The 21 best attractions in Manhattan (2024)

The 21 best attractions in Manhattan (1)

From the Statue of Liberty to the High Line, these are the best Manhattan attractions in NYC.

Photograph: By Bryan Smith

Written by Shaye Weaver & Rossilynne Skena Culgan

Contributor: Rosemary Waugh

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If you’re planning to visit New York City, it would be ridiculousnot to start with Manhattan and its attractions. Though it's neither the biggest borough (that’s Queens!)nor the most densely-populated (that’sBrooklyn!), it is the center of the city: historically, geographically, and culturally.

Dominated by some of the world’s most iconic skyscrapers, here you’ll findglobally famous attractions like the Empire State Building, Statue of Liberty, and Central Park. You’ve got some of the best restaurants in New York. And all thebiggest and bestBroadway showsare here because Broadway isliterally in Manhattan. Whether you’re just visiting the Big Apple for the weekend or you’re a lifelong New Yorker looking for something new to do, these attractions in Manhattan are essential additions to your bucket list.

RECOMMENDED: Full guide to the best New York attractions
RECOMMENDED: The best non-touristy things to do in NYC

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Best Manhattan attractions

1.One World Observatory
  • Attractions
  • Towers and viewpoints
  • Financial District
Photograph: Shutterstock

The tallest building in the United State, One World Observatory at World Trade Center lets visitors experience panoramic views of NYC on levels 100, 101, and 102. The tourbegins with a thrilling trip in theSky Pod elevators (some of the fastest in the world) which lead to a two-minute video presentation of gorgeous city images onfloor 102.

Check out City Pulse on the 100th floor,which shows HD videos featuring notable NYC landmarks and neighborhoods. For a special dining experience, make a reservation for dinner or co*cktails.

2.Empire State Building
  • Attractions
  • Monuments and memorials
  • Midtown West
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Shutterstock

Some things get better with age. The Empire State Building—now approaching its 100th birthday—is definitely one of them.

The Empire State Building became an icon when it opened in 1931 as the world's tallest building. Though the landmarkmay have lost its No. 1 height status, it's remained a beloved destination with incredible views of the city. Thanks to recent updates, it's not just about the views anymore. Thebuilding nowspotlights art, architecture, and history; plus, it offers a slew of cool events andexcellent dining options.

Tourists tend to make the Empire State Building their first stop upon arriving in New York City, and they're onto something—it's worth a visit, no matter if you're a lifelong New Yorker or just passing through town.

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3.The Statue of Liberty
  • Attractions
  • Monuments and memorials
  • Liberty Island
Photograph: Jena Cumbo

In a city where almost everything is iconic, Lady Libertyis the icon of icons – certainly where tourists are concerned. Our tipis to avoidthe foam-crown-sporting masses and pre-book a combo cruise-and-tour ticket. A climb to the crown – and why wouldn’t you? – affords a panoramic view of New York Harbor and the chance to see the literal nuts and bolts of Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi’s creation, which was given to the people of America by the people of France in 1886.

Wethoroughlyrecommend stopping in the museum on Liberty Island, if only to marvel at the initial ambivalence of 19th-century New Yorkers when they were asked to fund the construction of the pedestal.

4.The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • Museums
Photograph: Shutterstock

Opened in 1880, the massive museum takes up 11.5 acres within Central Park along Fifth Avenue, across two million square feet and receives more than 4 million visitors annually. Its collection, which spans 5,000 years of art history from pre-history to the present, boasts 36,000 objects, including 2,500 European Old Master, Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings, as well as the greatest collection of Egyptian art and artifacts outside Cairo—among them, the full-scale Temple of Dendur.

Other major attractions include The Met’s American and Lehman Wings; The Costume Institute; the Rooftop Garden, which offers spectacular views of the Park and the Midtown skyline; and, of course, its 29 amazing period rooms.

Time Out tip: To avoid the crowds, come on a weekday or visit for date night.

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5.Central Park
  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours
Photograph: S.Borisov / Shutterstock

Surely the world’s most famous public park, the startlingly enormous Central Park is one of the most beloved attractions in New York City, and an iconic fixture of numerous films, TV shows, and songs.

It’s surprisingly easy to forget you’re in Manhattan once you penetrate the idyllic, 843-acre plot, which was first brought to life in the mid-nineteenth century by urban visionaries Frederick Law Olmstead and Calvert Vaux. Their thoughtful design reflects a harmonious balance of scenic elements that live on today: pastoral (the open, picnic-ready lawn of the Sheep Meadow), formal (the linear, tree-lined Mall), and picturesque (the densely wooded paths of the Ramble).

Rent a bike in Central Park.

