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Washington, D.C., United States
Washington, D.C.

Mid-Atlantic / District of Columbia

Washington, D.C.

Almost every headline sight here is free, so fly into Reagan National over Dulles, grab a SmarTrip card, base near the Mall in Penn Quarter, and walk the monuments in one direction over three or four nights.

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

Best length

3-4 nights, easy NYC add-on

Airports

Reagan National (DCA) ~4 miles; Dulles (IAD) ~26 miles; BWI ~30 miles

Airport to centre

DCA Metro ~20-30 min/~ยฃ2; Dulles Silver Line ~50 min/ยฃ3-ยฃ4.75

Best base

Penn Quarter for first-timers; Dupont Circle for nightlife; Capitol Hill for value

In short

Washington, D.C. at a glance

Washington, D.C. is the rare big-ticket US city where most of the headline sights cost nothing: the Smithsonian's 17 museums and the National Zoo are all free, and so are the monuments, memorials and the Capitol tour. Give it three or four nights, fly into Reagan National (DCA) over Dulles if you can โ€” it's a 4-mile, ~ยฃ2 Metro ride against a 26-mile, 50-minute Silver Line slog โ€” and base yourself within a few Metro stops of the National Mall, such as Penn Quarter or Dupont Circle. Get a SmarTrip card on arrival, walk the Mall in one direction rather than zig-zagging it, and book the few sights that need free timed passes (Air and Space, the African American History museum) before you fly.

The short version

  • Almost everything is free: all 17 Smithsonian museums, the National Zoo, the monuments and the Capitol tour cost nothing, which is why DC is far cheaper to sightsee than New York.
  • Fly into Reagan National (DCA) if you can โ€” it's 4 miles out and a ~ยฃ2, 20-30 minute Metro ride, against Dulles (IAD) at 26 miles and a 50-minute Silver Line trip.
  • Get a SmarTrip card or tap a contactless card; single Metro rides run about ยฃ1.75-ยฃ5.30 by distance and time, and a 7-day unlimited pass is about ยฃ49.
  • Stay within a few Metro stops of the Mall โ€” Penn Quarter for first-timers, Dupont Circle for a livelier base, Capitol Hill for value; skip Georgetown unless you don't mind being off the Metro.
  • Book free timed passes ahead for the Air and Space Museum and the National Museum of African American History and Culture, which release in batches and go fast.
  • Cherry-blossom peak (late March to early April; it peaked 26 March in 2026) is the most beautiful and the most crowded and expensive window โ€” April and October are the better all-round months.

Washington, D.C. is the one big-ticket US city where the sightseeing barely touches your wallet. The Smithsonianโ€™s 17 museums and the National Zoo are all free, as are the monuments, the memorials and the Capitol tour โ€” funded as a public trust rather than charging at the door โ€” which is why a DC trip costs a fraction of the same days in New York once youโ€™ve paid for flights and a hotel. The catch isnโ€™t money, itโ€™s pacing: the National Mall is a two-mile spine of world-class collections, and the first-timer mistake is trying to inhale six museums and every monument in a day and ending up footsore by lunch.

Two calls matter before you fly. The first is your airport. Reagan National (DCA) is only about 4 miles out and sits on the Metro, so itโ€™s a 20-30 minute, roughly ยฃ2 ride to the Mall; Dulles (IAD) carries the most non-stop UK flights but is 26 miles away, a 50-minute Silver Line trip or a ยฃ55-ยฃ90 cab. If your fare lets you choose, DCA wins the first hour after a transatlantic flight. The second is the handful of free sights that still need a free timed pass โ€” the National Air and Space Museum and the National Museum of African American History and Culture both release passes in batches that vanish fast, so book them from the UK rather than turning up and hoping.

The honest version of a good DC trip is to walk the Mall one direction at dusk rather than zig-zagging it in the midday heat, base yourself within a few Metro stops of it (Penn Quarter for ease, Dupont Circle for evenings, Capitol Hill for value), and skip Georgetown as a base because itโ€™s the one central neighbourhood with no Metro at all. Three full days covers the museums, the monuments and Capitol Hill; four is more comfortable, and the city pairs neatly with New York at about 3.5 hours by Amtrak. Below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay, the airport transfers in pounds, a realistic daily budget and the cherry-blossom timing question โ€” picks up from here. Entry (including ESTA), health and safety facts for your trip are covered on the United States country guide, which is anchored to the latest GOV.UK travel advice.

