- Blog -

Key West 3 Day Itinerary for First Time Visitors

If it is your first time visiting Key West, I have one piece of advice for this Key West 3 day itinerary: do not try to do everything.

Trust me, I tried.

During my trip, I packed my schedule full of restaurants, attractions, tours, beaches, museums, Key lime pie stops, and hidden gems because I was researching content for my blog. I had an amazing time, but I also realized most visitors do not need to see every single thing Key West has to offer to fall in love with the island.

This Key West 3 day itinerary focuses on the experiences I think first-time visitors should prioritize while still leaving enough breathing room to actually enjoy Key West.

You will get the classic photo stops, Old Town, Hemingway House, Mallory Square, Dry Tortugas, great food, a few sunset options, and enough time to wander without turning the whole trip into a checklist.

If you are still figuring out the bigger trip details, my Key West Travel Guide for First Time Visitors is a good place to start before narrowing everything down into this 3 day plan.

Southernmost Point photo stop included in a Key West 3 day itinerary

Day 1: Classic Key West

Day 1 is all about the classic Key West experiences. This is the day for iconic restaurants, famous photo stops, Old Town wandering, Hemingway House, Mallory Square, and one really good dinner.

11:00 AM — Lunch at Blue Heaven

Start your Key West trip with one of the island’s most iconic restaurants.

Blue Heaven is touristy, but I think it is totally worth it.

Between the live music, outdoor courtyard, wandering chickens, and famous brunch dishes, Blue Heaven feels very Key West in a way that makes sense for a first trip. It is a fun way to start the itinerary because you immediately get the casual, quirky, outdoor Key West feeling.

I would make a reservation if you can, especially if you are visiting during a busy weekend or holiday.

12:30 PM — Southernmost Point

After lunch, head to the Southernmost Point for the classic photo.

No first trip to Key West is complete without this stop, but the line can get surprisingly long. If you arrive in Key West earlier in the day, I would actually make this your first stop before lunch.

The photo itself is quick. The wait is what can take time.

Mile Marker 0 on a Key West 3 day itinerary for first-time visitors

1:00 PM — Mile Marker 0

Mile Marker 0 is only a short walk from the Southernmost Point area and makes another iconic Key West photo stop.

This does not need a lot of time. It is more of a quick picture, look around, and keep moving stop.

1:15 PM — Walk Whitehead Street

Whitehead Street was one of my favorite streets in Key West.

It is an easy area to walk, and you will pass several classic Key West sights without needing to drive or constantly move the car.

Along the way, you will see:

  • Hemingway House
  • Key West Lighthouse
  • Beautiful historic homes
  • Tropical landscaping
  • Plenty of chickens roaming around

This is also where Key West starts to feel less like a list of attractions and more like a place you can just wander.

Hemingway House exterior on a Key West 3 day itinerary for first-time visitors

2:00 PM — Hemingway House

Even if you are not a huge history person, Hemingway House is worth visiting.

My dad loved reading every plaque and learning the history, while I spent most of my time admiring the famous six-toed cats.

That is actually what makes this stop work for different types of travelers. If you love history, there is plenty to read and learn. If you love cats, you will also be busy. If you love both, this is probably your moment.

The house, grounds, and cats make it a fun and easy first-time Key West stop. I also have a full Visiting the Hemingway House in Key West guide if you want more details before you go.

3:30 PM — Explore Old Town

Spend the rest of the afternoon wandering around Old Town.

This is where I would keep the itinerary flexible. You can walk Duval Street, pop into shops, wander through art galleries, head toward Lazy Way Lane, or make your way to the Historic Seaport.

Some of my favorite memories in Key West came from simply walking around and seeing what I discovered.

Good areas to explore include:

  • Duval Street
  • Lazy Way Lane
  • Historic Seaport
  • Local shops
  • Art galleries

You do not need a rigid plan for this part of the day. Key West is compact and walkable, especially around Old Town, so this is a good time to follow whatever looks interesting.

A small crossbody or phone strap is helpful for this kind of wandering because you will probably be taking pictures constantly and do not want to dig through a bag every five minutes. I use this phone and wallet crossbody strap for travel days like this.

Sunset sail option for a Key West 3 day itinerary

6:30 PM — Mallory Square Sunset Celebration

If this is your first visit to Key West, I think you should experience Mallory Square at least once.

Yes, it is crowded. Yes, it is touristy. But this is one of the most iconic sunset experiences in Key West for a reason.

Street performers, musicians, artists, food vendors, boats in the harbor, and sunset views all come together in a way that feels very specific to Key West.

I would arrive about an hour before sunset if you want time to walk around, watch the performers, and find a decent spot.

8:30 PM — Dinner at Café Marquesa

End your first day with dinner at Café Marquesa.