  • Attractions
  • Civic buildings
  • Midtown East
The 21 best attractions in Manhattan (14)
The 21 best attractions in Manhattan (15)

If you want to call thismagnificentpinnacle of Art Deco architecture NYC’s most eye-popping skyscraper then we’re not going to argue with you. Triangle-shaped windows in its crown are lined with lights, creating a beautiful effect come nighttime.

Oozing a moneyed sophistication oft identified with old New York, you can’t actually go up it as a tourist – it’s still in use as offices –but the magnificent art deco lobby is open to the public.

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7.The High Line
  • Things to do
Photograph: Shutterstock

Though it’s spawned many imitators, there’s something uniquely New York about this wonderful aerial walk, builton an abandoned railway track,an ultra-smart move-in footage-starved Manhattan. What we like best is how the pathwayrises above thecity while keeping you rooted in urban life: where else can you walk through a field of wildflowers as cabszip along the street beneath you?

8.Theater District
Photograph: Courtesy Joan Marcus

More than13 million locals and tourists take in Broadway shows every year. Most of NYC’s 41 Broadway venues – that is to say, professional theaters with a capacity of over 500 – are located in the Theater District. Roughly speaking, that’s 41st Street to 52nd Street betweenSixth Avenue andEighth Avenue. Each season brings a new wave of mega-musicals, plays, and star-driven revivals.

Tickets don’t tend to be cheap – although discounts are often available – but youwould beremiss to leave New York City without taking in one of the season's best shows.

Get spooked on a haunted Broadway theater tour.

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9.9/11 Memorial and Museum in NYC
  • Things to do
Photograph: By Fotos593 / Shutterstock

The 9/11 Memorial & Museum is one of the most popular—and certainly the most heartbreaking—attractions in New York City. Located where the Twin Towers once stood, the memorial and museum tell the story of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The 9/11 Museum, located where the Twin Towers once stood, explores the history of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. The museum houses artifacts, historical records, firefighting equipment and a memorial exhibition. Tours with expert guides are available.

Outside the museum is the memorial, which honorsthe 2,977 people killed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 at the World Trade Center site, near Shanksville, Pennsylvania, and at the Pentagon, as well as the six people killed in the World Trade Center bombing on February 26, 1993. The Memorial’s twin reflecting pools are each nearly an acre in size and feature the largest man-made waterfalls in North America.

10.Rockefeller Center
  • Things to do
  • Midtown West
Photograph: courtesy of Rockefeller Center

Built bythe fabulously wealthy businessmen John D Rockefeller, the construction of this enormous complex employed over 40,000 workers over nine years. Nowadays, more than 350,000 visitors make their way to the historic landmark every year, starting early in the morning with folks hoping tospotcelebrities orappear in the background ofthe Today Show.

Always in demand is the NBC studio tour, which covers the network’s history and sites in 30 Rock. The busiest time to visit, of course, is December when the enormous, 70-foot Christmas Tree stands proudly above the plaza ice rink.Book Online

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11.Grand Central Terminal
  • Attractions
Photograph: Shutterstock/Sean Pavone

This iconictransit hub, which opened in 1913,is used by thousands upon thousands of commuters each day. Andit’s also a destination in its own right:its majestic Beaux-Artsarchitecture is an awesomemarriage of form and function.

Famous features include the vaulted, constellation-adorned ceiling and the four-faced opal clock topping the main information booth. They’re both located in the Grand Concourse. Meanwhile, ornamentation above the 42nd Street entrance includes a likeness of Mercury, the god of travel (naturally), and an ornate Tiffany-glass timepiece.

12.Whitney Museum of American Art
Photograph: Courtesy the Whitney Museum of American Art

Standing at the foot of the High Line along Gansevoort Street in the Meatpacking District, the 63,000 square facility features bothindoor and outdoor exhibition space. True to its founder Gertrude Vanderbilt's wishes, the Whitney is dedicated to presenting the work of American artists. Its collection holds about 15,000 pieces by nearly 2,000 artists, including Alexander Calder, Willem de Kooning, Edward Hopper (the museum holds his entire estate), Jasper Johns, Louise Nevelson, Georgia O’Keeffe and Claes Oldenburg.

Three outdoor sculpture spaces provide views of the Hudson and the surrounding neighborhood. This is a goldmine for slightly lesser-known but fantastic exhibitions.

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13.New-York Historical Society
  • Museums
  • History
  • Upper West Side
  • price 2 of 4

Photograph: Courtesy New-York Historical Society/Jon Wallen

History buffs will love this Upper West Side institution. Built in 1804, it'sthe oldest museum in New York City. In a nod to history, the museum kept the hyphen in its name—that’s how the city’s name was spelled back in the early 1800s. The New-York Historical Society features more than 1.6 million works that explore the history of the city and the country, including exhibits, art and historical artifacts.

