Argentina · 7-day trip

7 Days in Buenos Aires

The perfect 7-day Buenos Aires itinerary — a complete day-by-day plan covering the best things to do, where to eat, and where to stay.

Buenos Aires is the most European city in the Americas, with French-style architecture, Italian-influenced food, and a café culture that runs on espresso and medialunas until midnight. The city's strength is its neighborhoods (barrios) — each with a distinct personality. Stay in Palermo Soho or Recoleta, eat steak at a real parrilla, drink Malbec, watch a tango show (the touristy ones are fine for a first visit), and learn how to say 'sho' instead of 'yo' to fit in. This 7-day itinerary gives you a balanced mix of Buenos Aires's headline experiences and the slower, more rewarding moments — all built around the city's natural rhythm.

Trip length

7 days

Daily budget

$115

Total budget

$805

Best months

October, November

Your day-by-day Buenos Aires plan

Each day is built around three flexible blocks. Adjust to your taste — generate a fully personalized version below.

Day 1

Iconic sights & old town

Based in Palermo Soho

Hit the headline sights early before the crowds, then ease into Buenos Aires's café culture for the afternoon.

Morning

Recoleta Cemetery

Free, sprawling, surreal — over 6,000 mausoleums housing presidents, generals, and Eva Perón.

Afternoon

Tango show in San Telmo

Café de los Angelitos and El Querandí are the polished tourist productions; for the real thing, find a milonga at La Catedral or Salón Canning.

Evening

MALBA

Museum of Latin American Art with one of the continent's best collections. Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Tarsila do Amaral.

Day 2

Museums, food & local life

Based in Palermo Hollywood

Pair a major museum with a long lunch and an evening wander through one of Buenos Aires's most charming neighborhoods.

Morning

La Boca and Caminito

Brightly painted dockworker houses. Touristy by day, sketchy after dark — visit late morning, then leave.

Afternoon

Steak dinner at a parrilla

Don Julio is world-famous (and worth the wait); La Cabrera and Parrilla Peña are fantastic alternatives. Order bife de chorizo, ojo de bife, and Malbec.

Evening

Mate in a park

Buenos Aires runs on yerba mate. Buy a gourd, learn the ritual, and join the locals in Bosques de Palermo on a Sunday.

Day 3

Hidden gems & neighborhoods

Based in Recoleta

Step away from the obvious tourist trail and explore the corners of Buenos Aires most visitors miss.

Morning

Recoleta Cemetery

Free, sprawling, surreal — over 6,000 mausoleums housing presidents, generals, and Eva Perón.

Afternoon

Tango show in San Telmo

Café de los Angelitos and El Querandí are the polished tourist productions; for the real thing, find a milonga at La Catedral or Salón Canning.

Evening

MALBA

Museum of Latin American Art with one of the continent's best collections. Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Tarsila do Amaral.

Day 4

Day trip & nature

Based in San Telmo

A change of scenery — get out of the city center and breathe.

Morning

La Boca and Caminito

Brightly painted dockworker houses. Touristy by day, sketchy after dark — visit late morning, then leave.

Afternoon

Steak dinner at a parrilla

Don Julio is world-famous (and worth the wait); La Cabrera and Parrilla Peña are fantastic alternatives. Order bife de chorizo, ojo de bife, and Malbec.

Evening

Mate in a park

Buenos Aires runs on yerba mate. Buy a gourd, learn the ritual, and join the locals in Bosques de Palermo on a Sunday.

Day 5

Markets, culture & nightlife

Based in Puerto Madero

Buenos Aires after dark is when the city really comes alive.

Morning

Recoleta Cemetery

Free, sprawling, surreal — over 6,000 mausoleums housing presidents, generals, and Eva Perón.

Afternoon

Tango show in San Telmo

Café de los Angelitos and El Querandí are the polished tourist productions; for the real thing, find a milonga at La Catedral or Salón Canning.

Evening

MALBA

Museum of Latin American Art with one of the continent's best collections. Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Tarsila do Amaral.

Day 6

Slow morning, big sights

Based in Palermo Soho

Sleep in, take it slow, and fill the day with the experiences you came for.

Morning

La Boca and Caminito

Brightly painted dockworker houses. Touristy by day, sketchy after dark — visit late morning, then leave.

Afternoon

Steak dinner at a parrilla

Don Julio is world-famous (and worth the wait); La Cabrera and Parrilla Peña are fantastic alternatives. Order bife de chorizo, ojo de bife, and Malbec.

Evening

Mate in a park

Buenos Aires runs on yerba mate. Buy a gourd, learn the ritual, and join the locals in Bosques de Palermo on a Sunday.

Day 7

A locals' day

Based in Palermo Hollywood

Eat where the locals eat, walk where the locals walk.

Morning

Recoleta Cemetery

Free, sprawling, surreal — over 6,000 mausoleums housing presidents, generals, and Eva Perón.

Afternoon

Tango show in San Telmo

Café de los Angelitos and El Querandí are the polished tourist productions; for the real thing, find a milonga at La Catedral or Salón Canning.

Evening

MALBA

Museum of Latin American Art with one of the continent's best collections. Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Tarsila do Amaral.

Where to stay for a 7-day trip

For a 7-day visit, base yourself in one neighborhood — you'll waste hours in transit if you split your stay. These are the best Buenos Aires bases.

Palermo Soho

Trendy boutiques, third-wave cafés, the city's best restaurants and rooftop bars. Best base for first-timers.

Palermo Hollywood

Sister to Palermo Soho, with more nightlife — cocktail bars, milongas, and late-night parrillas.

Recoleta

Elegant, upscale, with the famous cemetery (Eva Perón is buried here) and the city's best museum, MALBA.

7 days in Buenos Aires: FAQ

Is 7 days enough for Buenos Aires?+

7 days lets you really live in Buenos Aires — see everything most travelers miss, take multiple day trips, and find the version of the city you'll keep coming back to.

What's the best time of year for a 7-day Buenos Aires trip?+

Spring (October-November) and fall (March-May) deliver mild weather and tree-lined Palermo at its leafiest. Summer (December-February) is hot and many porteños leave town.

How much should I budget for 7 days in Buenos Aires?+

For a comfortable mid-range trip, plan around $805 per person for 7 days, covering a 3-star hotel, two restaurant meals a day, attractions, and local transit. Budget travelers can do it for around $315, while a luxury experience runs $2240+.

How many days do you need in Buenos Aires?+

Four days hits the major neighborhoods, food, and tango without rushing. Five lets you add a day trip to Tigre or a winery.

What's the deal with the Argentine peso?+

Argentina has multiple exchange rates and inflation is high. Bring USD cash (clean, large bills) and exchange at 'cuevas' or use Western Union for the favorable 'blue dollar' rate. Cards charge a worse official rate.

Other Buenos Aires trip lengths

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Make this 7-day Buenos Aires plan your own

Tell us your dates, budget, and travel style. We'll generate a fully personalized 7-day itinerary with real restaurants, hotels, and bookable activities — built specifically around how you like to travel.

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