San Juan

How many days in San Juan?

Plan 1-3 days for San Juan. 1 days hits the must-sees; 3 lets you eat well, walk neighbourhoods you've never heard of, and take one day trip.

The minimum

1 day

1 days fits the top sights, one good food walk, and one neighbourhood deep-dive — no day trips.

The sweet spot

3 days

3 days adds one day trip, two more neighbourhoods, and three more sit-down meals you'll actually remember.

Slow travel

5 days

5 days is when you leave the to-do list at home and actually live in the city for a week.

The headline things to do in San Juan

From the San Juan guide — these are the items that anchor a 1-day visit. For the full breakdown, read the San Juan travel guide.

  1. Castillo San Felipe del Morro (El Morro) — Old San Juan, north end

    The 16th-century Spanish fortress that defended San Juan harbour for 400 years — a six-level citadel rising 145 feet from the rocky headland at the entrance to the bay. Built between 1539 and 1790, El Morro repelled Sir Francis Drake (1595), the Dutch (1625), and a US bombardment in 1898. Today the National Park Service manages it; the green lawn outside is a perpetual kite-flying meadow on weekends. Combination ticket $10 includes Castillo San Cristóbal. Allow 2 hours minimum.

  2. Castillo San Cristóbal — Old San Juan, east side

    The largest Spanish fortification ever built in the Americas — 27 acres of walls, tunnels, dungeons, and ramps designed to defend San Juan from a land attack (El Morro defended the sea approach). Completed in 1790, San Cristóbal's tunnels and outer defences are mesmerising and far less crowded than El Morro. Look for the Devil's Sentry Box (Garita del Diablo) — the haunted lookout post at the easternmost tip with multiple disappearance legends.

  3. Calle del Cristo (Cristo Street) & Capilla del Cristo — Old San Juan, central

    The most photographed street in Puerto Rico — a sloping cobblestone lane lined with pastel-painted Spanish colonial buildings ending at the tiny Capilla del Cristo (1753), a chapel built at the spot where, legend says, a young horseman was saved after plunging over the city wall. The chapel's silver altar is one of the finest examples of Spanish colonial silverwork in the Caribbean. Open Tuesdays and Thursdays only.

  4. Paseo de la Princesa & La Muralla — Old San Juan, south wall

    A 19th-century esplanade running along the outside of the city walls from the Paseo de la Princesa fountain to the San Juan Gate (Puerta de San Juan) — the original water entrance to the city, marked by a massive wooden door painted red. The walk passes the Raíces fountain (the "Roots" sculpture honouring Puerto Rico's Indigenous Taíno, African, and Spanish heritage) and is the city's favourite sunset stroll.

  5. El Yunque National Forest — Río Grande / Luquillo, 45 min east

    The only tropical rainforest in the US National Forest System — 28,000 acres of cloud forest 45 minutes east of San Juan. La Mina Falls (currently closed for trail repair as of 2026 — check before going), Yokahú Tower for panoramic views over Vieques on a clear day, La Coca Falls visible from the road, and the Mt Britton trail to the cloud-shrouded summit are the highlights. Reservations required to enter via the main gate (recreation.gov, $2). Bring a poncho — it rains daily.

  6. La Fortaleza (Palacio de Santa Catalina) — Old San Juan, southwest corner

    The oldest executive mansion still in use in the Western Hemisphere — built 1533, official residence of every Puerto Rican governor since the Spanish era. Free guided tours run weekday mornings (English and Spanish, photo ID required, no shorts/flip-flops). The blue-and-white painted facade and the ornate Salón de los Espejos are the visit highlights. Closed during state functions; check schedule.

  7. Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico (MAPR) — Santurce, Avenida de Diego

    The island's flagship art museum in Santurce — a former hospital converted into an 130,000 sq ft gallery holding the most comprehensive collection of Puerto Rican art from the 17th century to today. The José Campeche and Francisco Oller rooms (Puerto Rico's two greatest classical painters) are essential. The contemporary wing has rotating exhibitions of Caribbean and Latin American artists. $6, closed Monday–Tuesday.

  8. Condado & Isla Verde Beaches — Condado / Isla Verde

    The two main San Juan beach districts. Condado is the closer, more urban beach — high-rise hotels (Vanderbilt, La Concha) backing a wide sandy strip with calm protected sections and tougher surf zones. Isla Verde, 15 minutes east near the airport, is longer and softer with the city's best beach restaurants. Both are public access (Puerto Rican law requires it) — walk between hotels to the sand.

Frequently asked

Is 1 day enough in San Juan?

1 day is the minimum for a satisfying visit — you'll see the headline sights but won't have flex time. If you can stretch to 3, you unlock a day trip and the food walks that make the trip memorable.

Is 6 days too long in San Juan?

6 days is for travellers who want to slow down — eat at neighbourhood spots tourists don't reach, take repeat day trips, and live in the city. If you're a tick-the-list traveller, 3 is enough.

What's the ideal trip length for first-time visitors to San Juan?

3 days is the sweet spot for a first visit — long enough to cover the must-sees, eat at three good spots, take one day trip, and not feel like you're racing a checklist. Less than 1 usually feels rushed; more than 6 is into slow-travel territory.

Should I add San Juan to a longer regional trip?

Yes — San Juan works well as a 1-3-day stop on a longer regional itinerary. Pair it with a nearby destination via the trip planner so the transit days don't compress your time on the ground.

Plan your San Juan trip