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New Orleans, United States
New Orleans

Louisiana, Deep South

New Orleans

Give it three or four nights, base a few streets off Bourbon so you hear the music without sleeping above it, and come in spring or autumn rather than the swampy summer.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 8 Jun 2026

Best length

3-4 nights, or a 2-night add-on to a wider US trip

Airport

Louis Armstrong (MSY), ~13 miles / 21km west of the centre

Airport to centre

Flat-rate taxi $36 for 1-2; RTA 202 bus $1.25; 20-30 min

Best base

Lower French Quarter or Marigny for atmosphere without the Bourbon Street noise

In short

New Orleans at a glance

New Orleans works as a 3- or 4-night stop, either on its own or bolted onto a wider Deep South or Florida trip. British Airways flies direct from Heathrow on a 787, but frequency is thin, so a one-stop connection through Atlanta or Charlotte is often cheaper and just as quick door-to-door. Base yourself a few streets off Bourbon Street, come in spring or autumn rather than the swampy summer, and treat the food and live music as the main event.

The short version

  • BA flies Heathrow to New Orleans direct on a 787 (about 9.5 hours out), but only a few times a week; a connection via Atlanta or Charlotte is usually cheaper and easy to book.
  • Stay in the quieter end of the French Quarter, the Marigny or the Warehouse District rather than the Bourbon Street blocks, which are loud until dawn.
  • Come in March-May or October-November: summer is brutally humid, hits hurricane season, and many afternoons are unbearable for walking.
  • Mardi Gras (17 Feb 2026, 9 Feb 2027) and Jazz Fest (late April-early May) are spectacular but mean packed streets and steep hotel prices, so book a year out or avoid them deliberately.
  • You do not need a hire car: the Quarter is walkable, the St Charles streetcar reaches the Garden District, and rideshare covers the rest.

New Orleans is a city you visit for the things that donโ€™t photograph well: the brass band that turns a Frenchmen Street corner into a party, the smell of chicory coffee and frying beignet dough at Cafรฉ du Monde, the way a poโ€™boy or a bowl of gumbo costs less and tastes better than the equivalent in any UK city. The French Quarter is the postcard, but the Bourbon Street blocks are the least interesting part of it โ€” loud, sticky and aimed squarely at stag and hen crowds. The good version of the Quarter is the quieter lower end, Royal Streetโ€™s antique shops and the Creole cottages of the Marigny next door, where the music is better and the hotel bills are lower.

Getting there is the planning call most UK travellers get wrong. British Airways does fly direct from Heathrow on a 787, which is the comfortable option, but it runs only a few times a week and often costs a premium; a single connection through Atlanta or Charlotte is frequently cheaper and barely slower once you count the wait for the limited direct service. Either way you arrive at Louis Armstrong (MSY), about 13 miles west, where a flat-rate taxi into the Quarter is a fixed $36 for one or two people.

The other call is timing. Avoid high summer โ€” the humidity is genuinely oppressive, it overlaps hurricane season, and the heat will wreck a walking-based trip. Come in spring or autumn instead, when the days are warm but walkable. The structured planning below โ€” where to stay, what to book, airport transfers and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in New Orleans

French Quarter

The French Quarter is free to walk and that is most of the point โ€” the grid of Spanish-built balconied streets, Jackson Square and the riverfront cost nothing. Spend the day on Royal Street (galleries, antiques, street musicians) and Decatur, save Bourbon Street for a quick after-dark look, and book one real jazz set: Preservation Hall on St Peter Street is the one to prioritise. Allow most of a day, and treat beignets at Cafรฉ du Monde as a stop, not a destination.

Half a day $15โ€“$25

French Quarter on foot

The French Quarter is best walked early, before the bars open. At around 8am the Royal Street balconies, Jackson Square and St Louis Cathedral are quiet, cool and photogenic, and you have the lacework verandas largely to yourself. It's free to wander โ€” no ticket, no fixed hours. Bourbon Street is a ten-minute curiosity by daylight, not a day plan, so save it for one quick look and spend your time on the prettier, quieter streets.

Allow 1.5โ€“2 hoursโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

Lower French Quarter

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The Quarter below Dumaine Street keeps the wrought-iron balconies and walkability without the Bourbon Street noise. You can stumble home from dinner and still sleep. The most atmospheric first-timer base, if not the cheapest.

