Itineraries
3 Days in Lisbon 2026: The Perfect Itinerary
A day-by-day Lisbon itinerary — Alfama, Belém and the viewpoints, the tascas, the nightlife, plus a Sintra day trip. Built for a 2026 city break.
Jordan
Founder & editor
TL;DR
- Day 1 — Baixa and Chiado, up into Alfama, the castle, the miradouro viewpoints, a Bairro Alto night.
- Day 2 — Belém in the morning (monastery, pastéis), the afternoon in Príncipe Real, a tasca dinner.
- Day 3 — Day trip to Sintra — leave early.
- Lisbon is built on seven hills — wear proper shoes, plan downhill routes, use the trams and funiculars.
- Pair with the where-to-stay guide; your base shapes how much you climb.
Three days is right for Lisbon: two for the city, one for Sintra (which you should not skip). The city itself is compact but vertical — it's built across seven hills, and the single biggest mistake visitors make is underestimating the climbs and over-packing the days.
This itinerary plans for the hills — downhill walking routes, trams where they help — and assumes a base. The where-to-stay guide covers neighbourhoods; an Alfama base is atmospheric but a workout.
Day 1 — Baixa, Chiado, Alfama & the viewpoints
Morning. Start flat in Baixa — the grid downtown, Praça do Comércio on the river, the Rua Augusta arch. Walk up into Chiado for coffee and the bookshops.
Afternoon. Tram 28 or 12 up to Alfama — the medieval quarter. The Castelo de São Jorge, the cathedral, and the miradouros (Portas do Sol, Santa Luzia) for the rooftop views. Walk down through Alfama's lanes; don't climb them.
Evening. Bairro Alto — the bar maze. Dinner first (see the food guide), then drinks in the street. The nightlife guide has the full picture.
Day 2 — Belém & Príncipe Real
Morning. Tram 15 west to Belém. The Jerónimos Monastery (book ahead), the Belém Tower, the Padrão dos Descobrimentos — and Pastéis de Belém for the original custard tart, eaten warm. The MAAT museum on the riverfront if you want more.
Afternoon. Back to the centre and up into Príncipe Real — the concept stores, the garden, the smartest neighbourhood eating. A rooftop drink at golden hour — Park, the car-park rooftop bar, is the move.
Evening. A proper tasca dinner — the plain, family-run taverns are the real Lisbon meal. The food guide names them.
Day 3 — Sintra
The day trip you don't skip. Sintra is 40 minutes by train from Rossio station (see the getting-around guide). A hill town of palaces and gardens — Pena Palace, the Moorish Castle, Quinta da Regaleira.
Leave Lisbon by 8:30 AM. Sintra by mid-afternoon is a coach-park; early, it's magic. Use the 434 bus loop to connect the sites. Pick two palaces, not all of them — Pena plus Regaleira is the strongest pair.
Evening. Back in Lisbon, a final dinner — or, if you've energy, the Cais do Sodré / Pink Street strip for a last night out.
✓The hills are not a metaphor
Lisbon's map lies about distance — a "ten-minute walk" can be a steep cobbled climb. Plan to go up by tram, funicular, or metro and down on foot. Pack shoes with grip; the calçada pavements are slippery. The getting-around guide covers which tram does what.
If you have a 4th day
A second day trip — Cascais (40 minutes by train, a seaside town with beaches) — or a slower Lisbon day: the LX Factory, the Tuesday/Saturday Feira da Ladra flea market in Alfama, a second tasca lunch.
How to make this itinerary yours
- Here for the food? The food guide — seafood, tascas, pastéis — is the real itinerary.
- Beach person? Swap Sintra's afternoon for Cascais, or do both on a 4-day trip.
- Here to go out? Day 1 ends in Bairro Alto; the nightlife guide runs it to sunrise.
Three days, the hills respected, Sintra not skipped. That's Lisbon done right.
Jordan picks every venue on this site. No paid placements, no scraped lists. How I work →
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