7 days
in Tel Aviv
A 7-day plan that gets the best out of Tel Aviv without burning out by day four. Skip a day if you need to — the trip is yours.
- Day 1
Arrive and acclimatise
Land in Tel Aviv, drop bags at your Booking.com property and don't try to do too much. Walk the closest neighbourhood, find a café, eat somewhere local and call it early. Day-one jet lag is undefeated.
- Day 2
The classic Tel Aviv day
Lean into what Tel Aviv is famous for — the marquee sights early, neighbourhood lunch, a museum or gallery, dinner reservation.
- Day 3
Go a bit deeper
Pick a corner of Tel Aviv you haven't seen yet. Tel Aviv also leans into beach — use today to mix it up.
- Day 4
Day trip or slow day
Either take a guided day trip or stay put and live like a local — pool, market, late lunch, repeat.
- Day 5
Best meal, best view
Book the best dinner you can afford tonight. Build the day around it — light morning, golden-hour walk, dinner, drinks somewhere with a view.
- Day 6
The one extra thing
Every traveller has the thing they almost skipped and ended up loving. In Tel Aviv it might be a hidden neighbourhood, a workshop or a museum no one mentions.
- Day 7
Slow morning, easy fly-out
Last coffee, last walk, last meal. Leave time to get to the airport without rushing — the lasting memory of Tel Aviv should be the one before the queue, not in it.
7-day Tel Aviv itinerary FAQs
- Is 7 days enough in Tel Aviv?
- A week in Tel Aviv lets you mix the must-dos with a real second-week feel — quieter neighbourhoods, longer lunches, a proper day off.
- What's the best way to spend 7 days in Tel Aviv?
- Follow the day-by-day plan above. The principle is simple: don't pack every day, eat where locals eat, and protect one slow day so the trip doesn't blur.
- Where should I stay for a 7-day trip to Tel Aviv?
- Pick one central base — moving hotels mid-trip costs you half a day. Hotels in Tel Aviv start from $150/night on Booking.com.
- Do I need a car in Tel Aviv?
- For a short Tel Aviv trip, only if you're planning day trips outside town. In the centre you'll walk more than you drive — and parking eats your time.