Best Things to Do in Raleigh (2026 Guide)

Raleigh is the anchor of North Carolina's Research Triangle β€” a university-driven city that combines a walkable downtown with world-class free museums and one of the South's most interesting food scenes. The NC Museum of Natural Sciences is the largest in the Southeast; the NC Museum of Art has impressive collection depth for a state capital.

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The unmissable in Raleigh

These are the staple sights β€” don't leave Raleigh without seeing them.

1
North Carolina Museum of Art
#1 must-see

North Carolina Museum of Art

πŸ“ 2110 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27607
πŸ• Mon–Tue Closed Β· Wed–Thu 10:00-17:00 Β· Fri 10:00-21:00 Β· Sat–Sun 10:00-17:00
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2
North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences
#2 must-see

North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

πŸ“ 11 W Jones St, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27601
πŸ• Mon Closed Β· Tue–Sun 10:00-17:00
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3
Airlie Gardens
#3 must-see

Airlie Gardens

πŸ“ 300 Airlie Rd, Wilmington, North Carolina, 28403
πŸ• Mon–Sun 9:00-17:00
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Attractions in Raleigh

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North Carolina Museum of Art 1
#1 must-see

North Carolina Museum of Art

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πŸ“ 2110 Blue Ridge Road, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27607

Set back from Blue Ridge Road in a park-like landscape on the western edge of Raleigh, the North Carolina Museum of Art holds a collection that spans five thousand years and ranges from ancient Egyptian artefacts to contemporary American work β€” an ambitious scope for a state institution that it manages with surprising depth in several areas. The museum opened in 1956 as the first state-funded art museum in the United States, a distinction it carries as a piece of civic history as much as an artistic credential.

The permanent collection’s strongest holdings include ancient Mediterranean art, European old masters, and twentieth-century American painting and sculpture, with notable works by Rodin, Winslow Homer, and Georgia O’Keeffe among many others. The Ann and Jim Goodnight Museum Park surrounding the building integrates large-scale outdoor sculpture into 164 acres of landscape, with pieces by Thomas Houseago, Barbara Kruger, and Ai Weiwei, among others. The outdoor collection is free to access at all times and functions independently as a significant public art installation.

The museum is open Wednesday through Sunday and charges admission for the indoor galleries, with the outdoor park remaining permanently free. Parking is ample. The scale of the property makes a combined indoor-outdoor visit a half-day endeavour at minimum, and the park’s unpredictable art placements reward walking beyond the main path network.

Within North Carolina’s arts landscape, the NCMA occupies a position that combines encyclopedic ambition with a landscape setting that few peer institutions can match. The outdoor collection, in particular, has elevated the museum’s regional standing in recent years, attracting commissions from artists of international reputation who might otherwise bypass Raleigh entirely.

North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences 2
#2 must-see

North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

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πŸ“ 11 W Jones St, Raleigh, North Carolina, 27601

On West Jones Street in downtown Raleigh, the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences is the largest natural history museum in the American Southeast, and one of the few in the country that operates active research programmes visible to the public. The building’s design incorporates live specimen tanks, working laboratories behind glass, and real-time data feeds from field research stations β€” a presentation model that blurs the boundary between museum and scientific institution.

The permanent collection spans geology, paleontology, ecology, and zoology, with particular depth in the natural history of North Carolina’s diverse ecosystems β€” from Atlantic coastal marshes through Piedmont forests to Southern Appalachian highlands. The Terror of the South gallery features one of the most complete Acrocanthosaurus skeletons ever discovered, and the Nature Explore exhibits engage children and adults with interactive ecology content. The four-story Nature Research Center annex, opened in 2012, houses the active research laboratories and the Daily Planet theatre.

The museum is free to enter, with charges for specific programmes and the 3D theatre. It is open daily except major holidays and is particularly popular with families and school groups on weekdays. The location in downtown Raleigh makes it easily combinable with visits to the North Carolina Museum of History directly across Bicentennial Plaza, creating a full-day itinerary within easy walking distance.

