Miami pairs Art Deco beachfront, Cuban café windows in Little Havana, and the murals of Wynwood into a city that feels more Caribbean and Latin American than American. Beyond South Beach, the Design District, Coconut Grove, and the Everglades on the doorstep give it real depth.
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Quick facts
Timezone
America/New York
Currency
$ USD
Language
English
City transfer
~25 min
Metrorail / Rideshare (Uber/Lyft) / Taxi / Bus
Best time to visit
best weatherdeals available
Don't miss
Walk Ocean Drive on South Beach at 7am — before the sun umbrellas go up and the crowds arrive, the restored Deco facades glow in the morning light and you'll have the beach almost to yourself. This is the version of Miami Beach the postcards never show.
Visit Wynwood Walls on a weekday morning (opens 10am, free on weekdays) and explore the surrounding blocks — the neighbourhood extends far beyond the main walls. The Margulies Collection at the Warehouse (private, ticketed) houses one of the world's best private contemporary art collections and is regularly overlooked.
Order a cortadito at a Little Havana ventanita (walk-up window espresso counter) on Calle Ocho — Versailles Bakery at 3555 SW 8th St is the most famous, but La Carreta a block east is where locals actually go. Standing at the counter with a colada is peak Miami.
Take the free Brickell City Centre water taxi (runs on weekend afternoons from the Bayside Marketplace) across Biscayne Bay to the Venetian Islands — a chain of residential artificial islands with a waterfront walking path and jaw-dropping views back toward the downtown skyline.
Weekend itinerary · 3 days
Day 1
South Beach: Ocean Drive & the Deco District
Walk Ocean Drive from 5th to 15th Street in the early morning (7–9am) for the best light on the Art Deco facades and the quietest beach. The Art Deco Welcome Center on 10th and Ocean Drive runs excellent walking tours at 10:30am daily — $30, 90 minutes, genuinely informative.
Lincoln Road & Española Way
Walk north to Lincoln Road Mall — pedestrianised and lined with restaurants and shops, it's Miami Beach's main social strip. Detour to Española Way (two blocks south of Lincoln) — a pink-and-white 1920s Mediterranean Revival alley that looks nothing like the rest of South Beach.
Sunset at South Pointe Park
Walk south to South Pointe Park at the tip of Miami Beach — a manicured park with the cruise ship channel running past it. At sunset, enormous container ships and cruise liners pass close enough to feel the wash. Bring snacks and sit on the jetty.
Joe's Stone Crab
A Miami institution since 1913 at the south tip of South Beach. Stone crab claws with mustard sauce is the only order. Open October–May only (stone crab season) — check dates before booking. Walk-in at the bar; the dining room requires a reservation.
Day 2
Wynwood Walls & Arts District
Take a rideshare to Wynwood and arrive at 10am when the Walls open (free weekdays). Spend 2 hours in the main compound then explore the surrounding blocks — the neighbourhood within a 6-block radius has murals, galleries, and studios that are more interesting than the curated walls.
Little Havana: Calle Ocho
Drive west to Little Havana. Walk the Calle Ocho (SW 8th Street) strip from 12th to 17th Avenue — the ventanitas, cigar rollers at El Titan de Bronze, and the Domino Park (Maximo Gomez Park) where old Cuban men play dominoes daily. Non-intrusive watching is welcomed.
Brickell & Downtown Skyline
End the afternoon in Brickell — Miami's financial district — for the high-rise skyline juxtaposed against Biscayne Bay. The free Metromover (an automated elevated rail loop) gives a 20-minute aerial tour of Downtown and Brickell at no cost.
Versailles Restaurant
The heartbeat of Miami's Cuban community on Calle Ocho since 1971. The ropa vieja, lechón asado, and Cuban sandwiches are all excellent. Busy and loud — that's the point. No reservations, queues move fast.
Day 3
Vizcaya Museum & Gardens
A Gilded Age Italian Renaissance villa on Biscayne Bay in Coconut Grove, built in 1916 by industrialist James Deering. The gardens alone (10 acres, formal European landscaping meeting the Biscayne shoreline) justify the $22 admission. Allow 2 hours minimum.
Coconut Grove Village
Miami's oldest neighbourhood — walkable, tree-canopied, and completely unlike the beach. The CocoWalk shopping centre is being replaced by an interesting mixed-use development; the surrounding streets with banyan-covered sidewalks are the real attraction.
Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM)
Return to Downtown Biscayne Bay for the Pérez Art Museum — a striking Herzog & de Meuron building on the bay with hanging gardens and an excellent collection of 20th and 21st century international art. Free on first Thursdays; otherwise $16.
Zak the Baker
A Wynwood bakery-deli hybrid that's become one of Miami's essential meals. The open-face sourdough sandwiches and wood-fired breads are extraordinary. Arrive for weekend brunch early — it fills by 9:30am. No reservations.
Travel tips
- →Skip rental cars if you're staying in South Beach — parking is brutal and expensive
- →Order a cortadito and pastelito at any Calle Ocho ventanita for a true Miami breakfast
- →Hurricane season runs June through November — travel insurance is worth it
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