Best Things to Do in Dallas (2026 Guide)

Dallas is a major metropolitan city in north Texas, the anchor of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex (America's fourth-largest metro area), and a city defined by its oil wealth, its arts investment, and its place in American political history as the site of John F. Kennedy's assassination in 1963. The Dallas Arts District is the largest contiguous urban arts district in the United States. Fort Worth, 30 miles west, is a separate city with its own character. This guide covers the best things to do in Dallas.

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The unmissable in Dallas

These are the staple sights — don't leave Dallas without seeing them.

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Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
#1 must-see

Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

📍 411 Elm St., Dallas, Texas, 75202
🕐 Mon–Tue Closed · Wed–Sun 10:00-17:00
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Dealey Plaza
#2 must-see

Dealey Plaza

📍 Main Street, Dallas, Texas, 75202
🕐 Mon–Sun 8 AM-10 PM
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Perot Museum of Nature and Science
#3 must-see

Perot Museum of Nature and Science

📍 2201 N Field St., Dallas, Texas, 75201
🕐 Mon–Sat 10:00-17:00 · Sun 11:00-17:00
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Attractions in Dallas

More attractions in Dallas

Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza 1
#1 must-see

Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

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📍 411 Elm St., Dallas, Texas, 75202

From a corner window on the sixth floor of a red brick building in downtown Dallas, a view opens down Elm Street toward a grassy slope and a railroad underpass — a sight now inseparable from one of the defining moments of the twentieth century. The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza occupies the floor from which shots were fired on November 22, 1963, and it approaches that history with documentary precision and an absence of sensationalism that can feel almost austere.

The museum traces the presidency of John F. Kennedy, the events in Dallas, the subsequent investigation, and the cultural aftermath through extensive photographic archives, film footage, and artifacts. The sniper’s perch at the southeast corner window is preserved behind glass, visible but not accessible. Audio guides walk visitors through the exhibits chronologically, and the pacing encourages careful attention rather than a quick pass-through. An additional floor below extends the narrative into the investigation and cultural legacy.

Timed entry tickets are recommended, particularly on weekends and around the anniversary of the assassination in late November, when the museum sees its heaviest attendance. A thorough visit takes ninety minutes to two hours. The museum is directly adjacent to Dealey Plaza, so visitors can move between the indoor exhibits and the outdoor site easily. No photography is permitted in portions of the exhibition near the preserved window area.

Among the many museums addressing difficult chapters of American history, the Sixth Floor Museum is notable for its restraint — it presents evidence and documentation without steering visitors toward a single conclusion about the full circumstances of the assassination. That careful approach has given it a credibility that distinguishes it from the considerable mythology surrounding Dallas’s most famous address.

Dealey Plaza 2
#2 must-see

Dealey Plaza

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📍 Main Street, Dallas, Texas, 75202

On the morning of November 22, 1963, a presidential motorcade turned from Main Street onto Elm Street in downtown Dallas, passing beneath the upper windows of a brick warehouse building and through a railroad underpass. The open plaza that witnessed those moments has changed remarkably little since then — the same grassy slopes, the same concrete pergolas, the same streets converging at the same angles — making it one of the most preserved sites of any twentieth-century American event.

Dealey Plaza sits at the western edge of downtown, a compact urban park framed by the former Texas School Book Depository to the north, the grassy knoll and pergola to the west, and the triple underpass carrying traffic away from the site. White painted Xs on Elm Street mark the approximate locations where President Kennedy was struck. The plaza is a public space with no admission charge, and visitors freely walk the grounds, stand on the grassy slopes, and examine the architecture that forms the backdrop to the historical photographs most people already know.

The site is accessible year-round and can be explored in thirty minutes, though many visitors spend considerably longer. Weekday mornings tend to be quieter. The adjacent Sixth Floor Museum inside the former Book Depository building provides deeper historical context and is worth combining with a visit to the plaza itself. Street parking exists nearby, and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit system stops within walking distance.

Dealey Plaza occupies a layered position in Dallas’s identity — a genuine piece of American history that the city has sometimes struggled to contextualize and embrace. Within Texas, no other urban space carries the same weight of collective memory, and the combination of ordinary streetscape and extraordinary history gives the place its particular, unsettling power.