North Carolina’s ecological variety β€” shaped by the convergence of the Appalachians, the Piedmont, and the Atlantic coastal plain β€” gives this museum a subject of unusual breadth. Few states contain ecosystems of such different character within a single political boundary, and the museum’s commitment to ongoing field research rather than purely historical collection gives its exhibits a currency that static natural history displays struggle to match.

Airlie Gardens 3
#3 must-see

Airlie Gardens

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πŸ“ 300 Airlie Rd, Wilmington, North Carolina, 28403

Along a tidal creek corridor near Wrightsville Beach, Airlie Gardens occupies 67 acres of coastal landscape that has been cultivated since the late nineteenth century. The property’s most celebrated resident is the Airlie Oak, estimated at more than 460 years old, whose limbs spread across more than half an acre and require cable support β€” a tree that was already ancient when the gardens around it were first planted.

The collections include one of the largest documented camellia plantings in the Southeast, with hundreds of cultivars that bloom from November through March. Spring brings azalea displays of considerable scale, timed to coincide with the Azalea Festival that Wilmington hosts each April. The Minnie Evans Sculpture Garden honours the self-taught African-American visionary artist who worked at Airlie for decades and whose densely symbolic paintings reflect the landscape she inhabited. A butterfly house operates during summer months.

The gardens are open daily year-round except major holidays, with seasonal ticket pricing. Spring azalea season β€” typically late March through mid-April β€” draws the largest crowds and the most dramatic visual display, though the gardens offer interest in every season. The tidal edges of the property support wading birds throughout the year, and the mature trees provide habitat density unusual in a maintained ornamental garden.

In the context of Wilmington’s cultural offerings β€” which range from the historic riverfront district to the nearby Cape Fear coastline β€” Airlie Gardens provides the city with a horticultural landmark of genuine regional significance. The combination of the ancient oak, the Evans legacy, and the cultivated landscape gives it a layered identity that extends well beyond a conventional ornamental garden visit.

Battleship North Carolina 4

Battleship North Carolina

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πŸ“ 1 Battleship Rd, Wilmington, North Carolina, 28401

The USS North Carolina lies at her permanent mooring on the Cape Fear River, and from the Wilmington waterfront she presents the grey geometry of a warship built when battleships were still the primary expression of naval power. The scale becomes apparent only when visitors cross the gangway and stand on the main deck β€” the ship is 728 feet long, displaces nearly 45,000 tons fully loaded, and carries nine sixteen-inch guns in three triple turrets that remain trained outboard as if still on watch.

Commissioned in 1941 and decommissioned in 1947, the North Carolina participated in every major naval campaign in the Pacific theater of the Second World War, earning fifteen battle stars. The self-guided tour covers all nine decks through watertight hatches and steep ladders, moving from cramped enlisted quarters below the waterline to the bridge and gun directors high in the superstructure. Engine rooms, fire control centers, and the main armament are all accessible, giving visitors a complete picture of how a fleet vessel functioned as a community of over 2,500 men.

The ship is open daily from morning through late afternoon, with extended hours in summer. Visitors should wear comfortable shoes with non-slip soles; the ladders are steep and the deck surfaces uneven. The crossing from the Wilmington waterfront is short, and parking is available at the site.

Among the preserved warships of the Second World War accessible to the public in the United States, the North Carolina stands out for the completeness of its preservation and the depth of access it provides. Within North Carolina, it functions as a memorial to the state’s residents who served at sea, and the riverine setting across from downtown Wilmington gives the vessel an unexpectedly intimate presence within a living city.

Bechtler Museum of Modern Art 5

Bechtler Museum of Modern Art

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πŸ“ 420 S Tryon St., Charlotte, North Carolina, 28202

On South Tryon Street in Charlotte’s arts district, the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art occupies a building designed by Swiss architect Mario Botta β€” a compact, brick-clad tower that signals its intentions through geometry alone. Inside, the collection reflects the personal taste of the Bechtler family, Swiss patrons who moved in the same European circles as the artists they collected during the mid-twentieth century.

