Last updated March 17, 2026 by the Recommended.app research team.
French Quarter Walking (Free)
Simply walking the French Quarter is one of America's great free experiences — the wrought-iron balconies, the hidden courtyards, the street musicians, the above-door plaques telling centuries of history. Jackson Square, the Cabildo, St. Louis Cathedral, and the Mississippi riverfront are all free to see.
Pro tip: Walk Royal Street instead of Bourbon for the art galleries, antique shops, and street musicians. Early morning in the Quarter, before the bars open, is serene and beautiful.
St. Charles Streetcar ($1.25)
The oldest continuously operating streetcar line in the world runs from Canal Street through the Garden District to Carrollton Avenue. For $1.25 you get a 7-mile ride past mansions, live oaks, Tulane and Loyola Universities, and Audubon Park. It's the best $1.25 you'll spend in America.
Pro tip: Ride in the evening when the mansions are lit from within. Sit on the right side heading uptown for the best Garden District mansion views.
City Park (Free)
One of the oldest urban parks in the country at 1,300 acres, City Park features the largest collection of live oaks in the world (some over 800 years old), a sculpture garden, botanical gardens, and the Besthoff Sculpture Garden — a world-class outdoor sculpture collection that's free to visit.
Pro tip: The Besthoff Sculpture Garden is the highlight — over 90 sculptures set among moss-draped oaks and lagoons. Completely free. Go in the morning for the best light.
Live Music on Frenchmen (Free (most venues))
Most clubs on Frenchmen Street have no cover charge, meaning you can experience world-class jazz, funk, and blues for the price of a drink. Moving between The Spotted Cat, d.b.a., Bamboula's, and The Maison in a single evening is one of the great nightlife experiences in America.
Pro tip: Tip the musicians generously — they're playing for your tips, not a salary. $5-10 per set is appropriate and appreciated.
Audubon Park (Free)
A gorgeous 340-acre park in Uptown designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, featuring a 1.8-mile jogging path under massive live oaks, a lagoon with wildlife, and a peaceful atmosphere that embodies the slow pace of Uptown New Orleans.
Pro tip: Walk the main loop under the oaks, then continue through to Magazine Street for coffee or lunch. The Tree of Life (a massive live oak near the St. Charles entrance) is one of the most photographed trees in the South.
Budget Travel Tips for New Orleans
Traveling on a budget in New Orleans doesn't mean sacrificing quality — it means being strategic about where you spend. The activities above prove that some of the best experiences in the city are free or nearly so. Beyond these specific recommendations, here are some general principles: eat where locals eat (not where tourists eat), walk whenever possible (you'll see more and spend less), visit museums on their free days, explore parks and public spaces that cost nothing, and remember that the most memorable travel experiences are rarely the most expensive ones. New Orleans is a city that rewards the resourceful traveler — the one who packs a water bottle, downloads offline maps, and approaches each day with more curiosity than credit card swipes. The goal isn't to be cheap; it's to be intentional about spending money on the things that truly enhance your experience and skipping the overpriced tourist traps that add nothing to your trip.
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