Perot Museum of Nature and Science 3
#3 must-see

Perot Museum of Nature and Science

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📍 2201 N Field St., Dallas, Texas, 75201

The Perot Museum of Nature and Science rises from a corner in the Victory Park neighborhood of Dallas like a massive concrete cube lifted off the ground on pilotis, its unusual form signaling an architectural ambition that continues inside. Designed by Thom Mayne of Morphosis and opened in 2012, the building’s exterior ramp and dramatic lobbies prepare visitors for a museum that presents science and natural history through exhibits designed to be physically engaging rather than passively educational.

The museum’s eleven permanent halls cover topics ranging from Texas geology and paleontology to space exploration, engineering, and the life sciences. The fossils hall features a notable collection of Texas dinosaur specimens, and the gem and mineral hall displays one of the finer public collections in the Southwest. The engineering and innovation halls target younger visitors with hands-on challenges, while the nature and science content across the other galleries serves a broad range of ages and interests.

The museum is located near the American Airlines Center arena in Victory Park, accessible by the Dallas Area Rapid Transit green and orange rail lines. Weekends and school holidays draw the heaviest attendance, particularly for the hands-on areas favored by children. Arriving at opening time on weekdays minimizes wait times at popular interactive exhibits. Timed tickets for some special exhibitions are available online. Allow three to four hours for a full visit.

Among Dallas’s cultural institutions, the Perot Museum occupies the most recent chapter of the city’s sustained investment in its arts and science district. Its bold architecture makes it as distinctive on the Dallas skyline as any of the museums in the nearby Arts District, and its programming serves a region that had no comparable natural history and science facility before its opening.

Dallas Arts District 4

Dallas Arts District

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📍 Dallas, Texas, 75201

The Dallas Arts District occupies nineteen contiguous blocks in the northeast corner of downtown, making it one of the largest urban arts districts in the United States by land area. The concentration of performing arts venues and museums along Flora Street and the surrounding blocks was developed deliberately over several decades, resulting in an unusual cluster of landmark buildings by internationally recognized architects that few American cities of any size can match.

The district’s institutions include the Nasher Sculpture Center, with its renzo piano-designed building and garden of modern and contemporary sculpture; the Dallas Museum of Art, which holds an encyclopedic permanent collection with free general admission; the Crow Museum of Asian Art; the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center; and the AT&T Performing Arts Center, which encompasses multiple venues for opera, dance, and theater. The concentration of these institutions within walking distance of each other gives the district a density of cultural programming found in very few American cities outside New York and Chicago.

The Dallas Museum of Art’s free general admission policy makes it particularly accessible and worth building into any Dallas itinerary. The Nasher Sculpture Center charges admission but offers free access on the first Saturday of each month. The Arts District is most easily reached via the Dallas Area Rapid Transit orange and green lines, with the Arts District station providing direct access. Weekday afternoons are noticeably quieter than weekend visits.

The Dallas Arts District represents one of the most sustained civic investments in cultural infrastructure undertaken by any American city in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, and the result is a walkable concentration of world-class institutions that significantly elevates Dallas’s cultural standing in the region and nationally.

Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum 5

Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum

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📍 300 N Houston St, Dallas, Texas, 75202

In the West End district of downtown Dallas, the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum confronts difficult history through a framework that connects the events of the Holocaust to broader questions about prejudice, power, and human rights in the present day. The building itself — a modern facility designed to draw visitors through a sequence of carefully considered spaces — sets a tone of gravity and reflection before a single exhibit panel is read.

The museum’s permanent collection traces the rise of Nazi Germany, the experiences of Jewish communities and other persecuted groups across Europe, and the postwar pursuit of justice. It includes testimonies from Holocaust survivors who settled in Texas, giving the narrative a local connection that grounds the global history. A section dedicated to contemporary human rights issues and genocides extends the museum’s scope beyond the World War II period and asks visitors to consider how the patterns of the past recur in the present.

Allow two to three hours minimum for the permanent galleries, more for visitors who engage deeply with the testimony stations and archival materials. The museum is emotionally demanding, and many visitors find they need to pace themselves or take breaks in the atrium spaces. It is open most days of the week; weekday mornings tend to be quieter and offer a more contemplative experience than weekend afternoons. The location in the West End is a short walk from DART rail stations.

Dallas has a significant Jewish community with deep historical roots, and the Holocaust Museum reflects that community’s commitment to education and memory. Its recent renovation and expansion brought it to a level of sophistication and scale that places it among the most significant institutions of its kind in the American South.