The permanent collection centres on work by artists including Alberto Giacometti, Joan MirΓ³, Max Ernst, and Andy Warhol, alongside notable holdings of Jean Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle. The Bechtlers acquired these works through direct relationships rather than market transactions, which gives the collection an unusual coherence β€” these are not trophy purchases but the accumulation of sustained aesthetic engagement. Several pieces have been exhibited rarely outside Europe prior to coming to Charlotte.

The museum is compact enough to explore thoroughly in two hours, making it an efficient stop within the broader South End and Uptown cultural corridor that includes the Harvey B. Gantt Center and the Mint Museum. It is open Tuesday through Sunday, with extended hours on Thursdays. Parking is available in adjacent decks, and the museum sits on the LYNX Blue Line light rail route.

Charlotte has assembled a concentration of cultural institutions that surprises visitors expecting a purely financial and NASCAR-driven city identity. The Bechtler, with its European modernist core, offers a counterpoint to that expectation β€” a reminder that the city’s civic ambitions have long reached beyond the regional and the commercial into something more deliberately international.

Blumenthal Arts Center 6

Blumenthal Arts Center

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πŸ“ 130 N Tryon St, Charlotte, North Carolina, 28202

At the northern end of Charlotte’s arts corridor on North Tryon Street, Blumenthal Arts Center serves as the city’s principal venue for touring Broadway productions, major orchestral performances, and performing arts presentations that require professional-scale infrastructure. The complex contains multiple performance spaces, with the Belk Theater as its largest hall, seating over two thousand and equipped for full-scale theatrical productions.

The programming calendar runs from September through June and covers musical theatre, opera, dance, comedy, and classical music. The facility hosts the touring productions of the Broadway series, which brings national-circuit shows to Charlotte audiences with the same technical specifications used in their New York runs. The smaller Booth Playhouse within the complex hosts more intimate productions and developmental work. Both spaces are actively used throughout the season.

The center sits on North Tryon Street adjacent to the Spectrum Center arena and within walking distance of Uptown Charlotte’s hotel cluster, making it a natural evening anchor for visitors staying in the city center. Parking in the surrounding decks is straightforward, and the light rail stops nearby. Ticket purchases are best made through the Blumenthal website well in advance of popular runs, particularly for Broadway titles.

Charlotte’s investment in performing arts infrastructure reflects a pattern of civic ambition that has reshaped the Uptown district since the 1990s. Blumenthal, alongside the Bechtler Museum, the Harvey B. Gantt Center, and the Mint Museum Uptown nearby, anchors a cultural district that gives the city a performing and visual arts identity distinct from its banking and motorsport reputation β€” though these identities coexist rather than compete.

Cascades Trail 7

Cascades Trail

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πŸ“ Boone, North Carolina, 28607

Near the Virginia state line along the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Cascades Trail descends through a hardwood cove to a 66-foot waterfall on Falls Creek β€” one of the most accessible significant waterfalls in the North Carolina High Country. The trailhead sits at an elevation of around 3,600 feet, and the two-mile round-trip route through dense forest canopy takes most walkers between one and two hours at an unhurried pace.

The forest along the trail is dominated by yellow birch, red maple, and tulip poplar, with a dense understory that creates near-total shade in summer. The creek builds gradually from a trickle to a substantial flow before dropping over the falls into a shallow pool suitable for wading. Wildflowers bloom along the trail margins from April through June, and the autumn foliage display from mid-October onward is considerable, with the yellow and orange canopy reflecting in the creek pools below the falls.

The trailhead is located at Milepost 272.4 on the Blue Ridge Parkway, with a parking area and restrooms. The trail is open year-round when the parkway is passable β€” winter closures due to ice and snow are common between November and March. The walk is moderate in difficulty, with some rocky sections and a sustained descent to the falls. Spring visits bring the highest water volume and the most dramatic falls display.

The Blue Ridge Parkway corridor in northwestern North Carolina contains dozens of waterfall trails of varying accessibility, but the Cascades stands out for the combination of relative ease, forest quality, and the falls’ genuine height and visual impact. It is among the parkway’s most rewarding short walks in a stretch of road already well-supplied with natural spectacle.

