GuruWalk analyzed 467,000 verified reviews across 3,617 tours in 120 cities to build its 2026 ranking of the world’s best walking destinations. One American city made the global top 100. Not Portland. Not San Francisco. Not Boston. New York City, sitting at No. 23 — and still climbing. For travelers who measure a city by what they find when they slow down and actually use their feet, that ranking is worth paying attention to.
What This Ranking Actually Measures
GuruWalk tracks walking-tour behavior, not errand ease — and the difference matters for how travelers should read this list.
Walk Score rates New York at around 88 out of 100 for everyday pedestrian utility, which tells you how easily you can grab groceries without a car. GuruWalk measures something else entirely: how many people chose to explore a city on guided walks, and how satisfied they were. That’s traveler behavior, not urban planning theory.
That behavioral lens explains a striking trend: New York climbed 20 positions between 2024 and 2025, then another 10 for 2026. Rome holds the No. 1 global spot — a city where more than 2,700 years of history live at street level. By placing New York at No. 23, GuruWalk is putting it squarely in that company.
By the Numbers
- 467,000 verified reviews analyzed across 120 cities
- 3,617 tours evaluated on GuruWalk’s platform
- New York ranked No. 23 globally — the sole U.S. city in the top 100
- NYC climbed 20 positions between 2024 and 2025, then another 10 for 2026
- Rome ranked No. 1 globally for 2026
What This Means for Your Trip
New York’s dense grid and specialized tour options make it genuinely built for travelers who want to explore on foot.
GuruWalk describes New York as “a symphony of cultures, languages, and dreams colliding on the sidewalks,” — which sounds like marketing copy until you find yourself standing at the intersection of three neighborhoods, each carrying its own food tradition, its own street energy, its own reason to stop. The platform’s NYC tours span food, architecture, history, nature, and art, meaning a full day of thematic exploration is entirely possible without retracing a single block — including a trip out to Flushing for some of the city’s most distinctive culinary streets.
It’s worth being precise about what this ranking actually claims. Portland, Maine, earned a “best for exploring on foot” nod from EatingWell’s 2026 Best Wellness Towns list, and San Francisco tops some relocation-focused walkability analyses. Different goals, different metrics. GuruWalk’s specific verdict is narrower: New York leads the U.S. in guided walking-tour usage and satisfaction. That’s the lens — and by that measure, no other American city comes close.
Travelers who arrive curious and stay on foot past the obvious stops tend to find the city at its most rewarding — and according to the data, more people are discovering that every year.

















