. Or hotel breakfast. The 30-min queue at Dominique Ansel Bakery for Cronut is the dessert-not-breakfast option.

Lunch

Joe's Pizza or Chelsea Market

Greenwich Village or Chelsea · $5-25

Joe's Pizza $3.75 slice for the canonical NYC slice. Chelsea Market for variety — Los Tacos No. 1 or The Lobster Place.

Dinner

Carbone or Lilia

Greenwich Village or Williamsburg · $70-180

Carbone for the iconic theatrical Italian-American (spicy rigatoni vodka). Lilia for the modern Italian (mafaldini with pink peppercorns). Both need 2-3 week advance reservations.

Transit:

Hotel → SoHo: N/R train to Prince Street, or 6 train to Spring Street. SoHo → Greenwich Village: 10-min walk. Greenwich Village → High Line south end: 15-min walk via Hudson Street. High Line → Chelsea Market: 1-min walk down at 14th St entrance. Day 3 transit: $5.80 round-trip on subway.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $75 Mid $175 Luxury $410
DAY 4

The Met & Upper East Side

Met Museum · Upper East Side · Madison Avenue

Activities

  1. 09:30 Met Museum (Metropolitan Museum of Art) 3-4 hours

    Founded 1870. The largest art museum in the Americas — 1.5 million objects across 17 collections. Highlights: Temple of Dendur (an actual Egyptian temple installed inside the museum), European Paintings (Vermeer, Caravaggio), American Wing, Costume Institute. Allow a minimum of 3-4 hours; even one full day doesn't cover everything

    Cost: $30 adult (pay-what-you-wish for NY/NJ/CT residents) TIP: Book timed entry online. The 'Visit the Met in 1 Hour' route from the museum's own audio guide is the speedrun. Closed Wednesdays.
  2. 13:30 Lunch — Met Members Dining Room or Upper East Side 1 hour

    The Met has multiple cafés inside; the Petrie Court Café (French-American, table service) is the upscale option. Or walk 5 minutes to Madison Avenue for café options

    Cost: $25-50 TIP: Reservations for Petrie Court Café via OpenTable. The Met's basement food hall is the faster casual option.
  3. 15:00 Madison Avenue luxury shopping 1.5 hours

    60th-86th Streets on Madison. Hermès, Chanel, Louboutin, Tom Ford flagships. The most-concentrated luxury shopping street in NYC. Mostly window-shopping for tourists; the storefronts are designed to be photographed

    Cost: Free walking TIP: The Carlyle Hotel (76th & Madison) has the iconic Bemelmans Bar with Ludwig Bemelmans (the Madeline books illustrator) original murals. Best evening cocktail destination on the Upper East Side.
  4. 17:00 Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum 1.5-2 hours

    Frank Lloyd Wright's only NYC building (built 1959). The spiral-ramp interior is itself the architectural destination — visitors walk down from the top floor through a continuous circular gallery. The collection emphasizes 20th-century modern art (Kandinsky, Picasso, Cézanne)

    Cost: $25 adult TIP: Book timed entry online. 'Pay-What-You-Wish' Saturdays 6-8 PM. The architecture viewing from the rotunda floor (free without entry) is itself worth a stop.
  5. 19:30 Dinner — Daniel or Cafe Boulud 2.5 hours

    Daniel (Daniel Boulud's flagship, 2 Michelin stars, $400+ tasting) is the splurge. Cafe Boulud (sister restaurant, $90-130 prix fixe) is the accessible alternative. Both are Upper East Side classics — Madison Avenue meets formal French cuisine

    Cost: $90-400 TIP: Daniel reservations 1-2 months ahead. Cafe Boulud is 2-3 weeks ahead. Jacket strongly recommended for Daniel.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Sant Ambroeus or hotel breakfast

Upper East Side · $15-30

Sant Ambroeus on Madison Avenue is the iconic Italian-style breakfast — espresso, cornetti, NYT readers on every other table. Or hotel breakfast for the faster start.

Lunch

Petrie Court Café (inside the Met)

Met Museum · $25-50

Petrie Court Café's French-American menu with the Central Park view. Reservations on OpenTable. Or the Met's basement food hall for the faster casual option.

Dinner

Daniel or Cafe Boulud

Upper East Side · $90-400

Daniel for the 2-Michelin-star splurge ($400+). Cafe Boulud for the $90-130 prix fixe access tier. Both Daniel Boulud, different access points.