This was my favorite meal in Key West and made it to my top 10 favorite restaurants in the world.

If you can only splurge on one dinner during your trip, make it Café Marquesa.

It does not have the oceanfront view that some Key West restaurants have, but the food is what makes it stand out. After a full day of classic Key West sightseeing, this is a great place to slow down for a nicer dinner that actually delivers.

Dry Tortugas National Park water views on a Key West 3 day itinerary

Day 2: Dry Tortugas National Park

Day 2 is for Dry Tortugas National Park.

If I had to choose the single most memorable experience from my entire Key West trip, this would be it.

Dry Tortugas takes planning, and whether you choose the ferry or the seaplane, I would treat it as your main activity for the day. Do not schedule too much afterward. You will probably be more tired than you expect.

8:00 AM — Dry Tortugas Excursion

Dry Tortugas National Park is about 70 miles from Key West, and you can reach it by ferry or seaplane.

Once you get there, you can spend your time:

  • Exploring Fort Jefferson
  • Snorkeling
  • Swimming
  • Learning the history
  • Walking around the island
  • Enjoying some of the most beautiful water in Florida

This was easily one of the best things I did from Key West.

The combination of the remote location, clear water, Fort Jefferson, and the full-day adventure feeling made it stand out from everything else on the trip.

The ferry is the more budget-friendly option and gives you more time at the park than the half-day seaplane. The seaplane is more expensive, but it is faster and gives you incredible views from above.

Either way, Dry Tortugas deserves a full day in your Key West itinerary. If you are still deciding between the two, read my Dry Tortugas Ferry vs Seaplane comparison before booking.

You can also browse Key West tours through Viator or Get Your Guide if you want to compare options before locking in your plans.

For this day, I would bring a dry bag, reef-safe sunscreen, face sunscreen, and a snorkel mask if you prefer having your own gear.

Save this for later on Pinterest so you don’t forget it.

Important Timing Note for Dry Tortugas Day

This schedule works best if you choose the seaplane, especially the half-day seaplane option.

If you choose the ferry, you will not get back to Key West until around 4–5 pm, so the lunch at Kaya Island Eats, Key lime pie at Pepe’s, and afternoon relaxation time may not apply the same way.

With the ferry, I would treat Dry Tortugas as a true full-day trip. Plan on returning, showering, resting for a bit, and then going straight into your evening plans if you still have the energy.

You could still do Latitudes that night, but I would not make the reservation too early. Leave yourself enough time to get back, clean up, and not feel rushed.

Key lime pie stop at Pepe’s during a Key West 3 day itinerary

1:00 PM — Lunch at Kaya Island Eats

After returning to Key West, head to Kaya Island Eats.

The legendary Rasta Pasta alone is worth the visit.

This is a good casual lunch stop after Dry Tortugas because it feels easy and filling without being too formal. After a morning of sun, water, walking, and exploring, you probably will not want anything complicated.

2:00 PM — Key Lime Pie at Pepe’s

After lunch, stop at Pepe’s for Key lime pie.

Pepe’s serves one of my favorite traditional Key lime pies in Key West. It had the tartness I wanted, and this is a great afternoon dessert stop.

They also have an awesome happy hour from 4–6 pm if you want shrimp, oysters, or a drink. Even if you are mainly here for pie, it is helpful to know because this can also work as a casual late-afternoon food stop.

3:00 PM — Relax

Do not schedule much after Dry Tortugas.

Seriously.

Most people underestimate how tired they will be after a full day of walking, snorkeling, sun exposure, and exploring Fort Jefferson.

This is the part of the itinerary where I would intentionally leave space. Go back to your hotel, spend time at the pool, shop a little, nap, or wander at your own pace.

Ferry to Sunset Key on a Key West 3 day itinerary

6:45 PM — Ferry to Latitudes

For dinner, take the ferry from Opal Key Marina to Sunset Key.

The boat ride alone makes the evening feel special.

It is a short ferry ride, but it adds something memorable to the experience because you are leaving Key West and heading over to a small island for dinner.

7:00 PM — Dinner at Latitudes

Latitudes is one of the most talked-about restaurants in Key West because of the setting.

The food was not my favorite meal of the trip, but the views are undeniably beautiful. For many visitors, this ends up being one of the most memorable dining experiences in Key West.

I think Latitudes is best if you care about the full experience: the ferry ride, the island setting, the beachy atmosphere, and the sunset timing.

If your top priority is food, Café Marquesa was much stronger for me. If your top priority is a beautiful setting, Latitudes makes sense.

Duval Street at night on a Key West 3 day itinerary for first-time visitors

Day 3: Hidden Gems, Food, Beach & Sunset

Day 3 gives you a little more flexibility.

