
Settli Editorial
Lisbon team
6 min read · Reviewed 19 June 2026
You don't need to "do Lisbon" in one weekend. You need a feel for how the city works: hills and miradouros in the morning, the river in the afternoon, and a square somewhere for dinner where nobody chases you off the table.
Below is a Saturday-to-Sunday shape. Swap days if the weather turns. Each stop has a map link and a few places we'd actually send a friend.
Alfama: wander without a plan
Go early, before the cruise-ship crowds hit the castle. Come in from Largo das Portas do Sol or walk up from Sé and let the lane pick the route.
Miradouro de Santa Luzia is the postcard view (tiles, river, red roofs). If it's packed, keep climbing toward the castle; the upper lanes thin out fast.
Alfama is small. You won't stay lost long. Grab a coffee standing up at a pastelaria on the way down.
LX Factory: stalls under the bridge
Train or tram to Alcântara, then walk to LX Factory: old industrial yard, now bookshops, design shops, and lunch spots under the bridge.
Saturday is the day to go. Vintage stalls, occasional live music, and a mix of locals and people who've been here six months. Tourist-friendly, but it doesn't feel like Baixa.
Two hours if you browse; one if you just want lunch and a walk along the river.
Open in Maps
LX Factory, Alcântara
Worth a stop
CrossFit LX Factory
Drop-in classes in English if you want a workout between the stalls
Gym · in our directory
Belém: pasteis and the promenade
Half a day is enough. Jerónimos from the outside if the queue inside is silly. Walk the Tagus promenade. Eat a pastel de nata at Pastéis de Belém (the takeaway window on the side moves faster than the sit-down room).
MAAT is worth it for the building and the roof walk alone. Stick around for sunset if you can; the bridge lights up and it's one of the better free views in the city.
Guincho: if the sun is out
Clear forecast? Head west to Praia do Guincho. About 25 minutes by car, or train to Cascais and a short taxi.
Atlantic beach, not a calm Mediterranean cove: wind, surfers, lunch spots in the dunes. This is where a lot of Lisboetas go for salt air without driving south.
Even in summer, bring a layer. Book lunch on sunny weekends or eat early.
Campo de Ourique: dinner that isn't Baixa
Finish somewhere with a proper neighbourhood feel. Campo de Ourique has the square, the covered market (Mercado de Campo de Ourique), and side streets with wine bars and small restaurants that aren't priced for tram 28.
Eat, then walk the grid. It's the kind of area people mention when you ask where they'd live if they moved here.
Was this helpful?
Save guides and get updates in the Settli app for Lisbon.