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

Top things to do in Washington, D.C.

National Mall and Smithsonian

Almost everything here is free โ€” the eleven Smithsonian museums lining the Mall charge nothing to enter, and so does the Washington Monument. The catch is reservations, not money: the National Air and Space Museum and the National Museum of African American History and Culture both need a free timed-entry pass booked online before you go, and they routinely run out. Pick two or three museums rather than all eleven, base yourself at the Smithsonian metro stop, and treat the open-air monuments as a separate evening walk.

Half a day
No tickets required Read the guide

The National Mall and monuments

The National Mall is the two-mile spine of monumental Washington, running from the Capitol to the Lincoln Memorial, with the Washington Monument, the WWII, Vietnam, Korean War and Martin Luther King Jr memorials strung along it. It is all free and open late. Walk it in one direction at dusk, when the memorials light up, rather than doubling back through the midday heat.

Around 2โ€“3 hours tโ€ฆ
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

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

Penn Quarter and Downtown

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The easiest first-timer base: walking distance to the Mall, on multiple Metro lines, and packed with hotels, restaurants and the free Portrait Gallery and American Art Museum. Not the most charming part of DC and quiet at weekends when the office crowd leaves, but the most time-efficient place to sleep.

Best for: First-timers who want to walk to the Mall

Browse hotels Walk to the Mall; Metro Center / Gallery Place

Dupont Circle

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A more characterful base with independent bookshops, brunch spots and the city's best-established LGBTQ+ nightlife, on the Red Line two stops from downtown. A little pricier and a 10-15 minute Metro hop from the Mall, but the better evening base if you don't want a dead downtown after dark.

Best for: Couples, food and nightlife, repeat visitors

Browse hotels 10-15 min to the Mall by Metro

Capitol Hill

ยฃ value

Townhouse streets behind the Capitol with Eastern Market, good-value B&Bs and easy access to the Mall's east end. Quieter and often cheaper than downtown, with the trade-off that the western monuments are a longer walk or Metro ride away.

Best for: Value, a residential feel, a longer stay

Browse hotels Walk to the Capitol; 15 min to the Lincoln end

The Wharf / Southwest Waterfront

ยฃยฃ mid-range

DC's redeveloped riverfront: modern hotels, music venues and waterside restaurants a short walk or water-taxi from the Mall's south side. Better value and more relaxed than downtown, and a strong pick if you want evenings that aren't all monuments.

Best for: Waterside evenings, modern hotels, families

Browse hotels Waterfront / L'Enfant Plaza Metro

Georgetown

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The prettiest neighbourhood โ€” cobbled streets, federal townhouses, canal and waterfront โ€” but the only central area with no Metro station, so you rely on buses, the DC Circulator or long walks. Lovely for an afternoon; a frustrating base for a sightseeing-heavy trip.

Best for: Atmosphere and shopping, not Metro convenience

Browse hotels No Metro; bus/walk from Foggy Bottom

Airport to city centre

Washington, D.C. airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Reagan National (DCA) โ€” Metro Blue/Yellow Line ~20-30 min to the Mall about ยฃ2 (~$2.55) to Smithsonian By far the easiest arrival โ€” choose DCA flights if you can
Dulles (IAD) โ€” Silver Line Metro ~50-54 min to Metro Center about ยฃ3-ยฃ4.75 ($3.85 off-peak, $6 peak) Cheap and step-free via the terminal tunnel, but slow
Dulles or BWI โ€” taxi / rideshare ~45-60 min in traffic usually ยฃ55-ยฃ90+ ($70-$110+) Only worth it late at night or with heavy luggage
BWI (Baltimore) โ€” MARC / Amtrak to Union Station ~45-70 min plus airport shuttle about ยฃ6-ยฃ35 by train type Use only if BWI has the cheapest transatlantic fare
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: Late March to mid-May and September to early November are the best windows: comfortable walking weather (around 15-25ยฐC), the monuments at their best and the worst of the humidity gone. Cherry-blossom peak (late March to early April; it hit 26 March in 2026) is the most beautiful stretch but also the most crowded and expensive, so book months ahead or aim for the weeks either side.

High summer (July-August) is hot, sticky and humid at up to 35ยฐC with afternoon thunderstorms โ€” fine for the air-conditioned Smithsonians, punishing for long Mall walks โ€” and the July 4th weekend is a crowd and price spike. Winter (December-February) is cold but cheap and quiet, with the museums at their calmest and occasional snow on the monuments. The cherry-blossom super-peak around late March means hotel rates well above baseline and a packed Tidal Basin; the National Cherry Blossom Festival ran roughly 20 March to 12 April in 2026, so come a week or two off-peak for the colour without the worst crowds.

