Los Angeles on a Budget: Free and Cheap Things to Do
How to experience the best of Los Angeles without breaking the bank
Griffith Park Hiking (Free)
Over 4,200 acres of urban wilderness with trails for every skill level. The hike to the Hollywood Sign via the Brush Canyon Trail is the classic route, but the park also offers quieter trails through Fern Dell, Bronson Cave (the Batcave entrance from the 1960s TV show), and the Old Zoo picnic area.
Pro Tip
The Fern Dell entrance on Western Canyon Road is the most beautiful entry point — a shaded grotto with a stream that feels tropical. Free parking on residential streets nearby.
Santa Monica Pier & Beach (Free)
The iconic Santa Monica Pier with its Ferris wheel and Pacific Park, plus miles of wide sandy beach stretching south toward Venice, is free to visit. The pier itself, the beach, the sunset views, and the people-watching are all free — only the rides and games cost money.
Pro Tip
Park at the structure on 4th Street (about $8) instead of the pier lot ($15+). Walk south from the pier along the beach path toward Venice for the best sunset views.
Grand Central Market ($5-15 per meal)
Operating in downtown LA since 1917, Grand Central Market is a sprawling food hall with vendors serving everything from Mexican tacos and Thai noodles to artisanal egg sandwiches and freshly pressed juices. It's one of the most diverse and affordable food experiences in the city.
Pro Tip
Tacos Tumbras a Tomas has the best tacos in the market. Villa Moreliana serves carnitas that rival anything in Mexico. Go at off-peak hours to avoid the lunch crush.
The Broad Museum (Free)
Eli Broad's contemporary art museum in downtown LA houses one of the most significant postwar and contemporary art collections in the world, including major works by Warhol, Basquiat, Koons, Lichtenstein, and Kusama. The building itself, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, is an architectural landmark.
Pro Tip
Free timed-entry tickets are released monthly and go fast. Standby lines on weekday mornings are usually short (15-30 minutes). The Infinity Mirrored Room requires a separate free ticket.
LACMA Free Days (Free (select days))
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the largest art museum in the western United States, offers free general admission for LA County residents every second Tuesday of the month and for everyone after 3 PM on Mondays. The Urban Light installation (the rows of vintage streetlamps) is free to see anytime.
Pro Tip
The Urban Light installation is most photogenic at dusk when the lamps turn on against the twilight sky. Free parking is available after 7 PM.
Budget Travel Tips for Los Angeles
Traveling on a budget in Los Angeles 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. Los Angeles 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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