Quick Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|
| Wynwood Walls entry | $12 weekday / $16 weekend |
| Surrounding murals | Free |
| Art Walk | 2nd Saturday, free |
| Core area | NW 2nd Ave, 22nd-36th St |
| Parking | $4-8/hour meters |
| Best days | Thu-Sun |
| Distance from SoBe | 6 mi (15-20 min) |
Wynwood was a sleepy warehouse district until 2009, when developer Tony Goldman (the same man who revived SoHo NYC and South Beach) turned six warehouse exteriors into curated mural canvases. Now 60+ blocks of warehouses are painted and the neighborhood draws 4+ million visitors annually.
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Calculate now →Wynwood Walls vs Free Street Art
This is the single most important thing to understand about Wynwood. There are two experiences:
Wynwood Walls — the paid, curated, walled garden at NW 2nd Ave and 26th Street. 40+ murals by invited artists (Shepard Fairey, Os Gemeos, Retna, Kenny Scharf), rotated every Art Basel (December). $12-16 entry, 1-2 hours, includes a small indoor museum.
Wynwood street art — everything else, all free. 60+ blocks of warehouses and alley walls painted by thousands of artists, many world-class. Often just as impressive as the paid garden.
- Best free murals: NW 2nd Ave at 24th, 25th and 26th Streets
- Bakery-themed alley: "Wynwood Kitchen & Bar" corner
- Biggest pieces: NW 5th Ave warehouse walls
- Photographable: Museum of Graffiti facade (free exterior)
- Rotating commissions: check @wynwoodmiami on Instagram for current walls
Walk the free murals first (60-90 minutes), then decide whether to pay for Wynwood Walls. For hardcore street art fans, the paid garden is worth it. For casual visitors, the free walls are plenty.
Best Time to Visit
- Best days: Thursday, Friday, Saturday afternoon
- Second Saturday each month: Wynwood Art Walk — galleries free and open until 10pm
- Avoid: Monday (many galleries closed), early morning before 11am
- Early Dec: Art Basel week — wild crowds, new murals debut, hotel rates 3x
- Summer (Jun-Aug): hot and humid; paint holds up but photos wash out midday
- Winter (Dec-Mar): perfect weather, peak tourist season
Light matters for murals. Late afternoon (3-5pm) gives angled golden light that makes colors pop without blowing out the highlights. Midday sun flattens colors and creates harsh shadows.
Galleries and Marketplace
Beyond the murals, Wynwood has 20+ active galleries and event venues. Most are free to enter.
- Museum of Graffiti — $16, dedicated museum of the art form
- Rubell Museum — $15, world-class contemporary collection (technically in Allapattah, 1 mile west)
- Margulies Collection at the Warehouse — $10, massive private contemporary collection
- Wynwood Marketplace — free outdoor weekend market, ~50 vendors, food trucks
- Mana Wynwood — event venue, regular art fairs and concerts
- The Goldman Warehouse — rotating exhibitions
The Wynwood Marketplace at NW 2nd Ave and 25th Street runs Friday-Sunday, with live music, food trucks, and local artisans. Free entry. Best Friday nights for the crowd and music.
Breweries and Food
Wynwood has become Miami's microbrewery district. Five serious craft breweries within walking distance of each other, plus standout restaurants.
| Place | Type | Notes |
|---|
| Wynwood Brewing Co. | Brewery | First in Wynwood, 2013 |
| J. Wakefield | Brewery | Cult IPA and sours |
| Veza Sur | Brewery | Latin-inspired beers |
| KYU | Restaurant | Asian BBQ, reserve weeks ahead |
| Coyo Taco | Restaurant | Speakeasy taqueria, great tacos |
| Zak the Baker | Bakery/cafe | Best morning stop |
| 1-800-Lucky | Food hall | Asian street food |
Zak the Baker (opens 7am) is the best place to start a Wynwood day — ethical kosher bakery, excellent coffee, pastries, and the courtyard is quiet before the neighborhood wakes up at 11am.
Parking and Safety
Wynwood is a former industrial district — most parking is surface lots and metered street.
- Street meters: $4/hour via PayByPhone app, 2-hour max
- Surface lots: $8-15/day
- Valet at restaurants: $15-25
- Free after 7pm on some side streets (check signs carefully)
- Avoid: unmarked lots — aggressive tow companies operate here
Safety-wise, the core tourist zone (NW 2nd Ave from 22nd to 36th Street) is busy and well-trafficked day and evening. Walking a few blocks west or north after dark takes you out of the tourist zone quickly — use rideshares to return to your hotel rather than walking to a remote parking spot late at night.
Walking Route
A good 3-hour Wynwood walking loop:
- Start: Zak the Baker (295 NW 26th St) — coffee and pastry
- Walk to: Wynwood Walls (266 NW 26th St) — paid garden, 60-90 min
- Walk south on NW 2nd Ave to 24th St — free murals both sides
- Detour: Museum of Graffiti at 299 NW 25th St
- Lunch: Coyo Taco (2300 NW 2nd Ave) or 1-800-Lucky
- Explore: NW 5th Ave walls (west two blocks)
- End: Wynwood Brewing Co. for a beer on the patio
Combine Wynwood with the Design District (10-minute walk north) for luxury retail and public art, or with downtown Miami (10-minute Uber south) for Bayfront Park and the PAMM museum.
