Things to do in Oxford
Oxford is one of Europe's best places for city, culture trips. Old bones, new openings, easy to get around. Here's how we'd actually spend the time — what to book, what to skip, and the small choices that make the difference.
- 01
Walk the marquee neighbourhood first, then a quieter one the next day
- 02
Eat in the neighbourhood you're staying in, not the centre, for one meal
- 03
Book the museum/gallery online — skip the queue
- 04
Find the rooftop or viewpoint locals like, not just the tourist one
- 05
Plan one nice dinner — book ahead, dress for it, make it the highlight
- 06
Do the main historic site early, before the heat and the crowds
- 07
Book one guided tour with a local — it lifts the whole trip
- 08
Eat one meal that's specific to here, even if you don't normally
- 09
Visit one museum locals recommend, not just the headline one
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Oxford FAQs
- What are the must-do things in Oxford?
- In Oxford, lean into what the place is famous for — city experiences first, then a slower day to find the neighbourhoods most visitors miss. Build the trip around one big day and one easy day.
- How many days do you need in Oxford?
- Three days is enough to see the headlines, five days is the sweet spot, and seven lets you add a day trip or a slow morning without rushing. See our 3-, 5- and 7-day itineraries for Oxford.
- Is Oxford expensive?
- Hotels in Oxford start from around $175/night on Booking.com. Eating and getting around is reasonable if you avoid the most touristy streets — locals' favourites are usually a third the price and twice the food.
- What's the best area to stay in Oxford?
- Stay close to where you'll actually spend time — a central neighbourhood saves an hour a day. We pick the area based on what kind of city trip you're after; the full Oxford guide breaks it down.
- Is Oxford worth visiting?
- Yes — Oxford is one of Europe's best places for city, culture trips. Old bones, new openings, easy to get around.