What to Do Before a Broadway Show in NYC: Best Pre-Theater Plans, Dinner, Drinks, Times Square & Timing | Stage & Street NYC
HomeExperiencesBefore the Show › Before Broadway
Before the Show · Broadway

What to Do Before a Broadway Show in NYC:
Dinner, Drinks, Times Square & Smart Pre-Theater Plans

The hours before Broadway can make or break the night. The best pre-show plan is not the busiest one — it is the one that gets you fed, relaxed, close to the theater, and inside with time to spare.

Rule: stay close to the theater Dinner: earlier than you think Best zones: Theater District · Hell’s Kitchen · Times Square Biggest mistake: one more stop before curtain
The Short Version

Quick Answer: What Should You Do Before a Broadway Show?

✈️
First Broadway night? Keep it simple: arrive in the Theater District early, eat nearby, take a short walk through Times Square or past Rockefeller Center, then head to the theater with buffer time built in. Do not over-engineer the pre-show window on your first visit. See First-Time Broadway Visitors guide.
🍽️
Want dinner before the show? Book earlier than feels necessary and choose a restaurant close to the theater. Pre-theater menus often close early. The best pre-theater restaurant is not the most famous — it is the one that gets you fed and to your seat on time. See best pre-theater restaurants NYC.
🍸
Want drinks before the show? Keep them near the theater and avoid chasing a far-away “perfect bar.” One stop is enough. Avoid packed venues with unpredictable wait times close to curtain.
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦
Traveling with kids? Prioritize food, bathrooms, walking distance, and calm over novelty. A Times Square photo and a nearby quick bite beats an ambitious multi-stop plan that exhausts everyone before the curtain. See Broadway shows for families.
💑
Date night? One polished dinner close to the theater, a short walk, and relaxed arrival. The date works better when it is not rushed. Choose dinner over an itinerary. See best Broadway shows for date night.
🌧️
Raining? Stay indoors or close to the theater. Do not cross town for a scenic plan that the weather has already ruined. Restaurant, hotel reset, museum, or head straight to the theater early. See the Rainy Day NYC guide.
Duffy Square and Broadway at night in Midtown Manhattan with bright Theater District lights before a Broadway show
The best pre-Broadway plan keeps the night close, simple, and on time — dinner, drinks, sightseeing, or a quick walk only work if they protect the curtain.
Stage & Street recommendation:

For most visitors, the best before-Broadway plan is: arrive in Midtown early → eat within walking distance → do one nearby add-on → arrive at the theater with time to spare. The closer the curtain gets, the less creative the plan should become.

The Timing Problem

How Early Should You Get to the Theater District Before Broadway?

The right arrival time depends on dinner, group size, weather, mobility, kids, hotel location, transit, and whether you want sightseeing. These are flexible planning ranges — always check your ticket for the actual curtain time and verify restaurant reservations, transit conditions, and theater entry procedures before the night of the show.

🎟️ Show Only
Arrive near the theater with buffer for entry, bathroom, seating, and unexpected delays. Do not wander far once the show is close. The Theater District gets crowded on show nights and walking time through midtown crowds takes longer than expected.
🍽️ Dinner First
Arrive in the area early enough for a real meal — not a rushed check-drop panic. Pre-theater menus often have early close times. Confirm your restaurant’s last seating for pre-theater. See best pre-theater restaurants NYC and restaurants near Broadway.
🍸 Drinks First
One stop, close to the theater, easy exit. Avoid long waits, packed bars, difficult-to-leave venues, or bars requiring a reservation that might run over. The drink is a warm-up, not the main event.
🏛️ Sightseeing First
Do it earlier in the day or keep it nearby. Times Square, Rockefeller Center, and Bryant Park are the safest sightseeing add-ons before Broadway. Museums, observation decks, and cross-borough plans require finishing well before dinner. See Rockefeller Center guide.
🚇 Traveling From Farther
Add buffer for subway delays, rideshare traffic, weather, and walking distance. Midtown traffic on show nights is real. See the subway to Broadway guide and Uber vs subway comparison.
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 With Kids
Arrive earlier, feed them earlier, avoid over-walking, and plan bathrooms before leaving for the theater. Kids need the buffer more than adults do — energy and patience both run lower closer to curtain time.
Pre-Broadway rule: the closer you get to curtain, the smaller your plan should get.

A full sightseeing day earlier is fine. A museum visit at 3 PM is fine. Adding “one more stop” at 6:45 PM before a 7:30 PM curtain is where Broadway nights go wrong. Protect the last 45–60 minutes before the show for transit, theater entry, and breathing room.