Transit:

Hotel → Met: 4/5/6 train to 86 Street, or M86 crosstown bus from West Side. Met → Madison Avenue: 5-min walk west. Madison Avenue → Guggenheim: 10-min walk north. Guggenheim → Daniel: 10-min walk south. Day 4 transit: $5.80 round-trip subway.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $95 Mid $210 Luxury $575
DAY 5

Brooklyn Deep Dive + Coney Island

Williamsburg · DUMBO · Brooklyn Heights · Coney Island (seasonal)

Activities

  1. 09:00 Williamsburg walking + Smorgasburg (Sat) 2.5-3 hours

    Take the L train to Bedford Avenue. Walk Bedford → Berry St → Wythe Avenue. Stop at independent record stores (Rough Trade), vintage shops, the Wythe Hotel rooftop (open to non-guests). Saturday-only: Smorgasburg outdoor food market at the East River waterfront (April-October)

    Cost: Smorgasburg food $10-25 TIP: Smorgasburg is Saturdays 11 AM-6 PM (April-October) at the East River waterfront. The Wythe Hotel's Lemon's rooftop bar has the most-photographed Manhattan-from-Brooklyn view.
  2. 12:00 Lunch — Peter Luger (Brooklyn) or Lilia 1.5-2 hours

    Peter Luger Steak House (1887) for the iconic lunch porterhouse. Reservations 2-4 weeks ahead. Lilia for the modern Italian alternative (also Williamsburg)

    Cost: $70-200 TIP: Peter Luger lunch is cheaper than dinner — porterhouse for one at $80 vs the dinner full porterhouse for two at $145. Both serve the same beef.
  3. 14:30 DUMBO + Brooklyn Bridge Park 2 hours

    Q train to High Street (or walk back across Williamsburg Bridge). DUMBO (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass) has the Manhattan Bridge framed by Brooklyn warehouse streets — the most-photographed Brooklyn scene. Brooklyn Bridge Park along the East River waterfront has lawns + skyline views

    Cost: Free TIP: The 'photo spot' for the Manhattan Bridge over the cobblestone street is at the corner of Washington Street and Water Street. Brooklyn Bridge Park has Jane's Carousel (1922 vintage merry-go-round, $2).
  4. 16:30 Brooklyn Heights Promenade 30 min - 1 hour

    0.5-mile (800m) elevated walkway with the canonical Manhattan skyline view. Sunset is the iconic photography window. Cantilevered over the BQE expressway — quiet despite the highway underneath. Free walking

    Cost: Free TIP: Best 30 min before sunset through 30 min after. The Promenade was built 1950 to soothe Brooklyn Heights residents about the BQE construction.
  5. 18:00 Optional: Coney Island (April-October) 2-3 hours

    1-hour Q train south to Coney Island-Stillwell Avenue. Boardwalk, Cyclone roller coaster (1927, the second-oldest operating wooden coaster in the world), Wonder Wheel, Nathan's Famous hot dogs (since 1916). Open weekends April-October; Memorial Day-Labor Day daily

    Cost: $15-35 for rides; food extra TIP: Coney Island is the iconic NYC summer experience but isolated from the rest of the city. Nathan's Famous original at Surf & Stillwell hosts the July 4 hot dog eating contest. Closed November-March.
  6. 21:00 Brooklyn dinner — Roberta's or Lucali 2 hours

    Roberta's (Bushwick) for the contemporary wood-fired pizza experience. Lucali (Carroll Gardens) for the Mark-Iacono-handmade Italian. Both are Brooklyn-based; Roberta's is the modern, Lucali is the traditional

    Cost: $30-80 TIP: Roberta's: reservations on Resy. Lucali: cash-only, BYOB, no reservations, 90-120 min wait. Both require subway return to Manhattan after dinner.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Toby's Estate Coffee or Wythe Hotel

Williamsburg · $10-25

Toby's Estate Coffee for the iconic Williamsburg third-wave coffee. Or breakfast at the Wythe Hotel's restaurant with East River views.

Lunch

Peter Luger (porterhouse) or Smorgasburg (Saturday)

Williamsburg · $25-200

Peter Luger porterhouse for the iconic Brooklyn steakhouse. Smorgasburg (Saturday April-October) for the variety + outdoor experience.

Dinner

Roberta's (Bushwick) or Lucali (Carroll Gardens)

Brooklyn · $30-80

Roberta's for the modern wood-fired pizza. Lucali for the traditional brick-oven pies handmade by the chef-owner.

Transit:

Hotel → Williamsburg: L train to Bedford Avenue (15 min from Union Square). Williamsburg → DUMBO: F train or 20-min walk via Williamsburg Bridge. DUMBO → Brooklyn Heights: 15-min walk. Brooklyn Heights → Coney Island: 2/3 or Q train, 50-min ride. Day 5 transit: $5.80 multiple subway rides.