Best for: First-timers, couples, atmosphere

Browse hotels Central old city

Faubourg Marigny

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Just downriver of the Quarter and home to Frenchmen Street's music clubs. Creole cottages, guesthouses and a local evening rhythm. Better value than the Quarter and a five-minute walk to the best live jazz.

Best for: Music-led trips, value, local feel

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk from the Quarter

Warehouse / Central Business District

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Modern hotels, the WWII Museum and Julia Street galleries, with the Quarter a 10-minute walk away. The easiest area for larger or chain hotels and a quiet night's sleep, though it empties out after dark.

Best for: Business-style hotels, families, museum-first stays

Browse hotels 10 min walk to the Quarter

Garden District / Uptown

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Residential, leafy and quiet, reached by the St Charles streetcar rather than on foot from the Quarter. Choose it for mansions, Magazine Street shopping and calm, but accept a 20-30 minute streetcar ride to the action.

Best for: Repeat visitors, calm, longer stays

Browse hotels 20-30 min by streetcar

Airport to city centre

New Orleans airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Flat-rate taxi to the Quarter / CBD ~20-30 min $36 for 1-2 people; $15pp for 3+ Official MSY rate; rank at Door 7
Uber / Lyft ~25-35 min usually $35-$55 depending on demand Designated rideshare pickup zone
RTA 202 Airport Express bus ~40-50 min $1.25 Cheapest; drops near the CBD/Quarter edge
Shared airport shuttle ~45-60 min with stops around $26 return Slower but predictable with luggage
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Mid-March to May and October to November are the sweet spot: warm but walkable days, jacaranda and festival season in spring, and the swampy summer humidity gone by autumn. February is festival-busy but pleasant; December is mild and good value once the parades are done.

Summer (June-September) is brutally hot and humid, overlaps hurricane season, and is the one window to avoid unless you only want pool time and low room rates. Mardi Gras (17 Feb 2026, 9 Feb 2027) and Jazz Fest (late April-early May) are extraordinary but mean sold-out hotels and doubled prices, so commit early or sidestep them on purpose.

What it costs

UK return flights to New Orleans are typically ยฃ450-ยฃ700 booked a few months ahead: the BA Heathrow direct sits at the top of that, while a one-stop connection via Atlanta, Charlotte or New York is often ยฃ100-ยฃ200 cheaper. Spring festival weeks and Christmas push fares well past ยฃ800.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range New Orleans break for one person, excluding the flight, is roughly ยฃ620-ยฃ900: ยฃ330-ยฃ540 for a hotel share in or near the Quarter, ยฃ180-ยฃ260 for food and drinks (this is a famously food-led city), and ยฃ80-ยฃ120 for the WWII Museum, a streetcar day pass and a cemetery or swamp tour.

Two things inflate a New Orleans bill: the 12-13% sales-and-occupancy tax that is added on top of every quoted price, and tipping at 18-20% on meals and bar tabs. Budget both in from the start so the final number is never a surprise.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in United States

See the full United States guide

New Orleans FAQs

Can you fly direct to New Orleans from the UK?
Yes, British Airways flies Heathrow to New Orleans direct on a Boeing 787 in about nine and a half hours, but only a few times a week and it is rarely the cheapest fare. Many travellers connect once through Atlanta, Charlotte or New York for a lower price and similar total travel time.
How many days do you need in New Orleans?
Three nights is the comfortable minimum: one for the French Quarter and Frenchmen Street music, one for the WWII Museum and the Warehouse District, and one for the streetcar, Garden District and a swamp or cemetery tour. Two nights works only as an add-on to a wider US trip.
Is it safe to walk around New Orleans?
The French Quarter, Marigny and Garden District are busy and walkable by day and early evening, but New Orleans has a higher crime rate than most UK cities, so stick to well-lit, populated streets at night and take a rideshare rather than walking long distances after dark. Check the GOV.UK United States advice before you travel.
When should you avoid New Orleans?
Skip high summer (June-September) if you can: the heat and humidity are oppressive, afternoon storms are routine, and it is hurricane season. Spring and autumn give you the same food and music without sweating through the day.

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