Your weekend plans begin here, with a couple of dozen FREE and cheap things to do last weekend before Christmas besides last minute shopping, including the final weekend to ride vintage MTA subways and see Santa, and the annual Make Music Winter concerts.
Everything on the NYC on the Cheap weekend list is $25 or less, and most things are FREE, so you can be naughty or nice and enjoy NYC more for less money.
So much to see and do and so little time.
Let’s hope the weather cooperates with outdoor events.
And if it doesn’t, here are some rainy and snowy day activities in NYC, besides re-arranging your sock drawer.
SEE ALSO
NYC Holiday Traffic Gridlock Alert days
Weekend Bridge and Street Closures
Best holiday crafts markets
Best Pop-Up Holiday Markets
Holiday Scams to Avoid
Discount tickets for holiday shows $25 or less
including Big Apple Circus
and a musical version of A Christmas Carol
What to do today, Thursday, Dec. 20
Astronomy Live: Winter Solstice and the Year Ahead
Celebrate the winter solstice at the American Museum of Natural History and get ready for the cosmic year ahead. Ted Williams and Irene Pease conduct this tour around the Sun and preview important astronomical and scientific happenings you won’t want to miss.
- 7pm at the Hayden Planetarium Space Theater (doors open at 6pm)
- Tickets are $15, $13.50 for Seniors/Students
What to do Friday, Dec. 21
Make Music Winter
Celebrate the Solstice with parades and concerts all over town. This is the eighth annual Make Music Winter event, celebrating the shortest night of the year. Here are some of the events you can join, or just watch
- A dance parade in Central Park,
- A funky after-work music line snaking its way through East Harlem and across 125th Street
- A New Orleans-style jazz parade through the streets of Corona, Queens
- Participatory sonic healing through vocalization and listening at the Oculus Plaza.
Holiday Sing-Along
Deck the halls with song at this FREE sing-along with one of the top jazz and swing dance bands in the USA, Dandy Wellington and His Band. The yule log will be alight for a cozy evening of cocktails, holiday sweaters and live music in the heart of TriBeCa.
- 7pm to 10pm, at Town Stages, 221 West Broadway.
Things to do in NYC every Friday

Freebie Friday – FREE admission to NYC museums including MOMA. No passes or coupons needed. Just go.
Get FREE admission to more than a dozen NYC museums with the IDNYC card. Enrollment is also FREE.
Freebie Friday: Family Fridays at MoMath – Solve puzzles, family-style, and learn how math affects everything, from music to space flight. 6:30pm, FREE The National Museum of Mathematics is at 11 E. 26th St.
Freebie Friday – Grand Central Neighborhood Tour. FREE every Friday at 12:30, docents from the Grand Central Partnership guide you through the history of the fabled Grand Central Terminal and some equally-fabled nearby landmarks including the Chrysler Building. There are no tickets, no reservations. Just meet at Sculpture court at 120 Park Avenue (southwest corner of East 42nd Street). Tour is 90 minutes.
What to do Friday and Saturday, Dec. 21 and 22
Smorgasburg Night Market
The final weekend of food, drinks, music, art and more. Everything you need for a holiday night out, under one roof.
6pm to midnight both nights at Villain, 307 Kent Ave., Williamsburg. Admission is FREE, purchases are not.
What to do Sunday, Dec. 23
Ride the MTA Nostalgia Train
Get aboard for a trip back in time, on a vintage NYC subway train, for the price of a MetroCard swipe.
The annual and popular MTA Holiday Nostalgia Train rides again for 2018, with vintage R 1/9 cars that were in service 1932 to 1977.
Things to do in NYC every Sunday
FREE Sunday admission at top NYC museums including Morgan Library and Museum.
FREE Flatiron Walking Tour – Join professional guides on a 90-minute journey through this vibrant neighborhood, viewing some of the City’s most notable landmarks, including the New York Life Insurance Building, the MetLife Clock Tower, the Appellate Courthouse and the famous Flatiron Building. Every Sunday at 11am, rain or shine. No advance registration is required. Comfortable walking shoes are recommended.
Where to See Santa in NYC
Santaland at Macy’s
The big guy will see you now. He’s set up shop inside the world’s largest department store on Herald Square. As last year, you’ll need to make an appointment. It’s FREE to see him, FREE to make an apoointment, even if it’s just 30 minutes ahead of your hoped-for visit.
Breakfast with Santa
Give your kids a chance to get up close and personal with ol’ Saint Nick himself at Breakfast with Santa. This is a morning meet-and-greet that includes a continental breakfast and the opportunity to pose for photos and present a holiday wish list to the big guy in red. In addition, Elfprov (from the silly minds behind Improv 4 Kids) perform an interactive musical comedy starring Santa’s favorite helpers. For an extra-special holiday treat, go VIP for reserved stage-side seats, priority access to Santa and tasty treats at your table.
- Discount tickets from $12 for multiple dates in December.
Santa at Brookfield Place
Santa is now in residence at Brookfield Place. Visiting him is FREE, getting photos of your naughty or nice experience is not free. Photos are $29 and up, which is not NYC on the cheap. Daily except Mondays, with the exception of Dec. 24th.