You can make it a food-focused day with a Secret Food Tour, or you can use the morning for quieter Key West stops that feel different from Duval Street and the main photo spots.

Then I would spend the afternoon at Fort Zachary Taylor and end the trip with one more sunset and dinner.

8:00 AM — Breakfast at Sunny Eggs

Start your final day with breakfast at Sunny Eggs.

This is a great local breakfast spot in Key West. It is casual, delicious, and a good way to start the day before more walking or beach time.

If you are visiting on a weekend or holiday, earlier is better. We went early and did not have a wait, but breakfast spots in Key West can get busy quickly.

9:00 AM — Choose Your Adventure

For the morning, I would choose based on your travel style.

You can either take a food tour or explore a few hidden gems on your own.

Key West Food Tour for a Key West 3 day itinerary

Option 1: Key West Secret Food Tour

If you are a foodie, I highly recommend the Key West Secret Food Tour.

The tour runs from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM and includes multiple food stops throughout Old Town. It was at the top of my favorite experiences in Key West and introduced me to several places I probably would not have discovered on my own.

I was completely full by the end, so come hungry.

This is a great option if you like learning about a place through food, want a guided experience, or do not want to research every lunch stop yourself.

You can book through Secret Food Tours, and I also have a full Best Food Tour in Key West? My Secret Food Tours Review if you want to know what the experience was actually like.

Key West Cemetery Key West 3 day itinerary

Option 2: Explore Hidden Gems

If you would rather explore independently, spend the morning visiting a few quieter Key West stops.

Good options include:

  • Key West Cemetery
  • First Legal Rum Distillery
  • West Martello Tower & Garden Club

These attractions show a completely different side of Key West than Duval Street.

The Key West Cemetery is interesting, quirky, and full of local history. First Legal Rum Distillery is a quick and fun stop if you want something indoors. West Martello Tower and the Key West Garden Club are good if you want tropical plants, ocean views, and a quieter break from the busiest parts of Old Town.

12:30 PM — Lunch at Garbo’s Grill

For lunch, head to Garbo’s Grill.

They have my favorite easy dish in Key West, Korean BBQ tacos.

If you are doing the Secret Food Tour, skip this stop because you will already be full. This is better for the independent hidden gems version of the day.

2:00 PM — Fort Zachary Taylor State Park

If you only visit one beach in Key West, make it Fort Zachary Taylor.

It is one of the best places on the island for swimming, snorkeling, relaxing, and sunset views.

The beach is rockier than some people expect, so water shoes can be helpful. But the water, shade, snorkeling opportunities, and overall setting make it one of the strongest beach options in Key West.

This is also a good place to spend a few hours in the afternoon because it gives you a break from walking around town.

A quick-dry towel is also helpful here because you may go back and forth between swimming, sitting, walking, and staying for sunset.

Sunset sail option for a Key West 3 day itinerary

5:30 PM — Choose a Sunset Option

For your final sunset in Key West, choose the option that fits your mood.

Sunset Sail

A sunset sail was my favorite overall sunset experience in Key West.

This is the option I would choose if you want the evening to feel more special and do not mind booking ahead.

Fort Zachary Taylor

Fort Zachary Taylor is a quieter alternative to Mallory Square.

If you already spent the afternoon at the beach and do not want to move around much, staying for sunset makes sense.

Sunset Pier

Sunset Pier is a good option if you want waterfront atmosphere, live music, and an easy location near the action.

It is not as quiet as Fort Zachary Taylor, but it has a fun Key West energy and works well if you want to keep the evening casual.

7:30 PM — Dinner at Hot Tin Roof

For your final dinner, book Hot Tin Roof.

Try to reserve outdoor seating if possible. Watching the harbor while enjoying dinner made this one of my favorite evenings of the trip.

This is a good final-night restaurant because you still get the waterfront atmosphere, but it feels more relaxed than some of the higher-effort dining experiences.

9:00 PM — Duval Street at Night

Finish your trip the way many visitors do: walk Duval Street after dark.

The live music, people-watching, performers, and nightlife create a completely different atmosphere from what you experience during the day.

Even if you are not a big nightlife person, it is still worth walking through at least once so you can see that side of Key West.

You do not have to stay out late or make a whole night of it. A walk down Duval after dinner is enough to get the experience.

Key West 3 day itinerary with Mallory Square sunset views and boats in the harbor

Final Thoughts: Is 3 Days Enough in Key West?

Yes, three days is enough time to see the highlights of Key West, especially if it is your first visit.

With three days, you can experience Old Town, Duval Street, the Southernmost Point, Hemingway House, Mallory Square, Dry Tortugas, Fort Zachary Taylor, a sunset sail or waterfront sunset, several great restaurants, Key lime pie, and a few hidden gems.