Ten Pre-Show Formats

Best Things to Do Before a Broadway Show

✈️
First-Time Broadway Night

Classic First-Time Broadway Night

Theater District arrival → early dinner → Times Square / short Midtown walk → theater

The format that works for most first-time visitors. Times Square photos are a natural warm-up to the theater energy. Dinner close to the theater means no rushing.

First-Time Visitors hub
🍽️
Most Visitors

Dinner + Broadway

Pre-theater restaurant close to theater → short walk → show

The most common and most reliable pre-Broadway format. The only rule: arrive early enough to eat without rushing, and choose a restaurant close enough to walk to the theater comfortably. See date-night restaurants NYC.

Best pre-theater restaurants
🌃
First-Timers · Families

Times Square Before Broadway

Arrive early → Times Square photos/walk → nearby food → theater

For first-time visitors and families, Times Square delivers the full Broadway-night energy before the show even starts. Keep it earlier — the closer to curtain, the more crowded and time-consuming it becomes. See near Times Square guide.

Restaurants near Times Square
🏢
Midtown Sightseeing

Rockefeller Center / Midtown Walk

Rockefeller Center → Bryant Park / Midtown South → dinner → show

Especially strong for first-time visitors and holiday-season trips. The Midtown loop — Rockefeller, Bryant Park, Grand Central area — delivers NYC landmark energy close to the Theater District. See Bryant Park / Midtown South guide.

Rockefeller Center guide
🏛️
Rain · Cold · Culture

Museum or Indoor Plan Before Broadway

Midtown-friendly museum or indoor stop → dinner → Broadway

MoMA or the Morgan Library are the strongest Midtown museum choices before an evening show — both keep the day close. See the NYC Museums guide for which museum to choose by neighborhood and time.

Rainy Day NYC guide
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦
Families

Family-Friendly Before Broadway

Simple food → bathroom break → short nearby walk/photo → theater

Do not overpack the pre-show window with kids. Times Square photos and a casual family dinner close by is the right level of ambition. See family-friendly restaurants NYC and Broadway shows for families.

Family-Friendly NYC hub
💑
Date Night

Date Night Before Broadway

Dinner close to theater → short walk → show → optional post-show drink/dessert

The date works better when it is relaxed, not rushed. One polished dinner, a short walk, and a comfortable show arrival beats a complicated multi-stop plan every time. See best Broadway shows for date night.

Date-night restaurants NYC
🏨
Hotel Guests

Hotel Reset + Broadway

Sightseeing earlier → hotel reset → dinner nearby → show

One of the most underrated pre-Broadway moves: return to the hotel, freshen up, and leave for dinner relaxed rather than rushing from sightseeing directly to the theater. Staying close to Broadway makes this seamless. See where to stay for shows and events.

Hotels near Broadway
Spontaneous Night

Last-Minute Tickets + Quick Dinner

Ticket decision → quick bite nearby → theater

Spontaneous Broadway nights work when you keep the food decision simple. Speed and proximity beat novelty when the curtain is already approaching. See rush and lottery tickets and best quick bites near NYC venues.

Last-minute Broadway tickets
🍺
Drinks Night

Drinks + Broadway

One nearby cocktail/wine/beer stop → theater

Hell’s Kitchen and the Theater District have excellent pre-show bar options a short walk from most theaters. Keep it to one stop, choose somewhere with no wait, and leave enough time to walk over comfortably. See Hell’s Kitchen neighborhood guide.

Theater District guide
Feed the Night Right

Dinner, Drinks, or Quick Bites Before Broadway?

The right food format depends on curtain time, group type, and how much you want the food to be part of the experience. All five options below can work — the mistake is choosing the wrong one for the situation.