Reunion Tower 6

Reunion Tower

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📍 300 Reunion Blvd. East, Dallas, Texas, 75207

The geodesic sphere atop Reunion Tower has punctuated the Dallas skyline since 1978, its latticed globe rising 560 feet above street level and casting a distinctive silhouette that appears on the horizon before the rest of the downtown towers come into view. At night, the sphere’s LED lighting system cycles through color sequences visible from miles away, making it the most immediately recognizable feature of the Dallas cityscape after dark.

Reunion Tower is a mixed-use structure that includes the GeO-Deck observation level, a rotating restaurant, and private event space, all accessed through the base in the West End area of downtown near Union Station. The tower’s design — a concrete shaft topped by a sphere of steel and glass — was unusual at the time of its construction and has aged into an icon that Dallas now embraces as a civic symbol rather than merely a commercial structure.

The tower is best appreciated from a distance for its architectural form — views from the Katy Trail, from the Trinity River levees, or from across the downtown grid provide different perspectives on how the sphere relates to the surrounding skyline. Those wanting to go inside should visit the GeO-Deck observation level for direct views in all directions. The West End neighborhood around the base has restaurant and bar options that make an evening visit easy to extend.

In a region with no shortage of towers and office blocks, Reunion Tower holds its own because of its genuinely unusual form — nothing else in the Dallas-Fort Worth skyline looks remotely like it. That singularity has made it as representative of Dallas as any other structure the city has produced in the past half century.

Deep Ellum 7

Deep Ellum

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📍 Dallas, Texas

East of downtown Dallas, across the rail lines that once defined the eastern edge of the city, Deep Ellum developed in the early twentieth century as a commercial and entertainment district serving both Black and white working-class residents at a time when the rest of Dallas maintained strict racial separation. Blind Lemon Jefferson recorded here, and the neighborhood’s blues and jazz clubs gave Deep Ellum a musical reputation that outlasted the segregation era and seeded the district’s later identity as Dallas’s most creatively restless neighborhood.

The current Deep Ellum is primarily a live music and nightlife district, its blocks of low brick commercial buildings from the 1920s and 1930s converted into bars, clubs, restaurants, and music venues operating across a broad range of genres. Large-format murals cover building facades throughout the neighborhood, making it one of the more visually striking urban districts in Dallas. The area also contains independent galleries, vintage clothing shops, and a weekly farmers market that draws a morning crowd distinct from the evening entertainment audience.

Thursday through Saturday nights are the main event, when multiple venues run simultaneously and the sidewalks fill. The neighborhood is most accessible by rideshare in the evening given the limited parking. The Dallas Area Rapid Transit has a station nearby that makes daytime visits practical. Weekday afternoons offer a chance to appreciate the murals and architecture at a quiet pace before the evening activity begins.

Deep Ellum has gone through cycles of neglect and revival over its century of existence, and its current iteration continues to shift as rents rise and the surrounding East Dallas neighborhoods gentrify. Within Dallas, it remains the most historically layered entertainment district — its musical past and architectural bones giving it a character that newer development in the city consistently lacks.

Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden 8

Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden

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📍 8525 Garland Rd, Dallas, Texas, 75218

Along the eastern shore of White Rock Lake, the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden spreads across 66 acres of landscaped grounds, blending cultivated formal gardens with views of the lake and the downtown skyline in the distance. The property changes with each season, and regulars often visit multiple times a year simply to see what is in bloom.

The arboretum maintains numerous themed garden areas, including a children’s adventure garden, seasonal bulb plantings that draw large crowds in spring, and collections of native Texas plants that demonstrate what thoughtful regional landscaping can look like. The Rory Meyers Children’s Adventure Garden occupies a separate section with interactive science and nature exhibits designed for younger visitors. The fall pumpkin display and the spring bloom season are the two events that draw the largest regional attendance, sometimes creating significant entry waits on weekends.

Weekday mornings in spring and fall offer the best combination of comfortable temperatures and manageable crowds. Summer visits are possible but should be planned around early morning hours before midday heat makes extended outdoor time unpleasant. The arboretum is not well-served by public transit, so most visitors arrive by car; on-site parking fills quickly on popular weekend days, and overflow lots require a shuttle. Advance ticket purchase online is advisable during peak bloom seasons.