- Hours are Tuesday – Friday: 12 – 8pm; Saturdays: 10am – 8pm; Sundays: 10am – 6pm; and Monday, Dec 24: 10am – 4pm
More places to see Santa in all five boroughs
Must See Exhibits
Holiday Train Show at GCT
The 17th Annual Holiday Train Show is now open at Grand Central Terminal, and it’s FREE again this year.
These are classic, vintage Lionel Trains which run on eight separate loops of track through a 34-foot long miniature New York City scene, at the New York Transit Museum Gallery Annex and Store in GCT.
Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim Crow examines the meaning of citizenship for African Americans following the abolition of slavery, through Reconstruction and the rise of the Jim Crow era. By 1868, all persons born in the United States were citizens and equal before the law, but efforts to create an interracial democracy were contested from the start. A harsh backlash ensued, ushering in the “separate but equal” age of Jim Crow.
Marking the 150th anniversary of the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment – back in the news today with all the headlines about immigration and birthright citizenship – and featuring art, artifacts, photographs and media, the exhibition highlights the central role played by African Americans in advocating for their rights and also examines the depth and breadth of opposition to black advancement. Black Citizenship in the Age of Jim Crow is part of New-York Historical’s new initiative to dedicate rotating gallery space to covering topics of freedom, equality, and civil rights in America.
- New York Historical Society, Central Park West at 76th St., through early 2019.
Also at New York Historical Society is the Harry Potter History of Magic exhibit.
See both exhibits for one price on the same ticket.
Voice of My City: Jerome Robbins and New York
Enjoy the exuberance and brilliance of dancer, choreographer, artist and poet – and native New Yorker – Jerome Robbins in this FREE exhibit celebrating the 100th year of his birth, and his hometown, where the Bronx is up and the Battery’s down, and the people ride in a hole in the ground, as we learned in On the Town.
Jerome Robbins was an inveterate observer, seeker, and creator. In diaries, drawings, watercolors, paintings, story scenarios, poems—and, especially, in dance—he reimagined the world around him. And New York dominated that world, where he was born one-hundred years ago and where he lived his entire adult life.
Ideas of New York have long inspired artists but often the city serves as a backdrop in an artwork rather than the basis for plot, theme, and meaning. Robbins put the city at the center of his artistic imaginings. From Fancy Free—his breakout hit ballet in 1944—to the musical West Side Story on stage (1957) and screen (1961) and the ballets N.Y. Export: Opus Jazz (1958) and Glass Pieces (1983), Robbins explored the joys, struggles, grooves, routines, and aspirations of New York. And in recreating the city around him on stage, Robbins found a place for himself.
Voice of My City traces Robbins’ life and dances alongside the history of New York, inspiring viewers to see the city as both a muse and a home.
- Open through March 30th, 2019. New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center.

- The Museum at FIT (Fashion Institute of Technology), Seventh Ave. at 27th St., through early January 2019.
Things to do in NYC every Saturday
FREE Saturday admission at top NYC museums every Saturday all year includes the Jewish Museum and the Cooper Hewitt Design Museum.
Things to do in NYC every Sunday
FREE Sunday admission at top NYC museums including Morgan Library and Museum.
FREE Flatiron Walking Tour – Join professional guides on a 90-minute journey through this vibrant neighborhood, viewing some of the City’s most notable landmarks, including the New York Life Insurance Building, the MetLife Clock Tower, the Appellate Courthouse and the famous Flatiron Building. Every Sunday at 11am, rain or shine. No advance registration is required. Comfortable walking shoes are recommended.
SEE ALSO
You now get FREE admission to more than 30 NYC museums and cultural institutions with the new CulturePass. It’s a new perk to use with your library card from the NYPL, Brooklyn Museum or Queens Museum systems.
The NYCOTC Free & Cheap Weekend Guide is $25 or less, with an occasional splurge because we deserve to treat ourselves once in a while.
NYC isn’t expensive when you know where to go and what to do, and we do. And we love to share.
- Unless a price is noted, our weekend list is FREE, but we usually remind you anyway.
- Unless otherwise noted, outdoor events are rain or shine, so let’s hope for shine.
- Street fairs are 11am to 6pm, unless otherwise noted.
Getting Around NYC – Know Before You go
FREE apps on subway track work and schedulng delays – Know what trains are bypassing what stations so you aren’t late for one of these free and cheap weekend events.
Manhattan subway stations closed through Autumn 2018 for repairs
NYC official street closures website – Know what streets are closed when for street fairs, parades, political protests and more.
2018 NYC parking calendar – Know when you have to move your car, or not.
Where to eat at LaGuardia Airport – Top NYC restaurants and cafes are replacing fast food joints.
Subscribe to our Email Newsletter
Get NYC on the Cheap in your inbox at 8am each morning.
It’s FREE, too, and you’ll start the day with what you need to know to be a NYC cheapskate.
Follow NYC on the Cheap and like us on Facebook
Follow NYC on the Cheap and like us on Twitter @nyccheap
Follow NYC on the Cheap on Pinterest
#NYCfree @nyccheap
Enjoy your free and cheap NYC weekend.
What do you think about this? We welcome your comments.