🍽️ Date Nights · Special Occasions Sit-Down Dinner Before Broadway Best for date nights, special nights, and visitors who arrive early enough for a real meal. Pre-theater menus are designed for exactly this — use them. Rule: book earlier and stay close. Confirm last seating time before reserving.
🥪 Families · Last-Minute · Late Arrivals Quick Bite Before Broadway Best for families, last-minute tickets, late arrivals, and matinee-to-dinner transitions. Speed and proximity beat novelty every time close to curtain. Rule: choose speed and proximity over novelty.
🍸 Couples · Friends · Repeat Visitors Drinks Before the Show One stop close to the theater. Hell’s Kitchen and the Theater District both have excellent pre-show options. Avoid hard-to-leave venues with unpredictable waits. Rule: one nearby stop — no cross-town bar chase.
🍰 Matinees · Tight Schedules Eat After the Show Instead If you have an early curtain or hate rushing dinner, save it for after. Post-show restaurants near Broadway are strong and the evening is more relaxed when dinner is not a timing race. See get home after a show. Rule: a great dinner after beats a rushed one before.
Families · Matinees · Light Eaters Dessert or Coffee Before Broadway Best for families, matinees, visitors who already ate, or casual show nights. Keeps the pre-show window light and social without the pressure of a full meal reservation. Rule: keep it short and nearby. This is a treat, not a destination.
The best pre-theater restaurant is not always the best restaurant in NYC. It is the one that gets you fed, happy, and to your seat on time.

The most common Broadway dinner mistake is choosing a great restaurant that is too far away or too ambitious for the time window available. Proximity and a reasonable reservation time beat star ratings every time on show night.

Where to Be

Best Areas to Be Before Broadway

🎭 Closest to Theater Theater District Staying in the Theater District before the show is the safest pre-Broadway position. Restaurants, bars, and the theater itself are all within walking distance. No transit, no rideshare, no surprise delays.
🌃 First-Timers · Families · Photos Times Square Times Square is the natural warm-up for Broadway night energy. First-timers and families love it before a show. Do it early — walking through Times Square at 7:15 PM on a crowded show night is different from 5:30 PM.
🍽️ Restaurants · Bars · Pre-Show Hell’s Kitchen One of the best pre-Broadway food zones in the city. Dense restaurant and bar scene a short walk west of the Theater District. Slightly more neighborhood-feeling than Times Square, with great options at every price point.
🌳 Calmer Midtown Bryant Park / Midtown South A calmer pre-Broadway option east of the Theater District. Bryant Park, the New York Public Library area, and Midtown South dining are all solid for visitors who want a quieter Midtown dinner before the show.
🚉 Penn Station · Moynihan · Hotels Midtown West For visitors coming from Penn Station, Moynihan Train Hall, or Hudson Yards-side hotels. Good restaurant and hotel options with easy Theater District walking distance.
🏢 First-Timers · Holiday Season Rockefeller Center A natural pre-show add-on for first-time visitors and holiday trips. The Rockefeller Center and Fifth Avenue corridor connects naturally into Theater District dinner. Keep it timed — do not let the plaza run into dinner.
🏨 Hotel Guests Hotels Near Broadway Staying close to Broadway changes the entire pre-show dynamic. Walk to dinner, walk to the theater, walk back after — no transit stress. See where to stay for shows and events.
🚇 Coming From Another Neighborhood Subway to Broadway If you are traveling from another neighborhood or sightseeing earlier, the subway is almost always faster than rideshare to the Theater District on show nights. See the full subway to Broadway guide.
Show Type Changes the Plan

Before a Broadway Matinee vs Before an Evening Show

Afternoon Show

Before a Broadway Matinee

Matinees give you a different kind of flexibility — the day is still open after the show. Keep pre-show food simple and save the bigger plans for after.

Best before the matinee:
  • Brunch or early lunch nearby
  • Easy Midtown walk or Times Square photos
  • Bryant Park or Rockefeller Center
  • Quick family food or coffee
  • Hotel check-in if timing works
Best after the matinee:
  • Full dinner — no rush
  • Observation deck or museum
  • Walking tour or neighborhood stroll
  • Post-show restaurant and drinks

See the Broadway matinee guide and observation decks NYC.

Evening Show

Before an Evening Broadway Show

Evening shows demand more discipline in the pre-show window. The two hours before curtain are where bad planning becomes a bad night.

Best before the evening show:
  • Early dinner close to theater
  • Drinks at one nearby spot
  • Short walk — Times Square or Hotel reset
  • Sightseeing only if done earlier in the day
Best after the evening show:
  • Post-show restaurant or late-night bite
  • Hotel — show nights are long days
  • Subway or rideshare plan sorted in advance

See best post-show restaurants NYC and get home after a show.

Matinees give you more flexibility after the show. Evening shows demand more discipline before the show.

This single rule shapes the entire day. If you are seeing a matinee, keep the morning light and plan the afternoon and evening. If you are seeing an evening show, protect the pre-show window and plan the whole day so it builds toward the theater — not away from it.

