New England / Massachusetts
The Freedom Trail
Boston's Freedom Trail is a free 2.5-mile red line on the pavement linking 16 colonial and revolutionary sites โ walk it yourself from Boston Common to Bunker Hill.
Where
Boston, United States
Opening hours
Open access โ the red line is in the pavement and walkable any time, day or night. Individual buildings along it keep their own hours, typically mid-morning to late afternoon, and some close seasonally.
Tickets
Free โ no ticket needed to walk the trail or follow the red line. Three buildings charge a small entry fee (the Old State House, Old South Meeting House and Paul Revere House); the rest are free or donation.
Time needed
Allow 2.5 to 4 hours to walk the full route end to end with photo stops; longer if you go inside the paid museums or take a costumed guided tour.
In short
Visiting The Freedom Trail
The Freedom Trail is a free 2.5-mile red line set into the pavement, linking 16 colonial and revolutionary sites from Boston Common to Bunker Hill. Follow it yourself with no ticket. Most stops are free or donation; only the Old State House, Old South Meeting House and Paul Revere House charge entry.
Following the red line
The clever thing about the Freedom Trail is that it needs no organising. A continuous red line โ brick in places, painted in others โ is set into the pavement, and you simply follow it for 2.5 miles from Boston Common through the old centre, across the river and up to Bunker Hill in Charlestown. Thereโs no gate, no ticket and no set start time; you walk into it whenever you like. Pick up a free map at the Commonโs visitor centre, or just keep the line under your feet and read the site markers as you go.
The 16 stops are a mix. Most cost nothing โ the Kingโs Chapel Burying Ground, Granary Burying Ground, Faneuil Hall and the waterfront are free or ask only a donation. The handful that charge a modest entry fee are the Old State House, the Old South Meeting House and the Paul Revere House, and you can pick and choose which, if any, you go inside. Wear proper shoes: the cobbles around the North End and the climb to Bunker Hill are harder underfoot than the distance suggests.
Doing it your way, and whether itโs worth it
Youโll see costumed guides leading paid walking tours, and they do tell a good story โ but you donโt need one. Going solo lets you skip the queues, linger in the North End for a coffee or cannoli, and turn back early if the kids flag. If history isnโt your thing, be honest with yourself: large stretches are ordinary city streets between markers, and the โsitesโ are sometimes just a plaque or a churchyard.
For anyone with a passing interest in the American Revolution, though, itโs one of the best free things to do in the country โ a self-guided spine through the events of 1770s Boston, ending with the USS Constitution and harbour views in Charlestown. Walk it in the morning before the crowds and the afternoon heat, and treat the three paid houses as optional extras rather than the main event.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Boston city guide.