Things to Do in Dallas: A Neighborhood-by-Neighborhood Guide
Things to do in Dallas, organized the way locals actually move through the city — by neighborhood, not by a randomized top-50 list.
Dallas is spread out, and most “things to do” lists scatter 50 attractions across the metro with no sense of how they connect. This guide groups everything by neighborhood instead, so you can actually build a day around where you are rather than zigzagging across town. Short overviews below, with links to full deep-dive guides as we build them out.
Deep Ellum
Dallas’s live music and street art neighborhood, with roots in 1920s blues and jazz. Today it’s 25+ live music venues (Trees, The Bomb Factory, Club Dada) and over 100 bars and restaurants, plus a mural corridor covering warehouse walls along Commerce, Main, and Elm. Best on a Friday or Saturday night — the energy from 8 PM on is the most distinctly “Dallas” experience in the city. Reachable by DART’s Green Line, with the Deep Ellum station itself near the “Travelling Man” sculptures, a favorite photo stop.
Bishop Arts District (Oak Cliff)
A walkable, 60-block neighborhood of independent boutiques, galleries, and restaurants — the daytime counterpart to Deep Ellum’s nightlife. Best on a weekend morning, when the bakeries (Emporium Pies is the local favorite) open and the neighborhood is at its most relaxed. Reachable free via the DART Streetcar from Union Station, about 10 minutes — genuinely one of the easiest Dallas neighborhoods to visit without a car.
The Arts District & Uptown
The largest contiguous urban arts district in the U.S. — four major institutions within a 10-block walk: the Dallas Museum of Art (free general admission), the Nasher Sculpture Center, the Crow Museum of Asian Art (free), and the AT&T Performing Arts Center. Klyde Warren Park, a deck park built over a freeway, connects the Arts District to Uptown and is genuinely one of the best free things in the city — food trucks, live programming, and locals from three different neighborhoods all sharing the same five acres. Uptown itself adds McKinney Avenue dining and the free, vintage M-Line Trolley through West Village.
Downtown & the West End
Home to Dealey Plaza and the Sixth Floor Museum — one of the most significant historical sites in the country, covering the JFK assassination. Reunion Tower’s GeO-Deck offers skyline views, especially good at sunset. One honest note: the West End’s restaurant row is dominated by tourist-facing chains — Deep Ellum, Bishop Arts, or Knox-Henderson are better choices for an actual meal.
Family-Friendly
The Perot Museum of Nature and Science, the Dallas Zoo, and the Dallas Arboretum (66 acres, including a dedicated Children’s Garden) cover most family trips. Six Flags Over Texas — the original Six Flags park — adds a new record-setting coaster for 2026. The Dallas World Aquarium and the Giant Eyeball downtown are good lower-key add-ons if you’ve only got an afternoon.
Day Trip: Fort Worth Stockyards
About 35 minutes from downtown Dallas, the historic Stockyards district has the daily cattle drive, Western shops, and a genuinely different feel from Dallas proper. Worth pairing with a Dickies Arena concert or Stock Show trip if your timing lines up.
Events & Festivals
Dallas-Fort Worth’s biggest annual draws are worth building a trip around:
- State Fair of Texas — Big Tex’s 24-day run each fall at Fair Park (Sept 25–Oct 18, 2026), one of the largest state fairs in the country
- Lone Star Smokeout — a country music and BBQ festival held right in AT&T Stadium’s parking lots each spring
- Cowboys, Rangers, Mavericks, and Stars home games — see our AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field, and American Airlines Center guides if a game lines up with your trip
Big events mean tight parking — booking a spot on SpotHero ahead of the State Fair, Smokeout, or a big game beats circling the lot.
Getting between neighborhoods
DART rail and the free streetcar connect most of the neighborhoods above — Uptown, the Arts District, Bishop Arts, and Deep Ellum are all realistically reachable without a car. Oak Cliff’s parks and Fort Worth day trips are the exception; you’ll want a car or rideshare for those. If you are driving anywhere downtown, see our downtown Dallas parking guide for meters, garages, and the rules that catch visitors off guard.
Best times to visit
Spring (March–May) and fall (September–November) have the best weather for walking neighborhoods outdoors. If your trip lines up with a Cowboys game, Rangers game, or the State Fair of Texas, plan around our Dallas parking guide for that specific venue — traffic and parking demand spike citywide on those dates.
This page may contain affiliate links. We may earn a commission if you book through them, at no extra cost to you. Hours, admission, and attraction details can change — verify directly with each venue before you go. Full details on our Affiliate Disclosure page.