DAY 5 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $75 Mid $180 Luxury $415
DAY 6

Philadelphia OR Washington DC Day Trip

Liberty Bell + cheesesteak OR National Mall + Smithsonian

Activities

  1. 07:30 Choose: Philly (closer) OR DC (farther, more depth) Travel 1.5-2.75 hours each way

    Philadelphia: Amtrak from Penn Station, 1.5 hours, $50-80 each way. DC: Amtrak Acela, 2.75 hours, $80-150 each way. Both are full day trips. Philly is the lighter option; DC is the substantial-history option with the Smithsonian museums

    Cost: $100-300 round-trip TIP: Book Amtrak 1-2 weeks ahead via Amtrak.com — same-day prices spike. The Acela is faster than the Northeast Regional but 30-40% more expensive.
  2. 09:30 (Philly) Philadelphia: Liberty Bell + Independence Hall + cheesesteak Full day

    Liberty Bell + Independence Hall (where the Declaration of Independence was signed 1776). Constitution Center for the deeper history. Reading Terminal Market for lunch. Pat's vs Geno's the iconic cheesesteak rivalry — both at 9th & Passyunk, 1 block apart

    Cost: $50-80 in attractions TIP: Liberty Bell and Independence Hall are FREE (timed entry required, reserve online). Reading Terminal Market has Amish counter, lunch counter ($15-25). Pat's vs Geno's: cash only at both; the cheesesteak is the same, the rivalry is the experience.
  3. 09:30 (DC) Washington DC: National Mall + Smithsonian Full day

    Lincoln Memorial + Washington Monument + Reflecting Pool. Smithsonian museums (all FREE): Air & Space, Natural History, American History, African American History (last one requires advance timed-entry ticket). The Capitol Building tour (free, advance booking)

    Cost: Free (Smithsonian); $30-60 in food + transit TIP: All Smithsonian museums are free year-round. African American Museum requires advance timed-entry tickets via SI.edu. The Capitol tour requires advance booking via your Congressional rep. Walking is the move along the Mall.
  4. 17:00 Return to NYC + dinner Travel back

    Amtrak back to Penn Station. Philly arrives NYC 7-8 PM; DC arrives 9-10 PM. Light dinner in Midtown or NYC delivery

    Cost: Included in round-trip TIP: Book the return ticket as round-trip with the morning departure. Penn Station → hotel: 10-min walk in Midtown, or 1/2/3 subway lines.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Penn Station Magnolia or hotel pickup

Penn Station / NYC hotel · $10-20

Magnolia Bakery has a Penn Station outpost with bagels + coffee. Or pick up bagel + coffee near hotel before Amtrak.

Lunch

Reading Terminal Market (Philly) or Smithsonian café (DC)

Philly or DC · $15-35

Reading Terminal Market for Philly variety. Smithsonian Air & Space cafe for DC convenience. Both are casual mid-day food.

Dinner

Late-NYC dinner after return

NYC · $30-80

Russ & Daughters Cafe for the late dinner. Or Joe's Pizza ($5) + cocktail bar nightcap. Save the splurge dinner for non-day-trip nights.

Transit:

NYC Penn Station → Philly: Amtrak Northeast Regional 1.5h $50-80 or Acela 1.25h $80-130 round-trip. NYC Penn Station → DC: Amtrak Acela 2.75h $80-150 or NE Regional 3.5h $50-90 round-trip. Book 1-2 weeks ahead. Within Philly/DC: walking + occasional Uber.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $165 Mid $280 Luxury $425
DAY 7

Hudson Valley Day Trip

Cold Spring · Beacon · Storm King Art Center · Vanderbilt Mansion

Activities

  1. 09:00 Grand Central → Cold Spring (Metro-North Hudson Line) 1.5 hours

    Metro-North train from Grand Central Terminal, 1.5 hours, $30-40 round-trip. The Hudson River Line passes the Hudson Highlands, the 19th-century Hudson River School landscape that defined American romantic painting. Sit on the LEFT side facing forward for the river view

    Cost: $30-40 round-trip TIP: Off-peak ticket (after 9 AM Monday-Friday or weekends) is cheaper than peak. Eat breakfast at Grand Central before boarding; the train has no food.
  2. 10:30 Cold Spring village walking 1.5-2 hours

    Population 2,000. Restored 19th-century Main Street with antique shops, cafés, and the Hudson River pier. The view from Cold Spring across to West Point Military Academy (founded 1802) is the iconic Hudson Valley landscape. Walking-only town