Within Dallas’s cultural landscape, the arboretum occupies a distinctive position as an institution that draws both casual visitors and serious gardening enthusiasts. Its lakeside setting gives it a scenic context that most botanical gardens lack, and its programming — which extends to evening events and educational series — keeps it engaged with the broader community year-round.

John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza 9

John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza

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📍 646 Main St., Dallas, Texas, 75202

A simple granite slab suspended above the ground on four concrete pillars stands in a small plaza in downtown Dallas, its stark geometry in deliberate contrast to the elaborate civic monuments that fill most American public spaces. The John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza, designed by architect Philip Johnson and dedicated in 1970, offers no images, no inscriptions beyond Kennedy’s name, and no narrative — just an open roofless cenotaph meant to evoke both enclosure and openness simultaneously.

The memorial sits one block from Dealey Plaza and a short walk from the Sixth Floor Museum, making it a natural stop on any route through this section of downtown Dallas. The interior of the structure is entered through gaps in the walls, and the experience of standing inside — sound muffled, sky visible overhead, granite walls rising on all sides — is different from viewing it from outside. The minimalist design polarized opinion when it was unveiled, and debate about its effectiveness has never entirely faded.

The plaza is a public outdoor space accessible at all hours. It requires only a few minutes to take in, though visitors who engage with the architectural intent tend to linger longer. The surrounding streets in the West End area of downtown Dallas have more pedestrian activity on weekday lunch hours than on weekends. No admission is charged, and the location is easily combined with nearby Dealey Plaza and the Sixth Floor Museum.

Within Dallas’s cluster of Kennedy-related sites, the memorial offers the most architecturally meditative experience — neither a forensic record nor a conventional monument, but a space designed to hold grief without explaining it. Johnson’s restraint makes it unusual among presidential memorials nationwide.

George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum 10

George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum

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📍 2943 SMU Blvd., Dallas, Texas, 75205

On a campus shaped by red brick and Georgian architecture, the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum sits on the grounds of Southern Methodist University in the Park Cities neighborhood of Dallas. Opened in 2013, it houses the records and artifacts of the 43rd presidency, a period whose events — September 11, two wars, Hurricane Katrina, and the financial crisis — still shape contemporary American life in visible ways.

The museum section presents the major events of the Bush administration through documents, photographs, personal objects, and interactive displays. A Decision Points Theater places visitors in the position of a president facing crisis scenarios and allows them to register their choices before revealing what actually occurred. The collection includes personal effects, gifts from foreign heads of state, and materials related to the Bush family’s broader political history. The presidential library archive, housed in the same building, is available to researchers by appointment.

Plan two to three hours for a thorough visit, more if you engage deeply with the interactive elements. The museum is open most days of the week, and crowds are typically lighter on weekday mornings. The SMU campus is pleasant to walk, and the library sits near other campus landmarks worth seeing. Paid parking is available in adjacent campus structures, and the Mockingbird DART station is within walking distance for those arriving by light rail.

Among the presidential libraries in Texas — which also include those of Lyndon Johnson in Austin and George H.W. Bush in College Station — the Bush 43 library is the most urban in its setting and the closest in time to living memory. Its proximity to downtown Dallas and a major university gives it an engaged audience that debates its subject matter with particular intensity.

Nasher Sculpture Center 11

Nasher Sculpture Center

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📍 2001 Flora St., Dallas, Texas, 75201

In the Arts District of downtown Dallas, the Nasher Sculpture Center presents a collection of modern and contemporary sculpture in conditions that rank among the finest in the world for the medium. The building, designed by Renzo Piano and opened in 2003, uses a carefully engineered roof system to filter natural light into the galleries, creating an environment where the quality of light changes throughout the day and responds to the sky above.

The permanent collection spans the twentieth century and includes major works by sculptors of international significance, with particular strength in postwar European and American artists. The garden — visible from the galleries and central to the museum experience — displays large-scale outdoor works against a backdrop of mature trees in a walled space that feels removed from the surrounding city. Temporary exhibitions regularly bring significant international loans to Dallas, and the programming extends to lectures and events that engage the local arts community.