Charlotte Motor Speedway (NASCAR) 8

Charlotte Motor Speedway (NASCAR)

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πŸ“ 5555 Concord Parkway South, Concord, North Carolina, 28027

On Concord Parkway South in Cabarrus County, Charlotte Motor Speedway is one of NASCAR’s premier tracks β€” a 1.5-mile quad-oval circuit that has hosted some of the series’ most significant races since opening in 1960. The facility is configured for the Coca-Cola 600, the longest race on the NASCAR Cup Series calendar and traditionally held each Memorial Day weekend, which draws crowds that rank among the largest single-day sporting events in the United States.

The speedway complex extends well beyond the oval, encompassing a road course, a dirt track, drag racing facilities, and a karting circuit that together make it one of the most comprehensive motorsport venues in the country. Tours of the facility run on non-race days and access the infield, pit lane, and media facilities. The Richard Petty Driving Experience offers passengers the chance to ride or drive a stock car at controlled speeds on the actual oval surface β€” a popular activity that books well in advance during race season.

Race weekends are the obvious time to visit, though the May and October events fill accommodation across the Charlotte region weeks in advance. Non-race visits are easier to plan and provide access to areas inaccessible during events. The speedway is located approximately twenty miles northeast of Charlotte’s city centre, reachable by road or shuttle services that operate during major race weekends.

NASCAR is deeply embedded in the cultural geography of the Carolina Piedmont β€” most of the sport’s teams base their operations within an hour of Charlotte, and the region claims the highest concentration of professional motorsport facilities in North America. Charlotte Motor Speedway is the axis around which that geography organises itself, functioning less as a venue and more as the sport’s de facto capital.

Foggy Mountain Gem Mine 9

Foggy Mountain Gem Mine

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πŸ“ 4416 NC Hwy 105, Boone, North Carolina

Along NC Highway 105 between Boone and Banner Elk, Foggy Mountain Gem Mine offers the particular pleasure of sluicing β€” the process of washing gravel through a water channel to reveal the stones within. The operation sells bags of mining rough β€” gravel salted with gemstones β€” and provides the flumes, instruction, and identification guides needed to sort through a find. The High Country of North Carolina sits above one of the most mineralogically diverse zones in the eastern United States, and the local geology genuinely produces emeralds, rubies, sapphires, and garnets, though the seeded buckets ensure visitors take something home regardless.

The process is tactile and surprisingly absorbing β€” sorting stones by hand through running water, identifying colours and shapes against an identification chart, and accumulating small finds in a plastic container over the course of an hour. Staff assist with identification and can arrange for interesting specimens to be faceted or set on-site. The experience works particularly well for children but holds interest across age groups.

Foggy Mountain operates seasonally from spring through autumn, with hours varying by month. The surrounding area β€” Boone, Blowing Rock, and the Blue Ridge Parkway corridor β€” offers abundant additional activities, making the gem mine a natural part of a multi-day High Country itinerary. Pricing is per bag of rough, and the range of bag options determines both cost and the density of stones within.

The gem mining tradition in the North Carolina mountains has deep roots β€” commercial ruby and emerald mining operations existed in the region from the nineteenth century, and several active gemstone deposits in Macon and Mitchell counties continue to attract both hobbyist prospectors and geological researchers. Foggy Mountain connects visitors to that tradition in an accessible and deliberately enjoyable format.

Grandfather Mountain 10

Grandfather Mountain

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πŸ“ North Carolina, 28646

At 5,946 feet, Grandfather Mountain is the highest peak in the Blue Ridge Mountains along the North Carolina–Tennessee border, and its profile β€” said to resemble a recumbent old man when viewed from the east along the Watauga Valley β€” has made it a visual landmark for the region for centuries. The Cherokee people regarded the mountain as sacred, and the surrounding landscape remains one of the most biologically diverse in the eastern United States.

The mile-high swinging bridge, suspended between two rocky outcrops near the summit, is the feature most visitors come for β€” a 228-foot span that vibrates perceptibly in the frequent summit winds. The nature museum at the base of the summit road houses a collection of native wildlife including river otters, eagles, and white-tailed deer in habitat enclosures. Fourteen hiking trails of varying difficulty traverse the mountain’s various aspects, with the backcountry routes offering solitude that the summit area cannot provide on busy weekends.

