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Los Angeles

Los Angeles

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Gate8 Global Team

Los Angeles needs 4-5 days and — unlike New York — a rental car; the city is built around freeways, not subway lines, and public transit won't get you between neighborhoods efficiently. Split your time between Hollywood (the sign, the Walk of Fame, studio tours), the beach cities (Santa Monica, Venice), and at least one proper meal-focused day exploring LA's genuinely excellent, hugely diverse food scene. It's also the easiest US base for a Grand Canyon or Las Vegas add-on.

Los Angeles is the one American city that international visitors most often get wrong before they even land — they picture Hollywood glamour and pack for a city, when it's actually more like several dozen small towns stitched together by freeways. Budget accordingly, and definitely budget a rental car.

How many days do you actually need?

Four to five days works well: one for Hollywood and Griffith Observatory, one for the beach cities (Santa Monica and Venice), one for a museum or studio tour, and a spare day for a day trip or simply eating your way around a genuinely great, wildly diverse food scene. LA rewards slower travel — the drive times between neighborhoods eat more of your day than the activities themselves.

Yes, you need a car

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This is the single biggest planning mistake international visitors make with Los Angeles: assuming it works like New York or a European city, walkable and transit-connected. It doesn't. LA has a growing but limited metro system, and most neighborhoods worth visiting are a 20-40 minute drive apart. Rent a car at the airport, budget for LA's notoriously heavy freeway traffic (especially the I-405), and expect any "20-minute drive" on a map to sometimes take twice that at rush hour.

What's actually worth your time

  1. The Hollywood Sign — you can't walk right up to it, but the view from Griffith Observatory (free entry, small parking or shuttle fee) is the classic, genuinely great photo spot.
  2. Hollywood Walk of Fame & Hollywood Boulevard — worth an hour, mostly for the novelty; manage your expectations, it's touristy and a little worn around the edges.
  3. Santa Monica Pier & Venice Beach boardwalk — the classic only-in-LA beach scene: street performers, muscle beach, and a genuinely nice stretch of coastline.
  4. The Getty Center — free admission (paid parking, around $25), striking architecture, and one of the best art museum views in the country.
  5. A studio tour — Warner Bros. or Universal Studios Hollywood, if movies and TV are your thing; book ahead in summer.
The Hollywood Sign, Los Angeles
The Hollywood Sign seen from a Griffith Observatory viewpoint

Where to stay

AreaBest for
Santa Monica / VeniceBeach access, walkable within the neighborhood, easy day-trip base
HollywoodStudio tours, nightlife, central for freeway access
Downtown LAA more urban feel, good for a design/food-forward stay
Beverly Hills / West HollywoodHigher-end shopping and dining, still car-dependent

Day trips worth the drive

Los Angeles is also the easiest jumping-off point in this guide for a Grand Canyon trip — about 4.5-5 hours' drive via Las Vegas, or a short flight to Las Vegas plus a rental car from there. See our national parks guide for the full logistics.

What it costs

ItemApprox. cost
Rental car, per day$45-90 (plus insurance)
Mid-range hotel, per night$180-320
Casual taco or food-truck meal$8-15
Sit-down dinner, per person before tip$30-65
Universal Studios Hollywood, single-day~$115-165

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Skipping the rental car to "save money" — ride-hailing across LA's spread-out geography for a whole trip usually costs more than a few days of car rental plus parking.
  • Underestimating freeway traffic — schedule anything time-sensitive (a flight, a tour) with a large buffer, especially between 3pm and 7pm on weekdays.
  • Trying to walk right up to the Hollywood Sign — the closest public access points are a genuine hike; Griffith Observatory's viewpoint is the easy, recommended option.

Where to stay in Los Angeles — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

Do I really need a car in Los Angeles?
Yes. Unlike New York, LA has no comprehensive transit system connecting its spread-out neighborhoods — a rental car (or budgeting heavily for rideshares) is essentially required to see more than one area of the city.
How many days should I spend in Los Angeles?
Four to five days lets you cover Hollywood, the beach cities, and one museum or studio tour without feeling rushed by the drive times between them.
Is Los Angeles a good base for visiting the Grand Canyon?
Yes — it's about a 4.5-5 hour drive via Las Vegas, or a short flight to Las Vegas followed by a rental car, making it the most practical of the three cities in this guide for a national parks add-on.

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