The Nasher is open Tuesday through Sunday, and admission includes access to both the indoor galleries and the garden. Weekday afternoons are typically quiet, offering the kind of unhurried engagement that sculpture rewards. The garden is particularly worth visiting in morning light before afternoon heat builds during summer months. The museum shares a block with the Dallas Museum of Art and the Crow Museum of Asian Art, making the Arts District a practical anchor for a full day of cultural visiting.

The Nasher holds a specific reputation within the international museum world that exceeds what its size might suggest. Its architecture, its collection, and its garden together represent one of the most thoughtfully resolved museum environments in the American South, and it is frequently cited by architects and curators as a benchmark for how sculpture should be displayed.

Fair Park 12

Fair Park

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📍 1121 1st Ave., Dallas, Texas, 75210

Fair Park in southeast Dallas is a place that reveals itself slowly — a 277-acre campus built for the 1936 Texas Centennial Exposition and preserved largely intact since then. The Art Deco buildings that line the esplanade were designed to showcase the ambitions of a state coming of age, and their scale and ornamentation still communicate that intent decades after the crowds of the world’s fair dispersed.

The park contains multiple museums under one campus, including the Perot Museum’s predecessor institutions, a natural history museum, a science museum, and the African American Museum of Dallas. The Cotton Bowl stadium anchors the southern edge and hosts the annual Texas-Oklahoma college football game each October, one of the most attended rivalry games in the country. The State Fair of Texas, held each fall, draws millions of visitors to the grounds over its three-week run, transforming the park into an enormous festival with livestock shows, carnival rides, and food vendors.

Outside of major events, Fair Park is quiet and undervisited, which makes it an excellent destination for anyone interested in mid-century architecture and landscape design. Weekday visits during the off-season offer the most unobstructed views of the buildings and grounds. The park is accessible by DART light rail, with a station adjacent to the main gate. Parking is available on-site during events, though the State Fair period brings significant traffic to the surrounding neighborhood.

Fair Park represents an unusual preservation achievement in a city not generally known for architectural conservation. Its survival as a largely intact Centennial-era campus gives Dallas a direct material connection to the 1930s that few American cities of comparable scale can match, and its continued use as an active public space keeps it from becoming purely a museum of itself.

Crow Museum of Asian Art 13 💎 Hidden Gem by Locals

Crow Museum of Asian Art

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📍 2010 Flora St., Dallas, Texas, 75201

The Crow Museum of Asian Art sits at the Flora Street end of the Dallas Arts District, its understated exterior giving little indication of the depth of the collection inside. Founded in 1998 and significantly expanded in recent years, the museum holds one of the largest privately assembled collections of Asian art in North America, spanning objects from ancient China, Japan, Korea, India, Cambodia, and across Southeast Asia.

The collection moves through several thousand years of material culture — bronze vessels, jade carvings, ceramics, sculpture, paintings, and decorative objects — presented in galleries organized by region and period. The Japanese and Chinese galleries are particularly strong, and the South and Southeast Asian sculpture collection includes major works in stone and bronze from multiple medieval traditions. The museum’s garden spaces integrate sculpture into a landscape designed to complement the indoor collection, and the exterior plaza displays rotating large-scale works.

The museum is free to visit and open most days of the week, making it one of the more accessible institutions in the Arts District. Weekday mornings are typically quiet, offering the kind of unhurried viewing that detailed decorative arts reward. Allow one and a half to two hours for a thorough visit, more for visitors with a specific interest in any of the collection’s regional strengths. The museum is an easy walk from the Nasher Sculpture Center and the Dallas Museum of Art, enabling an efficient full-day Arts District itinerary.

The Crow Museum’s free admission policy gives it an unusual openness within a district that includes several ticketed institutions, and its collection depth rivals that of Asian art museums in cities with far larger cultural budgets. It represents an exceptional resource for Dallas and the broader Southwest, where dedicated museums of Asian art are rare.

Dallas Farmers Market 14

Dallas Farmers Market

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📍 920 S Harwood St, Dallas, Texas, 75201

On a cool Saturday morning, the Dallas Farmers Market fills with the colors and sounds of a city that takes its food seriously — pyramids of heirloom tomatoes, bundles of fresh herbs, and vendors calling out prices in a mix of English and Spanish. The market has been a fixture in the city’s Farmers Market District since the 1940s, connecting urban Dallas with the agricultural abundance of North Texas.

