NYC Experiences
Things to do before the show, after the game, around your concert, or across a full New York weekend.
You have tickets. Now what? That question is what Stage & Street Experiences is built to answer. Whether you’re coming to New York for Broadway, a concert at MSG or Barclays, a Knicks or Yankees game, or a first visit with no plan beyond a hotel reservation — this section helps you build the time around the main event into something as good as the event itself.
NYC experiences here means sightseeing done with realistic timing, family-friendly ideas that account for actual kids, date nights that don’t fall apart after the curtain, rainy-day pivots that don’t waste the afternoon, seasonal moments worth planning around, and first-timer itineraries that don’t try to do everything. The anchor is always the city — but the plan is always built around your reason for being here.

Plan NYC experiences around Broadway shows, concerts, sports, sightseeing, date nights, family trips, rainy days, and seasonal weekends.
What This Section Covers
Seven experience categories — each with its own hub page and a set of detailed guides underneath. Start with the one that fits your trip.
| Experience Type | Best For |
|---|---|
| Sightseeing | Classic NYC landmarks, observation decks, museums, walks, and must-see stops — planned around real timing and transit |
| Before the Show | Things to do before Broadway, concerts, games, and arena events — near the venue, within the right window |
| Family-Friendly | Kid-friendly NYC days, Broadway with kids, Central Park, American Girl, princess day plans, rainy-day ideas |
| Date Night | Broadway dates, concert dates, rooftop bars, romantic walks, dinner and a show — nights that feel intentional |
| First-Time Visitors | One-day, weekend, and first-trip NYC planning — realistic pacing, subway basics, must-see priorities |
| Rainy Day | Museums, indoor activities, Broadway and concert plans, weather-proof pivots for any kind of trip |
| Seasonal | Summer, fall, winter, spring, Christmas, and New Year’s Eve in NYC — what the city offers and when |
Classic NYC sights planned around real timing, neighborhoods, and transit — not a generic tourist checklist. Whether you have two hours before a show or a full day, the sightseeing guides help you build a route that actually works.
All Sightseeing Guides →The most Stage & Street part of the experiences section. Most travel sites list attractions. These guides help you fill the exact window before a curtain, tipoff, puck drop, first pitch, or concert doors — near the venue, within the time you have.
- Before a Broadway Show
- Before a Concert in NYC
- Before a Sports Game
- Near Times Square
- Near Madison Square Garden
- Near Barclays Center
Practical, parent-friendly, and built around real kids — not idealized ones. The family guides help you avoid overpacked days, long walks in the wrong direction, bad timing, and the kind of afternoon that ends with everyone miserable in a cab.
- Princess Day NYC
- NYC With Kids
- American Girl NYC
- Broadway With Kids
- Central Park With Kids
- Rainy Day With Kids
Stylish but useful. The date-night guides focus on flow — where to go before, how to avoid the chaos of midtown after curtain, and how to make the night feel intentional rather than improvised. Broadway is the strongest date anchor in New York.
All Date Night Guides →Help for first-time visitors who want to see everything and have four days to do it. The biggest mistake is trying. The first-timer guides help you choose the right anchor event, build around it geographically, and leave the trip feeling like a success rather than a checklist failure.
All First-Timer Guides →Rain should not ruin the trip. New York has more genuinely excellent indoor options than most cities have options, period. The rainy-day guides help you pivot fast — museums, Broadway, great restaurants, hotel afternoons — without wasting the day waiting for the forecast to change.
All Rainy Day Guides →New York shifts dramatically with the seasons — what’s available, what the city feels like, what shows are running, and what to prioritize changes completely between July and December. The seasonal guides help you plan around the best version of whatever time of year you’re visiting.
- NYC Summer Experiences
- NYC Fall Experiences
- NYC Christmas Guide
- NYC New Year’s Eve
- NYC Winter Guide
- NYC Spring Guide
Start With Your Reason for Being Here
The fastest path through this section is knowing what brought you to New York. Pick your occasion and the relevant guides surface immediately.
We Have Broadway Tickets
We’re Going to a Concert
We’re Going to a Game
We’re Visiting With Kids
We’re Planning a Date Night
It’s Our First Time in NYC
Experiences Near Major NYC Venues
The strongest planning logic in New York is geographic. If you’re going to MSG tonight, the best pre-show experiences are the ones you can reach from Penn Station — not from the Brooklyn waterfront. These guides are organized by venue so the planning stays local and realistic.