Match the Plan to the Group

Best Before-Broadway Plan by Visitor Type

First-time visitors Times Square or Rockefeller Center + early dinner + Broadway Landmarks warm up the energy. Keep sightseeing early enough that dinner is relaxed. See First-Time Broadway guide.
Couples / date night Pre-theater dinner close + short walk + optional post-show drink One polished dinner beats a rushed multi-stop plan. See best Broadway shows for date night.
Families with kids Quick food + bathroom + Times Square photo + theater Simple, close, with buffer. See Broadway shows for families.
Rainy day show Indoor restaurant + hotel reset or museum + theater Stay covered. See Rainy Day NYC guide.
Short on time Quick bite near theater — skip sightseeing, protect arrival See best quick bites near NYC venues.
Special occasion Upscale dinner nearby + show + hotel close See date-night restaurants NYC and hotels near Broadway.
Matinee Brunch or lunch + show + bigger after-show plan Save dinner and sightseeing for after. See Broadway matinee guide.
Last-minute tickets Ticket first · quick bite second · theater third See last-minute Broadway tickets.
What Not to Do

Common Mistakes Before a Broadway Show

  • Booking dinner too close to curtain. Pre-theater menus close early. A rushed dinner is worse than no dinner.
  • Choosing a restaurant too far from the theater. Proximity beats star rating on show night.
  • Trying to squeeze in one more sightseeing stop too close to curtain. “One more” is how Broadway nights go wrong.
  • Assuming Times Square will be quick on a crowded show night. It will not be. Go earlier or budget real time.
  • Forgetting bathrooms, coat check, bag rules, strollers, or accessibility needs before you leave for the theater.
  • Relying on rideshare through Midtown at the last minute. The subway is almost always faster on show nights.
  • Not checking the theater address. Verify the exact theater name and address on your ticket.
  • Going to the wrong theater — several Broadway theaters have similar names nearby.
  • Underestimating walking time through Midtown crowds, especially on weekend show nights.
  • Planning a museum or observation deck too close to curtain — both take longer than expected.
  • Eating too little before a long show. Many Broadway shows run two to three hours or more.
  • Drinking too much before the show. One pre-show stop is enough.
  • Not planning what to do after the show — transit home needs a plan too.
  • Ignoring weather — rain, cold, and heat all change the pre-show plan significantly.
  • Treating first-time visitors, kids, and couples like they all need the same pre-show plan.
Before-Broadway rule: protect the curtain. Everything else is optional.

The show starts when it starts. Every add-on before the curtain is a gamble with the one fixed point of the night. The most common pre-Broadway regret is not “I wish I had done more before the show” — it is “I wish I had left more time.”

Use the Broadway hub, matinee guide, and pre-theater restaurants to build the night around the show — not against it.

Common Questions

Before Broadway FAQ

What should I do before a Broadway show?
Arrive in the Theater District early, eat nearby, choose one short add-on like Times Square or Rockefeller Center, and get to the theater with time to spare. The closer you get to curtain, the smaller your plan should become.
How early should I arrive before a Broadway show?
The safest approach is to be in the Theater District area early enough for dinner or a short walk, then keep the final stretch to the theater simple. Check your ticket for the specific curtain time and work backward from there.
Should I eat before or after Broadway?
Eat before if you can do it early and close to the theater. Eat after if you have an early curtain or hate rushing. Both work when the timing is realistic. See best post-show restaurants NYC.
Where should I eat before Broadway?
Choose a restaurant close to your theater. Theater District, Hell’s Kitchen, Times Square, and Bryant Park / Midtown South are the strongest pre-theater zones. See best pre-theater restaurants NYC.
Is Times Square worth visiting before Broadway?
Yes for first-time visitors, families, and photos — but do it early. Crowds and walking time can make you late if timed too close to curtain. See near Times Square guide.
Can I go to Rockefeller Center before Broadway?
Yes, especially for first-time visitors and holiday-season trips. Keep it timed carefully and pair with a Midtown dinner. See Rockefeller Center guide.
What should families do before Broadway?
Simple food, bathroom break, short walk or Times Square photo, then theater. See Broadway shows for families.
What is a good date-night plan before Broadway?
A nearby dinner, a short walk, then the show. One polished dinner close to the theater beats a complicated multi-stop plan. See best Broadway shows for date night.
What should I do before a Broadway matinee?
Brunch or early lunch nearby, a short Midtown walk, then the show. Save dinner and sightseeing for after. See the Broadway matinee guide.
What should I do if it rains before Broadway?
Stay close and indoor-focused. Restaurant, hotel reset, museum, or head to the theater early. See the Rainy Day NYC guide.
What is the biggest mistake before Broadway?
Trying to do too much too close to curtain. Protect the showtime first. Everything else is optional.