The market operates year-round and features two distinct sections: the Shed, an open-air covered market where local farmers sell seasonal produce directly, and a collection of permanent indoor vendors offering specialty foods, prepared meals, and artisan goods. On weekends, the surrounding plaza comes alive with additional pop-up vendors, food trucks, and occasionally live music. The selection shifts with the seasons, from spring strawberries and peaches to fall squash and pecans.

Weekend mornings between 8 a.m. and noon offer the best combination of full stalls and manageable crowds. Arriving early means the best selection of produce before popular items sell out. The market is accessible by DART light rail, which eliminates the challenge of parking in a busy urban neighborhood. Allow one to two hours for a thorough visit, more if you plan to linger over a meal at one of the indoor vendors.

In a city more associated with steakhouses and barbecue, the Dallas Farmers Market offers a different lens on local food culture — one focused on small farms, seasonal eating, and neighborhood community. Its central location near Deep Ellum and the Arts District makes it a natural complement to a broader day exploring downtown Dallas.

Dallas World Aquarium 15

Dallas World Aquarium

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📍 1801 N Griffin St., Dallas, Texas, 75202

Inside a converted warehouse along Griffin Street in downtown Dallas, the Dallas World Aquarium presents one of the more unusual juxtapositions in American natural history attractions — penguins and piranhas within blocks of the city’s arts and legal districts, the building’s brick exterior giving no indication of the layered tropical environments inside. The facility functions as both an aquarium and a zoo, housing rainforest species alongside marine life in a vertical multilevel arrangement that surprises visitors expecting a conventional fish tank layout.

The centerpiece is a simulated Orinoco rainforest exhibit that spirals downward through multiple levels, with free-flying birds, sloths, small primates, freshwater fish, and reptiles inhabiting different zones as visitors descend. Separate areas house reef fish, sharks, rays, and the penguin colony, which occupies a climate-controlled enclosure. The facility also maintains exhibits featuring big cats, manatees, and sea turtles, making the overall collection considerably broader than the aquarium name suggests.

The Dallas World Aquarium is open daily and is located within walking distance of the Perot Museum and other West End attractions, making it easy to combine into a downtown Dallas itinerary. Weekday mornings are the least crowded. Allow two to three hours for a thorough visit. The indoor nature of the exhibits makes it a practical choice during hot Texas summers or on rainy days when outdoor sightseeing is uncomfortable.

Among Dallas’s indoor attractions, the Dallas World Aquarium occupies a distinctive niche — neither purely a zoo nor a conventional aquarium, it occupies an older building adapted to house ecosystems that have no obvious analog elsewhere in the region, giving it a character that more purpose-built facilities in the area lack.

Dallas Zoo 16

Dallas Zoo

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📍 650 S.R.L. Thornton Freewqy, Dallas, Texas, 75203

The Dallas Zoo occupies more than 100 acres of wooded terrain in the Oak Cliff neighborhood south of downtown, and its hillside topography gives it a physical drama unusual among urban zoos. Mature trees shade much of the path system, and the varied terrain creates natural divisions between habitat areas that feel less artificial than the flat layouts of many comparable facilities.

The zoo houses more than 2,000 animals across a broad range of species, with particular strength in its African savanna exhibits, where giraffes, zebras, and other large mammals can be viewed from elevated platforms that bring visitors to eye level. The Giants of the Savanna exhibit spans several acres and allows multiple species to share visible space. A children’s zoo area, a monorail ride over some exhibits, and a butterfly garden offer additional ways to engage with the collection beyond standard walking paths.

Spring and fall are the most comfortable seasons for a full-day zoo visit in Dallas. Summer heat can be punishing by midday, so arriving at opening time and departing by early afternoon is the practical strategy during July and August. Weekday visits are noticeably less crowded than weekends, particularly during the school year. The zoo is well-served by DART light rail, with a stop directly adjacent to the main entrance, making car-free visits straightforward.

Among the major urban zoos in Texas, the Dallas Zoo is the oldest, dating to 1888, and its long history is evident in the scale of its tree cover and the depth of its programming. Its location in Oak Cliff, a neighborhood with its own distinct cultural identity, makes it a natural anchor for visitors exploring the south side of the city.

