Bristol
City Guide

Bristol

Vereinigtes Königreich · Best time to visit: May-Sep.

Guide coming in Deutsch, English shown for now.
Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget £75.00/day
Best season May-Sep
Language English
Currency GBP
Time zone Europe/London
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Brunel to Banksy — One Breathless Day Through Bristol's Greatest Hits

09:00

Clifton Suspension Bridge

Landmark
Duration: 1h30m Estimated cost: €0

Start on the Clifton side, where Bristol's most photographed silhouette appears between the trees — Brunel's 1864 masterpiece suspended 75 meters above the Avon Gorge. Walk the full 214 meters across to Leigh Woods; at this hour the low morning sun hits the iron chains face-on and the footway is almost empty. This isn't just the city's emblem — it's Victorian engineering imagination carved into stone and steel.

Tip: Walk all the way across to the Leigh Woods side and take the footpath right down 2 minutes to the Observatory viewpoint — this is the only angle where the full gorge-and-bridge composition fits in one frame. Coming back, pause mid-span on the south-side walkway: the cables align perfectly with the Bristol skyline behind.

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10:45

Banksy's Well Hung Lover

Landmark
Duration: 1h15m Estimated cost: €0

Walk southeast down Whiteladies Road for 30 minutes — a slow downhill past Victorian townhouses, secondhand bookshops, and the glass-fronted Clifton Down arcades, tracing the route locals take to reach town. The mural emerges suddenly on the flank of a sexual health clinic at the corner of Park Street and Frogmore Street: a naked man dangling from a bedroom window while a suited husband peers out. This is Banksy's most famous in-situ piece still standing on home soil, and the one the City Council officially voted to preserve.

Tip: Stand on the opposite corner by The Hatchet Inn — it's the only spot that captures the whole mural without passing cars or streetlamps in frame. The piece now sits behind acrylic glass after paintball attacks, so avoid shooting with flash; late-morning light on the Bath-stone wall is already warm enough to make the figures glow.

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12:30

Pieminister at St Nicholas Market

Food
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €12

Continue downhill along Park Street for 10 minutes — you'll pass the Wills Memorial Building tower and the bronze Cary Grant statue on Millennium Square (he grew up in Bristol as Archie Leach). Duck into St Nicholas Market, the 1743 Georgian covered market, and head straight to the Glass Arcade where Pieminister's stall sits under a Victorian glass roof. A proper pie-and-mash here, eaten elbow-to-elbow with market traders, is the fastest honest lunch in this city.

Tip: Skip the obvious 'Moo' steak pie — order the Heidi Pie (goat cheese, spinach, sweet potato, £8) with mash, minted peas, and red wine gravy. Eat at the arcade counters under the glass roof, not on the Corn Street side — the arcade itself is the photograph. Weekday queue is 5 minutes; Saturday it's 20.

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14:00

SS Great Britain and Harbourside

Landmark
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €0

Walk west along the harbourside for 20 minutes — cross Pero's Bridge (note the two horned counterweights that lift the span), pass the Arnolfini contemporary gallery, and follow Wapping Wharf where 19th-century warehouses have become craft-beer taprooms and artisan food stalls. The SS Great Britain rises up in her original 1843 dry dock: the world's first iron-hulled, screw-propeller ocean liner, and Brunel's second masterpiece of the day. Circle the entire dockyard quay on foot — the afternoon sun on the gilded bow is precisely why this stop is 2 PM and not morning.

Tip: You don't need a paid ticket for the best shot — the free public quay on the north side of the dry dock gives you the full hull and gilded trailboard from bow angle. Then walk east along the entire harbourside loop via Prince Street Bridge back to the centre; it's the best urban waterfront in England and the 1.5 km stretch passes the M Shed, street-food stalls, and floating bars you'll regret not seeing.

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16:30

Stokes Croft Street Art Walk

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h30m Estimated cost: €0

Walk north up through the city centre for 25 minutes — cross Baldwin Street, pass the Hippodrome and The Bearpit roundabout, and watch the streetscape shift from Georgian polish to post-punk creative chaos. Arrive at Mild Mild West — Banksy's teddy bear lobbing a Molotov at three riot police, painted on Hamilton House in 1999 and now Bristol's unofficial flag. From here wander Hillgrove Street, Moon Street, and Jamaica Street: the densest concentration of street art in the UK outside East London, changing literally by the week.

Tip: Don't just photograph Mild Mild West and leave — the guided walking tours stop here, but 80% of the best work is in the two-block grid behind it. Look up for Nick Walker's 'The Moona Lisa' on Jamaica Street and the full-wall Inkie piece on Hillgrove Street. Late-afternoon side light (around 5 PM in summer) gives the deepest colour saturation on the paint.

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19:00

Poco Tapas Bar

Food
Duration: 2h Estimated cost: €40

Stay exactly where you are — Poco occupies the ground floor of the same Hamilton House building that carries the Mild Mild West mural, a 30-second walk from where you just stood. Inside: a sustainable, zero-waste kitchen with candlelit wooden tables, an open flame grill, and a Spanish-North African menu that locals book out weeks ahead. This is Bristol's signature sit-down dinner — end the day with a glass of Rioja while Stokes Croft comes alive after dark outside the window.

Tip: Reserve at least 3 days ahead online, or walk in at 18:30 sharp before the 19:00 wave fills every table. Must-order: the Moroccan-spiced lamb meatballs in rose harissa (£9.50) and the salt cod and smoked paprika croquetas (£7.50). Pitfall warning — avoid the glass-fronted restaurants directly on the Harbourside tourist strip around Watershed and Pero's Bridge; they charge double for half the flavor, and Bristol's actual food scene lives up here in Stokes Croft, on Wapping Wharf's east end, and on Cotham Hill.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Bristol?

Most travelers enjoy Bristol in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Bristol?

The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Bristol?

A practical starting point is about €75 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Bristol?

A good first shortlist for Bristol includes Clifton Suspension Bridge, Banksy's Well Hung Lover, SS Great Britain and Harbourside.