Grandfather Mountain is open year-round but weather conditions vary dramatically by season. Summer afternoons bring thunderstorms that develop quickly, and the summit may be closed during high winds. Autumn visits β€” particularly October β€” align with peak foliage in the surrounding hardwood forest. Ticket prices include access to the bridge and museum; trail access is managed separately for backcountry hikers through the state park system.

Within the broader Southern Appalachian landscape, Grandfather Mountain holds a particular ecological position: the combination of elevation, aspect, and geology supports plant communities more typical of Canada than the American South. The International Biosphere Reserve designation, one of relatively few in the United States, reflects scientific recognition of this distinctiveness rather than any single dramatic feature.

Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts & Culture 11

Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts & Culture

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πŸ“ 551 S Tryon St., Charlotte, North Carolina, 28202

Across South Tryon Street from the Bechtler Museum, the Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts and Culture takes its name from Charlotte’s first African-American mayor and the first Black student admitted to Clemson University. That history of resistance and civic achievement provides the context for a museum whose collection and programming engage directly with the African-American experience in the Carolinas and beyond.

The permanent collection spans visual art, craft, and material culture, with particular depth in works by artists connected to the American South. Rotating exhibitions address themes of identity, migration, labour, and cultural transmission, drawing from both established and emerging voices. The building itself β€” designed by Philip Freelon, who also led the design team for the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington β€” is organised around a central atrium that opens the galleries to natural light.

The Gantt Center is open Tuesday through Saturday and on select Sundays, with occasional late hours for evening programming and lectures. It sits within the Johnson and Wales University Uptown campus area and is a short walk from the light rail’s Stonewall Station. Combined visits with the nearby Bechtler and Mint Museum Uptown are common and can fill a substantial afternoon in the South Tryon corridor.

Among Charlotte’s cultural institutions, the Gantt Center addresses a history that the city’s other museums approach only tangentially β€” the long arc of African-American life in a region where the legacies of slavery, segregation, and civil rights activism shaped everything from urban geography to musical tradition. That focus gives the museum a specificity that its broader peers, however excellent, cannot replicate.

Oconaluftee Indian Village 12

Oconaluftee Indian Village

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πŸ“ 218 Drama Road, Cherokee, North Carolina, 28719

On the Tuckasegee River in the Qualla Boundary β€” the federally designated homeland of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians β€” Oconaluftee Indian Village reconstructs a mid-eighteenth-century Cherokee settlement using structures, techniques, and practices drawn from historical and archaeological documentation. The site is operated by the Eastern Band themselves, a distinction that gives the presentations a grounding in living cultural continuity rather than external interpretation.

Guided tours move through a sequence of traditional structures including a seven-sided council house, smaller family dwellings, and craft demonstration areas where Cherokee artisans work in river cane basketry, finger weaving, pottery, blowgun construction, and beadwork. The guides are members of the Eastern Band who explain both the historical context and the ongoing relevance of these practices to contemporary Cherokee life. The combination of built environment and active craft production creates an experience distinctly different from static museum presentation.

The village operates seasonally from mid-May through late October and is adjacent to the Mountainside Theatre where the outdoor drama Unto These Hills has been performed for decades. Cherokee is positioned at the southwestern entrance to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, making Oconaluftee a natural addition to a visit to the park’s Oconaluftee Visitor Center, which itself sits beside a nineteenth-century mountain farm exhibit.

Western North Carolina contains one of the largest concentrations of Native American population in the eastern United States, and the Eastern Band’s presence in these mountains predates European contact by thousands of years. Oconaluftee Indian Village offers access to that depth of history with a directness and cultural authority that no outside institution could replicate.

See all things to do in Raleigh

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Raleigh has grown substantially in recent decades as the Research Triangle (with Duke in Durham and UNC in Chapel Hill) became one of the US’s most important technology and biomedical corridors. The result is a city with strong university energy, a younger demographic than most Southern cities, and a food scene that has evolved well beyond the traditional Southern staples. The downtown is genuinely walkable, the free museum district is excellent, and the surrounding Research Triangle provides easy day trips to Durham and Chapel Hill.