Pioneer Plaza 17 💎 Hidden Gem by Locals

Pioneer Plaza

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📍 1428 Young St., Dallas, Texas, 75202

A herd of forty bronze longhorn steers moves in perpetual silence across a grassy slope near the Dallas Convention Center, caught mid-drive by sculptor Robert Summers in a monument that reimagines the cattle drives of the late nineteenth century at full, life-size scale. The cattle trail that pioneer Plaza commemorates once passed through this area of North Texas, driving millions of longhorns northward from South Texas ranches toward railheads in Kansas, and the sculpture makes that history immediately tangible without requiring any prior knowledge of it.

The bronze longhorns are accompanied by three trail-driving cowboys and a chuck wagon, spread across a gentle hillside park of about four acres near Young Street in downtown Dallas. Visitors can walk among the sculptures, stand next to the cattle, and examine the detail of the individual animals at close range. The scale — the steers are the size of actual longhorns — creates an impression very different from looking at a conventional monument on a pedestal.

Pioneer Plaza is a public outdoor space open at all hours, with no admission charge. It is located a short walk from the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center and the Dallas Museum of Art, and near the DART transit system, making it accessible without driving. The best light for photography falls in the morning, when the sculptures are lit from the east. The park is pleasant on mild days and can be incorporated into a short walking circuit of downtown attractions.

Dallas has built its identity around commerce and finance more than its frontier past, which makes Pioneer Plaza an unusual choice of civic monument — a deliberate gesture toward the cattle trade that shaped North Texas long before oil and banking arrived. The scale of the installation ensures that it reads as serious rather than nostalgic.

Medieval Times Dallas 18

Medieval Times Dallas

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📍 2021 North Stemmons Freeway, Dallas, Texas, 75207

Medieval Times Dallas stages a jousting tournament and feast inside a castle-shaped arena off Stemmons Freeway, offering a dinner theater experience that has been running in various North American cities since the 1980s. The formula is consistent and deliberate: arena-style seating around a dirt floor, a color-coded knight to cheer for based on your table section, a multi-course meal eaten without utensils, and a theatrical narrative that builds to a climactic tournament.

The show combines equestrian performance, stage combat choreography, and period-inspired pageantry into a roughly two-hour experience. The horses are genuinely trained to a high standard, and the riding sequences are worth watching on their own terms. The food — roasted chicken, corn, soup, and pastry, served in sequence by costumed servers — is hearty and plentiful. The atmosphere is deliberately noisy and communal, with the audience encouraged to shout for their assigned champion throughout the evening.

Reservations are required and should be made in advance, particularly for weekend performances and holiday periods. The venue recommends arriving thirty to forty-five minutes before showtime to explore the pre-show hall, which includes exhibits about medieval weapons and armor. The experience runs best for groups — families with children, birthday parties, corporate outings — where the collective participation enhances the theatrical effect. Solo visitors or couples seeking a quiet meal will find the format disorienting.

Medieval Times occupies an interesting position in the Dallas entertainment landscape as a franchise concept that has outlasted many more sophisticated competitors. Its longevity reflects a specific kind of appeal — accessible, theatrical, and reliably consistent — that serves family audiences well and has sustained loyal repeat attendance for decades.

See all things to do in Dallas

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Dallas operates at Texas scale, which is to say larger than most expectations. The things to do in Dallas are spread across a vast metro area, but the essentials cluster around three zones: Uptown and Downtown (the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, the Arts District’s three major museums, the Dallas Arboretum), Deep Ellum (the music and nightlife district east of downtown), and Bishop Arts (the walkable neighbourhood in North Oak Cliff with the city’s best independent restaurants and shops). Fort Worth’s Stockyards National Historic District — where twice-daily longhorn cattle drives still run down the brick main street — is a 30-minute drive and a world apart.

Best time to visit

October through April is the most comfortable season: temperatures of 15-25C and the city’s event calendar fills up with the State Fair of Texas (October, six weeks at Fair Park), the Dallas International Film Festival (April), and the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo (January-February). May through September is hot (35-42C from June through August) and humid; indoor activities dominate. Dallas does not have a significant winter weather challenge compared to northern cities, though occasional ice storms in January-February can disrupt travel.

Getting around

Dallas has DART (Dallas Area Rapid Transit), a light rail and bus network that connects the airport (Love Field) to downtown and some Uptown areas. However, Dallas is fundamentally a car city — most destinations require a car or rideshare. Fort Worth is accessible by the Trinity Railway Express (TRE) from Union Station in 55 minutes. The Bishop Arts District, Deep Ellum, and the Stockyards all have limited parking but are walkable within each district once you’ve driven or taken a rideshare there.