Protect the Curtain. Everything Else Is Optional.

The Broadway show is the night. Every pre-show decision should build toward it, not compete with it. The best pre-Broadway plans end with everyone seated, relaxed, and on time.

Use the links below to plan the full show-night: restaurants, hotels, transit, sightseeing, and what to do when the curtain comes down.

Before the Show · Broadway

Before Broadway at a Glance

Best ruleStay close to the theater
Best dinner zoneTheater District · Hell's Kitchen · Times Square
Best first-time add-onTimes Square or Rockefeller Center
Best date planDinner close + short walk
Best family planFood + bathroom + theater
Biggest mistakeOne more stop before curtain
Before Broadway Planner

Guide Sections

Quick AnswerBest pre-Broadway plan — short version
🕐
TimingHow early to arrive, dinner vs drinks vs sightseeing
🎭
Best Plans10 pre-Broadway formats by group type
🍽️
Food & DrinksDinner, quick bites, drinks, post-show
📍
Nearby AreasTheater District, Times Square, Hell's Kitchen
🌟
Matinee vs EveningDifferent shows need different plans
Food, Hotels & Getting There

Practical Planning

Subway tip The subway is almost always faster than rideshare to the Theater District on show nights. Midtown traffic on busy evenings is consistently bad. Plan the subway route before you leave.
↓ Keep Planning Before Broadway Planning Links Restaurants, Times Square, hotels, subway, show guides, date-night plans, family ideas, and post-show options.
Share This Guide

Save & Share

Link copied to clipboard
@stageandstreetnyc
Complete Broadway Night Planning Hub

Keep Planning Your Broadway Night

Pre-theater restaurants, Times Square, hotels, subway, show guides, date-night plans, family ideas, rainy-day backups, and post-show options — all in one place.

Before the Show
Hub

Before the Show Hub

The complete Stage & Street before-show planning hub — Broadway, concerts, sports, and every venue type covered.

Explore hub
Times Square

Near Times Square

The most complete guide to what to do, where to eat, and how to navigate the Times Square zone before any show or event.

Read the guide
Concerts

Before a Concert

Concerts have different pre-show logistics than Broadway — venue size, transit, food options, and timing all shift. See the full guide.

Read the guide
Sports

Before a Game

Game nights have their own pre-event logic — stadium food, transit, tailgating, and neighborhood planning by arena.

Read the guide
Broadway Planning
Broadway Hub

Broadway Hub

Show listings, theater guides, ticket resources, first-time visitor planning, and the full Broadway ecosystem from Stage & Street.

Explore Broadway
First-Timers

First-Time Broadway Guide

Everything first-time Broadway visitors need — what to expect, how to choose a show, tickets, seating, arrival, and the full show-night plan.

Read the guide
Matinees

Broadway Matinee Guide

Matinees need a different plan — brunch or lunch before, full dinner and evening after. See the complete matinee planning guide.

Read the guide
Food, Hotels & Getting There
Dining

Best Pre-Theater Restaurants NYC

The definitive guide to pre-theater dining — what to look for, where the best options are by neighborhood, and how to time a dinner reservation correctly.

Find restaurants
Post-Show

Best Post-Show Restaurants NYC

Sometimes dinner after the show is the better move. See which restaurants near Broadway are worth the post-curtain reservation.

Find restaurants
Hotels

Hotels Near Broadway

Staying close to Broadway changes the whole show-night dynamic. Walk to dinner, walk to the theater, walk back. See the best hotel options.

Find hotels
Experiences & Sightseeing
Date Night

Date Night NYC

Broadway is one of the best date-night anchors in New York. Plan the dinner, the show, and the after-show with the full date-night guide.

Plan date night
Family

Family-Friendly NYC

Broadway with kids needs a different pre-show plan — simpler food, earlier arrival, bathroom strategy, and one clear nearby add-on. Full guide here.

Plan the family trip
Rainy Day

Rainy Day NYC

Rain changes the pre-show plan. Stay close, stay covered, skip the exposed sightseeing. Full rainy-day planning guide for NYC show nights.

Plan the rainy day
Sightseeing

Rockefeller Center Guide

The most natural pre-Broadway sightseeing add-on for first-time visitors — close to many Theater District shows, easy to time before dinner.

Read the guide
    0 0 votes
    Article Rating
    Subscribe
    Notify of
    guest
    0 Comments
    Oldest
    Newest Most Voted
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments