Boston

Boston is a city full of charm, its residents dedicated to their sports teams and their city’s place in history. An important college town, it has a youthful vibe you’ll feel everywhere, but thanks to an impressive arts and culture scene, Boston leans sophisticated too. The city’s colleges and universities offer quite the number of opportunities for learning at every age. Boston is anchored by two very important waterways: The Charles River and Boston Harbor provide plenty of photo opps and outdoor adventures. And all through the city: some of New England’s best shopping, vibrant neighborhoods, and some great eats. And though Cambridge residents cringe at being smashed in with their neighbor, visitors should think of Harvard’s hometown as part of Boston and head over there for at least a meal or two.

Historic Acorn Street on Beacon Hill in dowtown Boston Massachusetts MA.

Dennis MacDonald/© Dennis MacDonald

Overview

When’s the best time to go to Boston?

Boston is a busy city all year round. You won’t see much of an uptick in accommodation prices, except perhaps during leaf-peeping season in the fall and Marathon Weekend in April. Spring is beautiful, when the many parks make for pleasant strolling and trees along the water are in full bloom. Although winter definitely presents the greatest weather challenge, on the upside, there will be the fewest crowds. Indoor cultural events and festivals provide plenty of entertainment protected from the cold temperatures.

How to get around Boston

Boston’s Logan International Airport is about 20 minutes from downtown by taxi; fares will run about $30 (including the airport/toll fee). The public transportation system, MBTA, also runs directly to and from the airport. A fun option is the trip across the harbor by commuter boat, if you want to beat the notorious Boston traffic. Arriving by Amtrak train will bring you to either South Station or Back Bay, both located in convenient areas of the city.

MBTA trains and buses traverse the city. The “T,” organized by colored routes, is a reliable way to go, but remember the last ride is between 12 and 1 a.m. A $2.25 Charlie Card will allow you to travel on all lines for one price, or you can ge a day pass for $12 or a seven-day pass for $21.25. The MBTA mTicket option for commuter rail and ferry rides allows mobile ticketing via your smartphone. Taxis are readily available, as are services like Uber and Lyft. (In order to call one of these services, you’ll have to download their respective apps.) Zipcar and the city’s extensive bike-sharing program, Bluebikes, are two additional alternatives.

Can’t miss things to do in Boston

You can’t come to Boston without walking at least part of the 2.5-mile Freedom Trail. Any of the 16 historically significant sites the trail passes through will give you a taste of Boston history, and there are great pit stops along the way to recharge. On a nice day, start at the Old North Church, have lunch in the North End, then walk to the USS Constitution. You can take the water shuttle back to Central Wharf and enjoy outstanding views of Boston from the inner harbor.

The Rose Kennedy Greenway is another wonderful wander. The 1.5-mile greenway connects parks, public art, and several neighborhoods. Pull up the Interactive Map to find things to see and places to stop along the way.

Food and drink to try in Boston

Boston is a city just the right size to support the local farm-to-table movement. With many growers within a 30-mile radius, farmers’ markets all over town shine with local produce and small-batch makers. Affordable restaurants reflect the diverse population of Beantown, and the food truck scene rivals any in the nation. Seasonal menus can be found when splurging at high-end favorites Oleana or Craigie on Main, or dining at the more affordable brick-and-mortar locations of Clover Food Lab and Mei Mei food trucks. Somerville is home to many young chefs on the rise. Craft brews and cocktails are a big part of the local bar scene, and several local bartenders have gained national acclaim for their creations.

Culture in Boston

Boston has a huge cross section of museums. The scene is anchored by the MFA and the more contemporary ICA, but be sure to explore some of the smaller gems like the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, deCordova, and Peabody Essex. Many of the museums open for several hours a week free to the public. For instance, the MFA is open for voluntary contribution Wednesday evenings after 4 p.m. (Pro tip: full-price admission tickets are good for two visits within 10 days.) Although the traditional gallery scene is centered on Newbury St., the South End houses many high-profile exhibits as well. The Wang Theatre is home to an impressive array of theater, music, and dance; the Boston Opera House hosts the Boston Ballet. Check out the Berklee Performance Center for global jazz festivals and much more.