    Cost: Free walking TIP: Main Street is closed to cars in summer weekends. The Hudson House (river restaurant) has the iconic terrace view. Antique shopping is the secondary activity.
  3. 12:30 Lunch — Hudson House or Le Bouchon 1.5 hours

    Hudson House for the iconic river-terrace lunch with West Point view. Le Bouchon for the French bistro alternative. Both are Cold Spring landmarks

    Cost: $30-60 TIP: Reservations for Hudson House for summer weekends. Both have outdoor seating.
  4. 14:30 Storm King Art Center (Apr-Nov) OR Beacon 3-4 hours

    Storm King: 500-acre outdoor sculpture park, 30-min taxi from Cold Spring. 100+ large-scale sculptures from Calder, Serra, Goldsworthy, di Suvero. The largest outdoor sculpture park in the US. April-November only. OR Beacon (2 stops on Metro-North): industrial-art town, Dia:Beacon museum (60+ contemporary works in a converted Nabisco factory)

    Cost: Storm King $25; Dia:Beacon $20 TIP: Storm King is the harder logistics (rent a car or taxi) but the deeper sculpture experience. Beacon is easier (train) but more focused on indoor contemporary art. Both are major US art destinations.
  5. 18:30 Return to NYC + farewell dinner 1.5 hours + dinner

    Metro-North back to Grand Central, arrive NYC 7:30-8 PM. Farewell NYC dinner — Eleven Madison Park if you booked weeks ahead, otherwise a relaxed Manhattan brasserie

    Cost: $30-300 depending on dinner TIP: If the trip-closing dinner is the splurge, book Eleven Madison Park 1-2 months ahead. Otherwise Russ & Daughters Cafe, Carbone (if you can get a reservation), or a Lower East Side wine bar for the casual closing.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Grand Central Terminal — Magnolia or food hall

Grand Central · $10-20

Grand Central's main concourse food court has 30+ vendors. Or grab a Magnolia banana pudding for the train.

Lunch

Hudson House (river terrace) or Le Bouchon

Cold Spring · $30-60

Hudson House for the West Point view + American bistro. Le Bouchon for French bistro alternative. Both summer reservations recommended.

Dinner

NYC farewell — Eleven Madison Park or Russ & Daughters Cafe

NYC · $40-400

Eleven Madison Park for the trip-closing splurge (book 1-2 months ahead). Russ & Daughters Cafe for the iconic NYC closing meal. Or Carbone for the spicy rigatoni vodka farewell.

Transit:

Grand Central → Cold Spring: Metro-North Hudson Line 1.5h $15-20 each way. Cold Spring → Storm King: Uber 30 min ($30-40 each way) or rent a car. Cold Spring → Beacon: Metro-North 15 min, $5 each way. Total Day 7 transit: $50-100.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $105 Mid $245 Luxury $660

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New York 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

Should I do Philly or DC for Day 6?
DC if you want the substantial-history day — Smithsonian museums (all free), the Capitol Building, the Lincoln Memorial. Philly if you want the lighter US-history day — Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, cheesesteaks. DC is 3 hours each way; Philly is 1.5 hours. DC is the bigger commitment for the bigger payoff.
What's the Storm King vs Dia:Beacon decision?
Storm King: outdoor sculpture in a 500-acre landscape, weather-dependent, April-November only. Dia:Beacon: indoor contemporary art (Serra, Judd, Flavin) in a converted factory. Both are major US art destinations. Storm King for the landscape-and-art combination; Dia:Beacon for the deeper modern art experience.
Is the Amtrak Acela worth the price premium?
For DC, yes — saves 45 minutes each way and is more comfortable. For Philly, marginal — the time savings (15 min) doesn't justify the 30-40% price increase unless you're tight on schedule. Book either 1-2 weeks ahead for the best prices.
Should I add Boston as a 7-day extension?
Boston is 4 hours by Amtrak — too far for a comfortable day trip from NYC. Boston is its own 2-3 day destination. Extend to 9-10 day total trip if you want Boston included. Or treat the NYC 7-day as a base and fly to Boston on Day 8.
What's the total cost of 7 days?
Excluding flights and hotel: budget $685 ($98/day), mid-range $1,450 ($207/day), luxury $3,345 ($478/day). Add hotels: 7 nights 3-star Manhattan $1,400-2,100, 7 nights 4-star $2,450-3,850. NYC is the most expensive US city — extending the trip multiplies the cost faster than other US destinations.

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Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

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.

8+ years analyzing travel data 30+ countries visited Live exchange rate verified
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