Home Travel Guide 1 Week in the USA — The Perfect 7-Day Itinerary for First-Timers
Travel Guide Updated April 2026

1 Week in the USA — The Perfect 7-Day Itinerary for First-Timers

Make the most of 7 days in America with a classic East Coast route (NYC + DC + Boston) or West Coast route (SF + Vegas + LA).

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Overview

Seven days in the USA is enough to experience one region deeply. The classic first-timer choice is either the East Coast corridor — New York, Philadelphia, Washington DC and Boston — or the West Coast triangle of San Francisco, Las Vegas and Los Angeles. Both are doable in 7 days without rushing. Trying to see both coasts in one week is a mistake: you will spend half your trip in airports.

This guide lays out a day-by-day East Coast plan (our recommendation for first-timers), plus a West Coast alternative below.

Visa tip: Apply for your ESTA at least 72 hours before departure at esta.cbp.dhs.gov. It costs $21 and is valid for 2 years. Do NOT use third-party sites that charge $60-100 for the same thing.

Choose Your Coast

RouteBest ForHighlightsTransport
East CoastHistory, walkable citiesNYC, DC museums, BostonAmtrak Acela + walking
West CoastNature, driving, funSF, Vegas, LA, Grand CanyonRental car + 1 flight
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East Coast — Days 1-3 New York

Day 1 — Arrive & Midtown. Fly into JFK or Newark. Take the AirTrain + subway (JFK) or NJ Transit (EWR) to Manhattan — around $15. Check in near Times Square or Midtown. Afternoon: walk up 5th Avenue to Central Park, Bethesda Terrace, Bow Bridge. Evening: Top of the Rock at sunset.

Day 2 — Downtown & Lady Liberty. Morning: Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island (book ahead at statuecruises.com). Lunch at Chelsea Market. Afternoon: walk the High Line and through the West Village. Evening: a Broadway show (book at todaytix.com for discounted same-day tickets).

Day 3 — Brooklyn & Museums. Morning: walk Brooklyn Bridge at dawn from the Brooklyn side (DUMBO). Coffee in DUMBO, explore the waterfront. Afternoon: pick ONE world-class museum — The Met (art) or the 9/11 Memorial & Museum. Evening: dinner in Williamsburg or the East Village.

🗽 NYC essentials: Get a 7-day MetroCard ($34 unlimited). Do not try to take taxis everywhere — the subway is faster. Avoid Times Square restaurants; walk 2 blocks in any direction for better food.

East Coast — Day 4 Philadelphia

Take Amtrak from NY Penn Station to Philadelphia 30th Street (1h15, $40-80). Philadelphia is walkable and packed with early American history. Hit Independence Hall, the Liberty Bell, the Museum of the American Revolution and Reading Terminal Market for lunch. Get a cheesesteak at Jim's or Pat's. Sleep in Philly or take an evening train to DC.

East Coast — Days 5-6 Washington DC

Day 5. Philadelphia → DC on Amtrak (1h45, $50-90). Stay near the National Mall. Afternoon: walk the Mall — Washington Monument, Lincoln Memorial, WWII Memorial, Vietnam Memorial. Evening: dinner in Georgetown.

Day 6. Smithsonian museums are FREE. Pick two or three: Air & Space, Natural History, American History, National Gallery. Afternoon: the Capitol and Library of Congress (free, book online). Evening: dinner on H Street or Barracks Row.

🏛️ DC tip: The ENTIRE Smithsonian network is free every day. You could fill 2 weeks without paying a single museum admission. Book Capitol and White House tours through your home-country embassy weeks in advance.

East Coast — Day 7 Boston

Amtrak from DC to Boston is long (6h50 on Acela, $150-250), so consider flying (1h30, $80-150 booked early). Boston has the Freedom Trail — a 2.5-mile red line through 16 historic sites. Walk it in a morning. Afternoon: Fenway Park tour, a lobster roll at Neptune Oyster, then fly home from Logan.

West Coast Alternative

Days 1-2: San Francisco — Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, Alcatraz (book 2+ weeks ahead), Mission District burritos. Day 3: Drive or fly to Las Vegas (1h flight or 9h drive). Days 3-4: Vegas Strip, Fremont Street, a Cirque du Soleil show. Day 5: Drive to the Grand Canyon South Rim (4.5h) — overnight at Tusayan. Day 6: Grand Canyon sunrise, then drive to Los Angeles (7h) or fly from Flagstaff. Day 7: LA — Griffith Observatory, Venice Beach, Santa Monica Pier, Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Budget Breakdown

ItemBudgetMid-rangeComfortable
Accommodation/night$70-130$180-280$350+
Food/day$35-55$70-120$150+
Transport (week)$120$250$600+
Attractions (week)$80$200$500+
Total/week (1 person)$1,100$2,400$5,000+
💸 Tipping is mandatory: Budget 18-22% on top of all restaurant bills, $1-2 per drink at bars, $3-5/day for housekeeping, 15-20% for taxis/Uber. This is not optional in America.

Packing & Booking

  • ESTA — apply 72+ hours before travel
  • Travel insurance — US medical costs are catastrophic without it ($10k+ for an ER visit)
  • Book Broadway, Alcatraz, Grand Canyon early — top attractions sell out
  • Layers — US buildings are over-air-conditioned even in summer
  • Power adapter — US uses 110V with flat Type A/B plugs
  • eSIM or SIM — Airalo works instantly on arrival

For a longer itinerary, see our 2 weeks in the USA guide, which adds California coast + national parks to the mix.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is 1 week enough for the USA?

One week is enough for one coast done well — choose between the East Coast (NYC, DC, Boston) or the West Coast (SF, Vegas, LA). Do not try to cross the country in 7 days.

What is the best week for visiting the USA?

Late September to late October is ideal — great weather, lower prices after Labor Day, and fall colors in the northeast.

Do I need a visa for a 1-week USA trip?

Visitors from 40+ Visa Waiver Program countries need an ESTA ($21, apply online). Most others need a B1/B2 visa.

Should I rent a car for 1 week in the USA?

For the East Coast route, no — use Amtrak. For the West Coast route, yes — flights between LA, Vegas and SF are quick but a car gives you freedom.