Year-round festivals are a source of pride in Boston. The Boston Wine Expo‘s dinner run through much of February. Restaurant Week is in March, and the Boston Marathon falls on Patriot’s Day in April. June begins three months of festivals in the North End. The Rose Kennedy Greenway plays host to summer activities including the Boston Harborfest and Figment Boston, two days packed with art, creativity, and tinkering. Fall finds Head of the Charles Regatta. Holiday music sends us into the New Year with the Boston Pops. Every Sunday May through October, the SoWa Open Market hosts a huge gathering of farm-fresh vegetables, craft vendors, food trucks, and an indoor vintage market. Explore the surrounding areas of New England, and you’ll find many more themed celebrations throughout the year.

Practical Information

The weather is probably the biggest variable for Boston visits. Come prepared for variety. Layer layer layer. Sports events guarantee traffic jams so check the sports schedules if you have a nearby reservation. When the home teams are playing in town, traffic around their venues can come to a standstill. (The Boston−New York sports team rivalry is legendary. Do not wear clothing with a New York team’s logo unless you can take some serious verbal abuse.) The waterfront can be breezy, so even in summer, a wrap or light jacket is a good idea. Depending on where you’re staying, you can probably leave the car at home. The T, buses, cabs, and rideshares are readily available (and will keep you from having to learn any driving-in-Boston lessons the exhausting way). If time permits you to travel beyond the 617, rent a car to explore Massachusetts’ surrounding mountains, beaches, or historical sites.