What it costs

Direct return economy from London to the Washington area (IAD or DCA via a hub) runs roughly ยฃ420-ยฃ600 on good dates, dipping near ยฃ400 in low season and climbing past ยฃ700 around the cherry-blossom peak, July 4th and Thanksgiving. Dulles (IAD) has the most non-stop UK options; BWI is occasionally cheaper but a longer transfer.

Daily budget per person

Metro single ride (by distance) ~ยฃ1.75-ยฃ5.30 ($2.25-$6.75)
7-day unlimited Metro pass ~ยฃ49 ($62.75)
Smithsonian museum entry Free (some need a free timed pass)
Casual lunch / deli ~ยฃ10-ยฃ16 before tax and tip
Sit-down dinner with a drink ~ยฃ28-ยฃ45 before tax and tip
Hostel dorm bed, per night ~ยฃ35-ยฃ55
Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range DC break for one person is roughly ยฃ520-ยฃ760 before flights: ยฃ300-ยฃ480 hotel (a mid-range room, or half that sharing), ยฃ130-ยฃ180 food, about ยฃ25-ยฃ40 on a SmarTrip, and close to ยฃ0 on the headline sights because the Smithsonians, monuments and Capitol are all free. Budget extra only for a paid attraction or two โ€” the Newseum-style private museums, an IMAX, or a night out.

DC's superpower for the wallet is that sightseeing is genuinely free, so your spend is almost entirely flights, hotel and food. All dollar figures convert at roughly ยฃ1 โ‰ˆ $1.27 (June 2026). Tipping is expected on top of menu prices โ€” budget about 18-20% in restaurants โ€” and sales tax is added at the till, so headline prices read low.

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

Washington, D.C. FAQs

How many days do you need in Washington, D.C.?
Three full days is the practical first-timer minimum: one for the Mall museums (start with the Air and Space Museum on a timed pass), one for the monuments and memorials walked end to end, and one for Capitol Hill plus a neighbourhood like Georgetown or the Wharf. Four nights is more comfortable and leaves room for the African American History museum, which deserves a half-day of its own. DC also pairs easily with New York โ€” it's about 3.5 hours by Amtrak from Union Station.
Why are so many things free in Washington, D.C.?
The Smithsonian Institution runs 17 museums and the National Zoo in the DC area, and all of them are free because they're funded largely by the US federal government as a public trust โ€” there's no general admission charge. The monuments, memorials and the US Capitol tour are free too. A handful of sights need a free timed-entry pass (the Air and Space Museum, the African American History museum and the Washington Monument), and extras like IMAX films cost money, but the headline sightseeing genuinely doesn't.
Should I fly into Reagan National, Dulles or BWI?
Reagan National (DCA) if you can โ€” it's only about 4 miles from the centre and sits right on the Metro, so it's a 20-30 minute, roughly ยฃ2 ride to the Mall. Dulles (IAD) has the most non-stop UK flights but is 26 miles out; the Silver Line Metro gets you in for ยฃ3-ยฃ4.75 in about 50-54 minutes, or pay ยฃ55-ยฃ90 for a cab. BWI in Baltimore is occasionally the cheapest transatlantic fare but the slowest transfer, via a shuttle to a MARC or Amtrak train to Union Station.
Do you need a car in Washington, D.C.?
No. A car is a liability โ€” parking is expensive, traffic is bad and the Metro plus walking covers everything. Get a SmarTrip card or tap a contactless card; single rides run about ยฃ1.75-ยฃ5.30 by distance, and a one-day (ยฃ12) or 7-day (ยฃ49) pass pays off if you ride four or more times a day. Only hire a car if you're driving on to somewhere rural like Shenandoah; for the city and a New York add-on, the train and Metro are far easier.
When do the cherry blossoms bloom in Washington, D.C.?
Peak bloom usually lands in the last week of March or the first days of April, though it shifts with the weather โ€” in 2026 it peaked on 26 March, a few days earlier than the National Park Service forecast. The blossoms hold for roughly seven to ten days. It's the city's most beautiful window and its most crowded and expensive, so if you want the colour without the crush, target the National Cherry Blossom Festival shoulder (it ran about 20 March to 12 April in 2026) a week either side of peak.

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