The Best Things to See and Do in Philadelphia

Founded by William Penn in 1682, Philadelphia has a long and fascinating history. Home to some of America‘s top museums, it also has parks and lively markets that are regularly visited by locals. Here’s Culture Trip’s guide to what to see in the City of Brotherly Love.
Treat your senses at Reading Terminal Market
Bakery, Deli, Farmers' Market, Market, American, Street Food, Healthy

Independence Hall
Building

Visit Philadelphia Zoo
Zoo
Tour the Eastern State Penitentiary
Museum
Check out Franklin Square
Park
Visit The Franklin Institute
Memorial, Museum
See classic artwork at the Philadelphia Museum of Art
Building, Museum, Art Gallery

Visit Mütter Museum
Museum
A medical museum full of various specimens and oddities, the Mütter Museum is a biologist’s dream. The building holds a number of wax models, as well as antique medical equipment and wet specimens, all set up to be seen through glass cabinets. The goal of the museum is to spread awareness about the beauty, mystery and utter weirdness of the human body, so that visitors can truly appreciate the history of medicine and the treatment of disease.
Take the kids to Please Touch Museum
Museum
Explore art and flora at the Barnes Foundation
Art Gallery
An educational institution for art and horticulture, The Barnes Foundation is separated into two locations, one in central Philadelphia and another (which includes the arboretum) in the suburbs. The museum showcases many well-known post-impressionist and modern paintings, from painters such as Renoir, Cezanne, Picasso, Prendergast and Demuth. At the arboretum, visitors can walk around and admire over 2,000 different species of trees and plants, many of which are rare.
Visit the Rodin Museum
Art Gallery, Museum
Visit Edgar Allen Poe’s former home
Museum
Literature fans visiting Philadelphia will want to make the pilgrimage to 532 North 7th Street, to see the house in which American writer Edgar Allen Poe lived with his wife and mother-in-law between 1843 and 1844. Poe wrote two of his most famous short stories while living here – The Tell-Tale Heart and The Gold Bug – and is thought to have derived inspiration for another (The Black Cat) from its slightly spooky basement, which visitors can see for themselves on the guided tours.
Admire City Hall
Historical Landmark, Architectural Landmark
Philadelphia’s stately City Hall breaks all kinds of records. Built between 1871 and 1901, it was the tallest habitable building in the world from 1894 to 1908, and it remains the largest municipal building in the United States, with around 15 acres (6ha) of floor space spread over 700 rooms. It’s also the tallest free-standing masonry building on the planet, at 548ft (167m) high (including the statue of William Penn that tops the tower). Guided tours are available and there’s an observation platform at Penn’s feet.
Take a walk in Fairmount Park
Botanical Garden

Spanning both sides of the Schuylkill River, Fairmount Park is a 2,000-acre (809-ha) expanse of unspoilt greenery, woodlands and shaded picnic areas. It’s the perfect spot in which to escape the city for a morning or afternoon, offering visitors miles of trails for hiking, biking and horseback riding. Fairmount is also home to two outdoor concert venues, the Shofuso Japanese House and Garden, ball parks, tennis courts, swimming pools and colonial-era mansions.
Explore the Society Hill Historic District
Historical Landmark, Architectural Landmark
Walk through the Magic Gardens
Art Gallery, Museum
Visit an abandoned cemetery
Cemetery
Located in the city’s southwestern corner, Mount Moriah Cemetery is the final resting place of some of Philly’s most prominent Victorian families. Opened in 1855, it featured an ornate Romanesque entrance and enormous stone mausoleums resembling those found in Paris’s city of the dead, Pere Lachaise. It fell into neglect in the late 1990s and 2000s, but since 2011 a non-profit group has dedicated itself to clearing the site and displaying Moriah’s original features in all their gracefully ageing glory.
Learn about pizza
Museum
The world’s first pizza museum is located in the trendy Philadelphia neighborhood of Fishtown. Opened in 2012 by three friends and pizza enthusiasts, no wall in the Pizza Brain Museum of Pizza Culture is free of pizza-themed items, from old posters and boxes to toys and books, making it the biggest such collection on the planet. The attached restaurant, Pizza Brain, does a great selection of home-made pizzas to eat in or take out.
Say “hi” to Rocky
Building, Museum, Art Gallery

Visit America’s oldest botanical garden
Botanical Garden
Located on the western shore of the Schuylkill River, Bartram’s Garden is the oldest botanical garden in the United States. It was founded in 1728 by avid plant scholar John Bartram, who established a booming trans-Atlantic horticulture trade with a London-based merchant. Today, visitors to this 45-acre (18-ha) site can see Bartram’s house, a greenhouse dating from 1760 (that was crucial to the business) and wander gardens that have been meticulously preserved in their original layout.
Drink at a historic ale house
Bar, Pub, American, Irish, Pub Grub, Wine, Beer, Cocktails
Opened in 1860, the year Lincoln became president, McGillin’s Olde Ale House is Philly’s oldest continually operating bar, and has been owned by just two families since that historic year – the McGillins and present-day proprietors the Mullinses, who took over in 1993. It’s a hub for beer-lovers, offering over 30 on-tap varieties to choose from, including O’Hara’s Irish stout and three house specialities – McGillin’s Real Ale, McGillin’s Genuine Lager and McGillin’s 1860 IPA.
Visit a haunted fort
Historical Landmark
Built in 1771, Fort Mifflin was the setting of a crucial battle in the fall of 1777, when its American occupants fought off the British navy for six weeks before fleeing in defeat. The fort was extensively restored in the late 18th century, serving as a prison during the Civil War and as part of the local home front defenses throughout the First and Second World Wars. You can tour the well-preserved buildings, which are said to be some of the country’s most haunted.
Walk across a historical bridge
Bridge
The Frankford Avenue Bridge takes a street of the same name across Pennypack Creek in the Holmesburg area of the city. It’s the oldest surviving roadway bridge in the United States, and probably also the country’s oldest stone bridge, so be sure to take a stroll across it before you leave Philly. Its construction was ordered by William Penn to connect his mansion with the city, and to link Philadelphia with northern hubs such as Trenton and New York.
Photograph a famous bell
Historical Landmark, Architectural Landmark

Commissioned in 1751, the Liberty Bell once rang in the great tower of the building now known as Independence Hall (formerly State House). The crack that runs down one side is thought to have appeared after around 90 years of daily use, and was actually widened to preserve the bell’s tone. Viewable and snappable in the Liberty Bell Center opposite its former home, it bears an inscription from the Bible reading, “Proclaim liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof.”
Tuck into the city’s most famous food offering
Historical Landmark, Architectural Landmark
Philadelphia’s contribution to world cuisine is not, as its name might suggest, a well-known dessert. The Philly cheesesteak is actually a sandwich, consisting of a long, flat roll known as a hoagie filled with sliced steak, cheese (of one kind or another) and an optional topping of fried onions. There are, as you might expect, dozens of establishments claiming to do the best cheesesteak, but Geno’s Steaks and Pat’s King of Steaks, located opposite each other, are indisputable market leaders.
Additional reporting by Mark Nayler