A First-Timer's Guide to Los Angeles

Everything you need for a first trip to LA — when to come, where to stay, how to handle the distances and traffic, the essential sights, and how to plan a trip across a sprawling city.

Los Angeles isn't one city so much as a constellation of distinct areas spread across a vast basin — Hollywood, the Westside and beaches, downtown, the Valley — connected by famous freeways and even more famous traffic. The key to enjoying a first visit is accepting that you can't see it all, picking a few areas, and planning around the geography. Three days covers the highlights; four or five lets you breathe.

When to come. LA's weather is mild and sunny nearly year-round, so almost any time works. Spring and fall are ideal — warm, clear, and less crowded. Summer is hot inland (though the coast stays cooler) and busiest. Winters are mild with occasional rain. "June Gloom," a coastal morning overcast in early summer, usually burns off by midday. Whenever you come, expect warm days and cooler evenings, and pack layers.

Where to stay — and why location matters most. In LA, where you stay shapes your whole trip because of the distances. Pick a base near what you most want to do. Beverly Hills (the Beverly Hills Hotel, the Beverly Wilshire) is central and glamorous; Santa Monica and Venice (Shutters, Hotel Erwin) are best for the beach; Hollywood (the Roosevelt) puts you by the movie sights; West Hollywood (Sunset Tower) offers nightlife and a central location; downtown (The Hoxton) is the arts-and-food hub. Avoid spreading yourself across opposite ends of the city.

Getting around. LA is car country, and renting a car gives the most freedom — but factor in traffic (which is genuinely heavy at rush hours) and parking. Rideshares work well for shorter hops and nights out. The Metro rail system, while limited, is growing and useful for some routes (downtown, Hollywood, the beaches). Build driving time into every plan, and try to group activities by area each day.

The essentials. See the Hollywood sights (the Walk of Fame, the Hollywood Sign viewpoints, a studio tour, or Universal Studios). Go up to Griffith Observatory (free) for the views. Spend time at the beaches (Santa Monica Pier and Venice Beach). Visit a museum or two (the free Getty Center is a highlight; LACMA and the Academy Museum cluster on the Miracle Mile). And eat — LA's food, from tacos to fine dining, is among the country's best.

A sample three days. Day one: Hollywood — the Walk of Fame, a studio tour or Universal, and Griffith Observatory at sunset. Day two: the beaches — Santa Monica Pier and Venice Beach, with the Getty Center in the afternoon. Day three: museums and culture — the Miracle Mile (LACMA, Academy Museum) or downtown (The Broad, Grand Central Market), plus Beverly Hills and Rodeo Drive. Add a fourth day for a theme park (Disneyland is a day trip to Anaheim) or the harbor (USS Iowa, Queen Mary).

Attractions in This Guide

Where to Stay

The Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel
📍 Beverly Hills
Featured

The Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel

★★★★★

A grand 1928 landmark at the foot of Rodeo Drive — the "Pretty Woman" hotel — blending classic elegance with Four Seasons service, in the most central, walkable spot in Beverly Hills.

LuxuryFive-StarHistoric
The Hollywood Roosevelt
📍 Hollywood

The Hollywood Roosevelt

★★★★

A historic 1927 hotel on Hollywood Boulevard, host of the very first Academy Awards — Spanish Colonial glamour, the iconic Tropicana pool, and a lively scene right on the Walk of Fame.

HistoricHollywoodLively Scene
Shutters on the Beach
📍 Santa Monica
Featured

Shutters on the Beach

★★★★★

A beloved Cape Cod-style luxury hotel directly on the sand in Santa Monica — breezy beach-house elegance, an oceanfront pool and spa, and the rare LA hotel where you step straight onto the beach.

LuxuryFive-StarBeachfront