What to eat and drink

Dallas’s food scene has evolved significantly since 2010 and is now genuinely interesting beyond the steakhouse tradition. The Pecan Lodge in Deep Ellum is the city’s most celebrated barbecue: brisket, pulled pork, and the ‘Trough’ (a sampler board for multiple people) require arriving early as it sells out. For modern Texan cooking, Knife by John Tesar on Maple Avenue takes the state’s ranching culture into a serious steakhouse context. The Bishop Arts District has the most walkable restaurant concentration: Lucia (Italian), Hattie’s (Southern), and Emporium Pies (the best pie in Texas). For the full Texas beer experience, Four Corners Brewing on Singleton Boulevard makes the most interesting beers in the city.

Neighborhoods to explore

Downtown and Dealey Plaza — The historic core: the Sixth Floor Museum in the former Texas School Book Depository, the Grassy Knoll, and the new Klyde Warren Park (a freeway-cap green space) connecting downtown to Uptown.

Dallas Arts District — The largest contiguous urban arts district in the US: the Dallas Museum of Art, the Nasher Sculpture Center, the Perot Museum of Nature and Science, and the AT&T Performing Arts Center, all within walking distance.

Deep Ellum — The music and art district east of downtown: the Bomb Factory and Trees music venues, the most concentrated street mural collection in the city, and Pecan Lodge barbecue.

Bishop Arts District, North Oak Cliff — The walkable neighbourhood of independent shops, restaurants, and galleries in converted historic storefronts across the Trinity River from downtown.

Uptown — The residential and restaurant district north of downtown: McKinney Avenue’s restaurant row, the DART McKinney Avenue streetcar, and the proximity to Turtle Creek Park.

Fort Worth Stockyards — The National Historic District 30 miles west: the twice-daily longhorn cattle drive, Cowtown Coliseum rodeos, Billy Bob’s Texas (the world’s largest honky-tonk), and the White Elephant Saloon.

Frequently asked questions

What are the best things to do in Dallas?

The best things to do in Dallas include visiting the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza (the JFK assassination site — serious, well-curated, and essential), touring the Dallas Arts District, eating brisket at Pecan Lodge in Deep Ellum, exploring the Bishop Arts District's independent restaurants, and taking the 30-minute drive to Fort Worth for the Stockyards cattle drive. The Dallas Arboretum is excellent from March through May.

How many days do I need in Dallas?

Three days covers downtown, the arts district, Deep Ellum, Bishop Arts, and a Fort Worth day trip. Four days adds the Dallas Zoo, Fair Park (including the Hall of State museum), and more time in Bishop Arts and Uptown. A long weekend from most US cities works well.

Is Dallas safe for tourists?

Tourist areas (downtown, Uptown, Deep Ellum, Bishop Arts, Fort Worth Stockyards) are generally safe. Deep Ellum can be loud and rowdy on Friday and Saturday nights but is not dangerous. Standard urban precautions apply. Keep valuables out of parked cars throughout the city.

What is the best time to visit Dallas?

October for the State Fair of Texas and ideal weather. November through April for comfortable temperatures. January-February for the Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo. Avoid June-August unless you're comfortable with 38-42C heat.

How do I get around Dallas?

Rental car or rideshare for most destinations. DART light rail for downtown and some Uptown destinations. TRE train to Fort Worth (55 minutes). Love Field airport is serviced by DART. DFW International Airport requires DART Rail (orange line) to connect.

Is Dallas expensive?

Dallas is moderately priced by US major-city standards. A mid-range hotel downtown runs $150-250 per night. The Sixth Floor Museum admission is $18. A full brisket plate at Pecan Lodge costs $18-24. Dinner in Bishop Arts runs $30-60 per person. Fort Worth is slightly cheaper than Dallas.

What are hidden gems in Dallas?

The Crow Collection of Asian Art in the Arts District is free and houses one of the most significant collections of South and Southeast Asian art in the American Southwest. Fair Park, built for the 1936 Texas Centennial, has the largest collection of Art Deco exposition architecture in the country — the Hall of State alone is worth the drive. The Frontiers of Flight Museum near Love Field has a moon rock, a full Apollo spacecraft capsule, and the most comprehensive aviation collection between the Smithsonian and the National Air Force Museum.