Best Time to Visit Raleigh

March through May brings pleasant temperatures (15-25Β°C) and the city’s best outdoor markets and festivals. October is equally good β€” fall festivals and comfortable temperatures. Summer is hot and humid (regularly 33Β°C) but manageable given how air-conditioned indoor attractions are. Winter is mild by northern standards β€” temperatures rarely drop below freezing for extended periods, and the city stays active year-round.

Getting Around

Raleigh is primarily a car city, though the downtown area and Glenwood South/Warehouse District are walkable. The GoRaleigh bus system covers the city, and a light rail line (S-Line) is under development. Raleigh-Durham International Airport (RDU) is 25 minutes northwest and well-connected with major national hubs. Durham (30 minutes) and Chapel Hill (30 minutes) are easy day trips by car.

Best Neighborhoods in Raleigh

Downtown / Fayetteville Street: The pedestrian main street connects the State Capitol to the convention center, with restaurants, bars, and the NC Museum of History on adjacent Edenton Street. The city’s festival calendar concentrates on the Fayetteville Street Mall area.

Glenwood South: The primary entertainment and nightlife district north of downtown β€” a walkable stretch of restaurants and bars that’s the city’s most active evening destination. Moore Square and City Market are adjacent.

Warehouse District and Morgan Street: The arts and dining neighbourhood southwest of downtown, with Raleigh Beer Garden (one of the world’s largest selections of draft beer on tap), Transfer Food Hall, and several of the city’s better independent restaurants.

North Hills / Midtown: The city’s second commercial centre, more residential and suburban but with good shopping and dining. Crabtree Valley Mall area has standard chain options; North Hills itself has better independent choices.

Food & Drink

Raleigh has emerged as one of the South’s better food cities β€” a James Beard Award concentration that reflects the university-driven creativity and access to local North Carolina produce, pork, and seafood. For barbecue: the eastern North Carolina style (whole-hog, vinegar-based sauce) is best found in dedicated spots like Picnic and the Big Ed’s chain. For innovative dining: Bida Manda (Laotian, James Beard-nominated), the Mulino Italian Kitchen, and Saint-Jacques French restaurant. The Raleigh Beer Garden on Glenwood has 366 beers on tap β€” more than any other bar in the US, per Guinness records.

Practical Tips

  • The NC Museum of Natural Sciences is genuinely world-class and completely free β€” allow at least 3 hours. The SECU Daily Planet Theatre and the live animal collection are standouts.
  • The Research Triangle means Durham and Chapel Hill are 20-30 minutes away β€” consider them part of the Raleigh visit. Durham has Eno River State Park and the excellent Durham Food Hall; Chapel Hill has Franklin Street and the UNC campus.
  • Pullen Park (the oldest operating park in North Carolina, with a 1911 carousel) is a good afternoon stop near NC State University campus.
  • First Friday art walks in the Warehouse District and Glenwood South run monthly β€” the streets fill with open galleries and vendors from 6-10pm.
  • Hotel prices and restaurant availability are affected by major NC State and UNC sporting events; check the athletic calendars when planning.

Frequently asked questions

What is the Research Triangle?

The Research Triangle Park (RTP) is one of the largest science and technology parks in the US, anchored by North Carolina State University in Raleigh, Duke University in Durham, and UNC-Chapel Hill. The proximity of three major research universities created a technology corridor that has attracted IBM, Cisco, SAS, and hundreds of biotech and pharmaceutical companies.

How does Raleigh compare to Durham and Chapel Hill?

Raleigh is the largest and the state capital, with the most extensive museum infrastructure. Durham has a more hipster-creative energy with the American Tobacco Campus and more diverse food options. Chapel Hill is the most traditional college town of the three. They're close enough to visit all three in a single trip.

Is Raleigh worth visiting as a tourist?

Yes, particularly for the free museum district and the food scene. It's not a traditional tourist destination with iconic landmarks, but the combination of excellent cultural institutions, good restaurants, and a pleasant walkable downtown makes it a rewarding stop in the Carolina region.