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48 Hours in New York on a Brazilian Budget: The Locals-Only Playbook

"The tourists paying $90 for a cab from JFK are funding the bad brunch places in Midtown. Don't be them."

Here's what the travel industry doesn't want you to figure out: most of what makes New York exceptional is either free or deeply misunderstood by tourists. The $38 cocktail at the rooftop bar in Midtown? A trap. The Staten Island Ferry with the same skyline view? Free. Takes twenty-two minutes. Runs every half hour. And the tourists on it are the ones who've already been to New York enough times to stop performing the trip.

This is a guide for the Brazilian who lands at JFK with $800 for three nights and needs to make it feel like $2,000. It can be done. Not with hacks. With knowledge.

Getting There from the Airport

From JFK, the AirTrain to the Jamaica E/J/Z subway station costs $9.25 total (AirTrain + subway fare). A cab to Midtown in traffic will run $70–90 plus tip. The subway ride takes about an hour if you're in Lower Manhattan, less if you're in Queens — which is where you should be staying.

Where to Sleep

Long Island City, in Queens, is the move. Ten minutes on the 7 train to Grand Central. Rooms in decent hotels run $120–180 a night versus $300+ in Midtown Manhattan for comparable quality. The neighborhood is clean, increasingly good for food, and gives you a different angle on the skyline — the one locals actually look at. Aloft Long Island City, Courtyard by Marriott LIC, the Z NYC Hotel. All are workable.

Alternative: Astoria, also Queens. More neighborhood feel. Slightly longer commute. Better food.

The Subway: Stop Being Afraid of It

The New York City subway is not what it was in the 1980s. Tap your credit card or phone at the turnstile — no MetroCard needed, OMNY works everywhere and you're capped at $34 for a week's unlimited rides automatically. Learn three lines and you can reach almost everything: the 7 (Queens to Times Square to Hudson Yards), the A/C (Lower Manhattan to Brooklyn), the L (Williamsburg and the East Village). Google Maps subway directions are accurate and real-time. Use them.

New York street scene
Long Island City from the waterfront. The view Midtown tourists pay twice as much to be adjacent to.

Where to Eat Without Getting Robbed

Skip Little Italy. It died twenty years ago. Here's the real list:

Free Things That Are Actually Good

  • Free The High Line: An elevated park built on old railway tracks, from Gansevoort Street to 34th. Free, stunning, takes 90 minutes to walk.
  • Free The Brooklyn Bridge: Walk from Manhattan to Brooklyn. Takes 30 minutes. The view going east is better than the west. Free.
  • Free Staten Island Ferry: Statue of Liberty views, Manhattan skyline coming or going, beer available on board. Free. Always.
  • Free Central Park: The Ramble (a woodland in the middle of the park), the Conservatory Garden, and the view from Belvedere Castle are the parts most tourists never reach.
  • Free Fri MOMA: Fridays 5:30pm to 9pm are free to all. Go then. This is not a rumor.

The Dollar Math

48 Hours in NYC — Real Budget

2 nights in Long Island City $300
Subway (all-in, 2 days) $20
3 meals/day × 2 days (Jackson Heights prices) $100
1 paid museum entry $25
Coffee, incidentals, one splurge dinner in Williamsburg $80
Subtotal ≈ $525
Remaining for Comedy Cellar ($22) or Broadway standing room via TodayTix ($39–65) $275 left

One practical note: New York is a city where things go sideways — delayed flights, a sprained ankle on the High Line, a phone stolen on the subway. International travel insurance costs less than one taxi from JFK and covers all of it. The math is straightforward.

The city doesn't need to be expensive. It just needs to be understood.

New York neighborhood
Queens — where the real New York lives, eats, and takes the train. Ten minutes from Grand Central.
"Passei 48 horas em NYC por menos de R$2.800 tudo incluído. Thread 🧵"
NYC travel community Apr 3, 2026