Guide Editor

READ BEFORE YOU GO
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HOTELS
Whether you want to stay in a historic neighborhood, on the water, or in the middle of Red Sox Nation, Boston’s hotel scene delivers.
Hotels can introduce their guests to the creativity that surrounds them—and reveal canvases visitors may not otherwise see.
These top-level properties are the places to stay.
How to See the Boston Marathon Like a Pro (According to a Hotel Concierge)
RESOURCES TO HELP PLAN YOUR TRIP
It’s hard to go wrong with Italian food in Boston’s North End, but one surefire way to go right is to turn left from the door of the Paul Revere House and slip inside the historic town house that’s home to Mamma Maria, an unmissable fine-dining restaurant facing North Square. Settle into the serenely elegant dining room overlooking the square to feast on classics like terrine of suckling pig, veal osso buco, Tuscan-style rabbit pappardelle, and a wide selection of seafood dishes from local waters. The uninitiated may mutter a “mamma mia” at the prices, but for Northern Italian in the North End, Mamma Maria rules the house.
Top Chef finalist Tiffani Faison showed off her versatility in opening Tiger Mama, her second restaurant, as an un-Americanized Asian-fusion concept—wildly different than Sweet Cheeks Q, her Boston barbecue joint. What’s similar is Tiger Mama’s Fenway location and its creative take on traditional preparations, in this case Thai, Malaysian, and Vietnamese dishes grouped under general headings (like Cold & Fresh, Crispy & Spicy, Rich & Earthy, and Noodles & Rice) to aid in navigating the maybe-unfamiliar names of dishes. The short-rib crudo is the go-to starter; “pig rice” is a typically generous portion of rice mixed with bacon, tasso ham, and Isaan sausage, sprinkled with pork floss; and the tiki drinks will flow as the sharing plates are passed.
After more than 15 years atop Boston’s fine-dining scene, Barbara Lynch’s No. 9 Park may be familiar, but never ordinary. Facing the Boston Common, this restaurant is split between a dress-to-impress bar where Beacon Hill pols gather for after-work cocktails and a dining room favored for special-occasion gatherings, from proposals and wedding anniversaries to Harvard-graduation celebrations. Expect an expertly designed Cat Silirie wine list and elegant French-Italian cuisine (the foie-gras-and-prune-puree-filled gnocchi is guaranteed to please, and go with the steak frites if you’re dining at the bar), with an atmosphere to match.
Fish from tins, fish whose fins were in the sea just this morning—they’re all stars at Saltie Girl, a compact seafood bar and restaurant in the Back Bay from Kathy Sidell of MET restaurant fame. Whether you love your seafood raw, smoked, fried, or—yes—out of a can, settle into one of the 11 stools in front of the active kitchen to watch as your dinner is prepared or, well, opened. Of course, you’re not paying top dollar for Chicken of the Sea here: The tinned seafood comes from small artisan producers, sustainably sourced, packed fresh, and shipped from around the world. Caviar, squid, anchovies, cod liver, and cockles are among the savories served cold with dipping sauces and crusty bread.
Who wouldn’t trade an ugly elevated highway for a ribbon of new parkland? Boston’s famous Big Dig dismantled the eyesore John F. Kennedy Expressway that long separated downtown from its waterfront and turned most of its former route into a linear park named in honor of JFK’s mother. The Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway snakes for a mile and a half from Chinatown to the North End, mostly parallel to Boston Harbor. It’s a pleasant alternative to walking the city’s busy streets to get around, and you can use the park’s free Wi-Fi to plan your visit. Along the way you’ll find seven decorative and interactive fountains; a carousel where lobsters, codfish, harbor seals, and other local animals take the place of horses; and a variety of food trucks for when you need to recharge with a taco, a grilled-cheese sandwich, or a cupcake. The Greenway’s visitor center for the Boston Harbor Islands National Recreation Area has information and ferry tickets.
The Black Rose is reliable in every way: It’s a genuine Irish pub in a part of Boston where authentic can be hard to find among the tourist joints; the bar food is first-rate (you can’t go wrong with a pint of Guinness and the house-made corned beef on marble rye, hold the mustard); and there’s live music seven nights a week. Located across the street from the historic Custom House and close to Faneuil Hall, the Black Rose has thrived for 40 years by keeping it real, and you’ll find a lively crowd of locals and visitors here even on wintry weeknights to drink Irish beer poured by Irish bartenders and listen to Irish music.
A Caribbean coral reef in Boston? You’ll find it at the New England Aquarium, as part of the aptly named Giant Ocean Tank, which contains 200,000 gallons of water and is swimming with sharks, sea turtles, barracuda, and hundreds of other reef fish. While you can meet a family of harbor seals right outside the front door of the aquarium, it’s well worth your time to head inside to explore the exhibits that focus on habitats from the Amazon rain forest to the Gulf of Maine. The aquarium also boasts an IMAX theater and touch tanks, and if you want to encounter local marine life in their natural environment, you can join one of Boston Harbor Cruises’ whale-watching tours, which depart from the Central Wharf daily between March and November.
Baseball had nothing to do with the naming of Fenway Park: The stadium gets its moniker from the nearby Back Bay Fens, a stretch of saltwater marsh in the heart of Boston that was landscaped into a park by Frederick Law Olmsted. The Fens are among the wilder parts of the Emerald Necklace, 1,100 acres of parklands running from the Charles River to Brookline that include familiar spaces like the Boston Common and Boston Public Garden but also less-traveled (by visitors, anyway) sections like Olmsted Park, Jamaica Pond, the Arnold Arboretum, and Franklin Park. The arboretum, part of Harvard University and established in 1872, is one of Olmsted’s most unaltered terrains, with paths running up and around 261 acres of woodland interspersed with a curated collection of trees, plants, shrubs, and vines native to New England.
Mile-long Newbury Street, lined with handsome 19th-century brownstone homes, is synonymous with shopping in Boston; it’s also the place to go to get your hair done up nice. Between Arlington Street and Massachusetts Avenue you’ll find an eclectic mix of boutique and designer shops, hair salons, art galleries, and restaurants that generally skews upscale (Tiffany’s, Chanel, Dolce & Gabbana) but also includes the original location of the Newbury Comics record store and a T.J. Maxx. Eminently strollable and dotted with sidewalk cafés, Newbury Street is the hip heart of the Back Bay neighborhood, perfectly distilled at eye-candy drinks-and-dining hot spots like Sonsie and Stephanie’s on Newbury.
Like Sean Bean in National Treasure, you won’t find the booty of the Knights Templar in the basement of the Old North Church, but there is a crypt here with thousands of bodies dating back to the 18th century. This prominent stop on the Freedom Trail is rich in colonial and Revolutionary War history, most notably because the 191-foot steeple was where patriots hung two lanterns on the night of April 18, 1775, warning that British troops were setting out by sea to their fateful encounter with local militias at Lexington and Concord. A walk around the church, constructed in 1723 (making it Boston’s oldest house of worship), is a revelation in irony: While the building played a role in the start of the Revolutionary War, most of its Episcopal congregants remained loyal to King George. Chimes from the steeple still announce Sunday services, thanks to the Bellringers Guild, which is comprised of MIT students.