The Patricia D. Klingenstein Library has more than three million books, newspapers, maps, photographs and more from our nation’s founding through slavery and Reconstruction and beyond. The Gilder Lehrman Collection is also housed in the New-York Historical Society, where you can view signed copies of the Emancipation Proclamation, the Thirteenth Amendment and the Constitution.

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14.Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
  • Museums
  • Art and design
  • Upper East Side
  • price 3 of 4

Photograph: David Heald, © Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, 2017

Frank Lloyd Wright broke the mold on museum design when he completed his building for the Guggenheim in 1959. Since then, millions of visitors have come to the Gugg to gawk at its spiraling rotunda, but they stay for its daring art shows and its collection, which includes Peggy Guggenheim’s trove of Cubist, Surrealist and Abstract Expressionist works, as well as the largest collection of Kandinskys in the United States.

Beautiful and innovative both inside and out, what more inspiration do you need?

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15.Times Square
  • Things to do
Photograph: Shutterstock

Times Square in NYC—New York’scrowded attraction—is a global icon in its own right. It’s the "center of the world" and the epicenter of NYC tourism with the best Broadway shows and photo opportunities with The Naked Cowboy and even those creepy mascots.

Its fabled days of grime and crime are a distant memory, thankfully, but it still has much to experience, especiallyduring the holiday season.

16.New York Public Library, Stephen A. Schwarzman Building
  • Attractions
  • Libraries, archives and foundations
  • Midtown West
Photograph: Moira Brazier

Catch a glimpse ofthismonumental library’s Beaux-Arts facadeand you’ll see why it tooknine years and $9 million to construct (when $9 million was a lot of money). The grand columns, Tennessee marble lions dubbed Patience and Fortitude and spectacular Rose Main Reading Room make the library one of the most beautiful buildings in the city.

The contents aren’t too bad either: bibliophiles shouldn’tpass up the chance to look through the vast collection of books and literary ephemera, including the original Winnie-the-Pooh bear and first folio editions of William Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies.

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17.Chelsea Market
  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
Photograph: Shutterstock

More than six million people a year visit this former biscuit factory turned food hall: a fact that’s unlikely to surprise anyone who has ever braved the epic line for Los Tacos No. 1.

In addition to 35-plus eateries, Chelsea Market is home to the rotating boutique selection of Artists & Fleas, plus a selectionof other local boutiques. The fact Google snapped thespace up for a cool $2.4 billion a few years back only goes to show how iconic it really is.

Explore Chelsea Market and The Highline.

18.Flatiron Building
  • Attractions
  • Monuments and memorials
  • Flatiron
Photograph: Shutterstock

When it debuted in 1902, critics thought the Flatiron Building wouldn’t last: they worriedthat a strong windmight topple the long, thin, pyramidal structure. Fortunately,architect Daniel Burnham’ssmart solution to the problem of a triangular lothas proven nothing if not enduring, and the unique architecture is still very much in place.

While it's still cool to look at, the building has been under scaffolding for years now, so set your expectations if you're heading there for a photo.

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19.American Museum of Natural History
  • Museums
  • Science and technology
  • Upper West Side
Photograph: Marielle Solan

If the American Museum of Natural History only contained the94-foot blue whale model in the Milstein Hall of Ocean Life and the 122-foot cast of the Titanosaur fossil in the Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Orientation Center, then it would be worth visiting on those grounds alone.

What’s that, you want more?Fair enough: youcan also consider the vast collection of taxidermied animals, check out the dazzling Hall of Gems, explore the heavens in the awe-inspiring Hayden Planetarium, and get inspired in the new Gilder Center.

20.Macy’s Herald Square
  • Shopping
  • Department stores
  • Midtown West
Photograph: Jessica Lin

Though it’s no longer the biggest department store in the world, the original Macy’s location is no slouch, covering a prodigious 2.2 million square feet. You couldspend daysshopping in this 11-floor building, butbuying stuff isn’tthe only draw.

Visit in the spring to peep the extravagant Macy’s Flower Show, or wait until after Thanksgiving to take in the festive holiday windows and drop off your Christmas list to Old Saint Nick himself.

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21.Harbor helicopter tour

The 21 best attractions in Manhattan (44)
The 21 best attractions in Manhattan (45)

For generations, the architects who have worked in Manhattan have known one thing: the only way is up. Take their lead and view the area’s iconic buildings, bridges, parks and statues from the air. Ideal for when your feet needtime off from earth-bound site-seeing, a helicopter tour will sweep you up and around the Statue of Liberty, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Empire State Building and so forth, including giving you a view of Central Park normally reserved for the birds.

Head to Pier Six on the East River and, well, prepare for lift off.

Book online

Looking for more things to do?

The best bike tours in NYC
  • Things to do
  • Walks and tours
Photograph: Whitney Lawson

For those looking to experience the citylike alocals, hop on two wheels and join of the best bike tours NYC has to offer

Been there, done that? Think again, my friend.

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