Near Times Square & Broadway
Near Madison Square Garden
Near Barclays Center
Near Yankee Stadium
Near MetLife Stadium
Featured Planning Paths
Five common NYC trip scenarios — each with a suggested structure and the planning resources that make it work. Use these as starting points, not scripts.
Broadway show as the anchor event. Dinner in Hell’s Kitchen or the Theater District beforehand, maybe an observation deck or museum during the day, hotel in Midtown or close enough for the walk to matter.
Concert at MSG, Barclays, or another major venue as the centerpiece. Dinner near the arena before the show, hotel based on venue proximity, sightseeing the next day in a neighborhood that makes geographic sense.
Game day as the anchor — Knicks, Yankees, Rangers, Mets, Giants, Jets, Nets, Islanders, or Devils. Transportation and timing matter most. Experiences before the game are mostly practical; the neighborhood determines the pre-game options.
Choose one major ticketed event as the non-negotiable. Build sightseeing around that neighborhood and the adjacent areas. Keep the subway manageable. Don’t try to see all five boroughs in four days.
Rain showed up. The outdoor plans are gone. This is actually one of the best days to see a museum, have a long lunch, and book a Broadway matinee — if you pivot fast and don’t spend the morning waiting for it to stop.
Experiences + Night Out — How They Work Together
Experiences and Night Out are separate sections on Stage & Street, but they’re built to be used together. Here’s the difference — and how to move between them.
🗺 Experiences — What to Do
- Sightseeing and landmarks
- Things to do before a show or game
- Date-night activity ideas
- Family-friendly plans and itineraries
- Rainy-day pivots and indoor alternatives
- First-timer itineraries and pacing
- Seasonal NYC activities and events
🌆 Night Out — How to Make It Work
- Restaurants and pre-show dining
- Hotels and where to stay
- Transportation and subway routing
- Parking and rideshare logistics
- Neighborhood guides and context
- Post-show bars and late dining
- Practical logistics around the main event
The way to use both: start in Experiences to decide what you’re doing, then go to Night Out to figure out where to eat, where to stay, and how to get there. Most planning sessions touch both sections — that’s by design.
FAQ: NYC Experiences
Plan Your NYC Day
- This Section Things to do before shows, games, concerts & around your NYC weekend
- Categories 7 hubs — sightseeing, before the show, family, date night, first-timers, rainy day, seasonal
- Core Idea Anchor the trip around a ticketed event — build everything else around it
- Works With Broadway · Concerts · Sports · Night Out — all connected
NYC Experiences Categories
Near Your Venue
NYC Landmarks & Walks
Plans for Every Group
Visit Planning & Pivots
Connect to Broadway, Concerts & Sports
"Start with the anchor event — the show, concert, or game. Then build everything else around it geographically. Don't cross the city twice."
Every Guide You Need — Before, During & Around Your NYC Trip
Sightseeing, family plans, date nights, rainy-day pivots, first-timer itineraries, and the practical planning that makes every NYC day actually work.
Near Times Square — Before Broadway
What to do in the hours before a Broadway show — walks, landmarks, drinks, and how to fill the window without rushing to the theater.
Before the Show → Pinterest GoldPrincess Day NYC Planning Guide
American Girl, Lion King or Aladdin matinee, lunch in Midtown — the full day-plan for a magical NYC experience with kids.
Princess Day Guide → High TrafficNYC in a Weekend
How to build a two-day New York trip around one major ticketed event — realistic pacing, subway basics, and the sightseeing that actually fits.
Weekend Guide → Date NightDinner and a Show — NYC
The strongest date-night formula in New York — how to choose the show, book the restaurant, and build an evening that feels intentional.
Date Night Guide → SightseeingNYC Observation Decks Guide
Empire State, Top of the Rock, Edge, One World — which deck is worth it, which is better before a show, and how to time it right.
Observation Decks → Rainy DayThings to Do in NYC When It Rains
The fast pivot guide — museums, Broadway, indoor experiences, and how to salvage a great day when the outdoor plans disappear.
Rainy Day Guide →Browse All Experiences
Before a Broadway Show — Full Guide
Everything to do in the hours before curtain — by showtime, neighborhood, and how much time you have. The most useful pre-show planning page on the site.
Before Broadway →