Quick Facts
| Item | Detail |
|---|
| Wynwood Walls entry | $12 weekday / $16 weekend |
| Surrounding murals | Free |
| Art Walk | 2nd Saturday, free |
| Core area | NW 2nd Ave, 22nd-36th St |
| Parking | $4-8/hour meters |
| Best days | Thu-Sun |
| Distance from SoBe | 6 mi (15-20 min) |
Wynwood was a sleepy warehouse district until 2009, when developer Tony Goldman (the same man who revived SoHo NYC and South Beach) turned six warehouse exteriors into curated mural canvases. Now 60+ blocks of warehouses are painted and the neighborhood draws 4+ million visitors annually.
🧮
USA Trip Cost Calculator
Planning a Miami trip? Get a personalised Miami travel budget — Wynwood, South Beach, Everglades and hotel costs for 2026.
Calculate now →Wynwood Walls vs Free Street Art
This is the single most important thing to understand about Wynwood. There are two experiences:
Wynwood Walls — the paid, curated, walled garden at NW 2nd Ave and 26th Street. 40+ murals by invited artists (Shepard Fairey, Os Gemeos, Retna, Kenny Scharf), rotated every Art Basel (December). $12-16 entry, 1-2 hours, includes a small indoor museum.
Wynwood street art — everything else, all free. 60+ blocks of warehouses and alley walls painted by thousands of artists, many world-class. Often just as impressive as the paid garden.
- Best free murals: NW 2nd Ave at 24th, 25th and 26th Streets
- Bakery-themed alley: "Wynwood Kitchen & Bar" corner
- Biggest pieces: NW 5th Ave warehouse walls
- Photographable: Museum of Graffiti facade (free exterior)
- Rotating commissions: check @wynwoodmiami on Instagram for current walls
Walk the free murals first (60-90 minutes), then decide whether to pay for Wynwood Walls. For hardcore street art fans, the paid garden is worth it. For casual visitors, the free walls are plenty.
Best Time to Visit
- Best days: Thursday, Friday, Saturday afternoon
- Second Saturday each month: Wynwood Art Walk — galleries free and open until 10pm
- Avoid: Monday (many galleries closed), early morning before 11am
- Early Dec: Art Basel week — wild crowds, new murals debut, hotel rates 3x
- Summer (Jun-Aug): hot and humid; paint holds up but photos wash out midday
- Winter (Dec-Mar): perfect weather, peak tourist season
Light matters for murals. Late afternoon (3-5pm) gives angled golden light that makes colors pop without blowing out the highlights. Midday sun flattens colors and creates harsh shadows.
Galleries and Marketplace
Beyond the murals, Wynwood has 20+ active galleries and event venues. Most are free to enter.
- Museum of Graffiti — $16, dedicated museum of the art form
- Rubell Museum — $15, world-class contemporary collection (technically in Allapattah, 1 mile west)
- Margulies Collection at the Warehouse — $10, massive private contemporary collection
- Wynwood Marketplace — free outdoor weekend market, ~50 vendors, food trucks
- Mana Wynwood — event venue, regular art fairs and concerts
- The Goldman Warehouse — rotating exhibitions
The Wynwood Marketplace at NW 2nd Ave and 25th Street runs Friday-Sunday, with live music, food trucks, and local artisans. Free entry. Best Friday nights for the crowd and music.
Breweries and Food
Wynwood has become Miami's microbrewery district. Five serious craft breweries within walking distance of each other, plus standout restaurants.
| Place | Type | Notes |
|---|
| Wynwood Brewing Co. | Brewery | First in Wynwood, 2013 |
| J. Wakefield | Brewery | Cult IPA and sours |
| Veza Sur | Brewery | Latin-inspired beers |
| KYU | Restaurant | Asian BBQ, reserve weeks ahead |
| Coyo Taco | Restaurant | Speakeasy taqueria, great tacos |
| Zak the Baker | Bakery/cafe | Best morning stop |
| 1-800-Lucky | Food hall | Asian street food |
Zak the Baker (opens 7am) is the best place to start a Wynwood day — ethical kosher bakery, excellent coffee, pastries, and the courtyard is quiet before the neighborhood wakes up at 11am.
Parking and Safety
Wynwood is a former industrial district — most parking is surface lots and metered street.
- Street meters: $4/hour via PayByPhone app, 2-hour max
- Surface lots: $8-15/day
- Valet at restaurants: $15-25
- Free after 7pm on some side streets (check signs carefully)
- Avoid: unmarked lots — aggressive tow companies operate here
Safety-wise, the core tourist zone (NW 2nd Ave from 22nd to 36th Street) is busy and well-trafficked day and evening. Walking a few blocks west or north after dark takes you out of the tourist zone quickly — use rideshares to return to your hotel rather than walking to a remote parking spot late at night.
Walking Route
A good 3-hour Wynwood walking loop:
- Start: Zak the Baker (295 NW 26th St) — coffee and pastry
- Walk to: Wynwood Walls (266 NW 26th St) — paid garden, 60-90 min
- Walk south on NW 2nd Ave to 24th St — free murals both sides
- Detour: Museum of Graffiti at 299 NW 25th St
- Lunch: Coyo Taco (2300 NW 2nd Ave) or 1-800-Lucky
- Explore: NW 5th Ave walls (west two blocks)
- End: Wynwood Brewing Co. for a beer on the patio
Combine Wynwood with the Design District (10-minute walk north) for luxury retail and public art, or with downtown Miami (10-minute Uber south) for Bayfront Park and the PAMM museum.