You will not see everything, but that is fine.

Key West is better when you leave a little room in the schedule. If you try to pack in every museum, beach, restaurant, tour, and photo stop, you may technically see more, but you will enjoy it less.

Plan the big things: Dry Tortugas, a few dinner reservations, your sunset sail if you want one, and any must-do tours.

Then leave space for walking, eating, shopping, resting, and changing your mind.

Planning Resources for Your Key West Trip

If you end up booking anything for your trip, using my affiliate links helps support my blog at no extra cost to you. I spend a lot of time researching and writing these guides, so I really appreciate the support.

Travel Planning

If you are flying into Key West, you can compare flights through Skyscanner.

If you are driving through the Florida Keys or adding other stops before or after Key West, you can compare rental cars through Discover Cars.

Hotels + Where to Stay

For hotels, you can compare stays through Booking.com or Hotels.com.

If you are still deciding which part of town makes the most sense, read What Areas to Stay in Key West.

Tours + Activities

For tours, activities, sunset cruises, and day trips, you can browse options through Viator or Get Your Guide.

For more food planning, read Best Restaurants in Key West.

What to Pack

For Key West, I would especially think about sun, heat, walking, water, and beach time.

A few things I would pack again:

For a more detailed packing breakdown, read What to Pack for Key West in May (What I Actually Used and What I Didn't).

Related Blog Posts

For more Key West planning, these posts will help:

If you’re doing a Netherlands tulip trip and renting a car, staying directly in Amsterdam might actually be working against you…

We stayed at Hotel Heemskerk it’s on a historic estate outside the city, quieter than I expected, and about 20-30 minutes from the tulip fields. Free parking included, which after seeing Amsterdam parking prices felt genuinely exciting in a way I’m not embarrassed about. @hotelheemskerk worked really well as a base for exploring northern Holland without fighting city traffic every single morning.

Full review with room details, parking tips, location breakdown, and what’s nearby | link in bio. 🌷
I planned to spend maybe an hour at a cheese farm outside Amsterdam and left several hours later with an engraved clog birdhouse, way too much cheese, and a strong opinion on 1.5-year aged Gouda.

Clara Maria Cheese Farm near Amstelveen does a free cheese and clog demonstration that was genuinely one of my favorite things from the entire Netherlands trip. The farm is over 160 years old, the people running it are wonderful, and the tour guide Delo was hilarious in a way I was not prepared for.

A few things that surprised me: Dutch cheese gets its golden color naturally from beta carotene in cow’s milk. The entire cheese-making process is still done largely by hand pressed, flipped, salt-soaked, and hand-waxed before aging even starts. And Americans (myself included) have been pronouncing Gouda wrong our whole lives. It’s closer to “HOW-da.” I understand this now and will still panic and say it wrong anyway.

We tried about ten cheeses ranging from fresh to 20 years aged. The 20-year was aggressively pungent, think concentrated smelly feet... but the 1.5-year was perfect. We also met the cows. Honestly the whole thing was a lot more personal than I expected from a tourist stop.

Full review with what to know before you go, link in bio. 🧀
The tulip fields in the Netherlands look exactly like the photos, except the photos don’t capture how massive the color blocks actually are stretching across the countryside. Or the windmills. Or the sheep randomly standing in the middle of everything like they don’t know they’re in the most photogenic country on earth.

The honest caveat: tulip season moves fast, the fields rotate every year, and peak bloom is not a guarantee, it depends on the weather, the harvest schedule, and a little bit of luck. But that’s also part of what makes it feel less like a tourist attraction and more like something you actually found.

Full driving route with towns, parking tips, and what to expect | linked in bio. 🌷

#netherlands #travelling #tulipfields #exploreeurope
Amsterdam has a way of making you feel like you need to see everything, and then rewarding you most when you slow down anyway. The museums and canal cruises are worth it, but so is just wandering neighborhoods, eating whatever looks good, and sitting along the canals with a grilled cheese and nowhere to be.

First-time visitor guide is on the blog. Link in bio. 🌷

#travelling #travel #amsterdam #visitamsterdam #traveleurope

Follow Me @travelwithwendyplummer for Beautiful Beach Destinations, City Guides, Foodie Spots, and Luxury Hotel Recommendations.

My Exact Packing List

I use this packing list for every trip — grab it and make packing way easier.

Embark. Explore. Eat.

Follow @travelwithwendyplummer for Beautiful Beach Destinations, City Guides, Foodie Spots, and Luxury Hotel Recommendations.

© Travel with Wendy
Site Credit // SouthMade

The Exact Packing List I Use Every Trip

Insider travel system from someone who travels constantly.