Travel

6 European cities for a weeklong stay

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Imagine waking up in the same apartment-style hotel in Paris three mornings in a row knowing exactly which boulangerie to hit for perfectly flaky croissants, which picturesque canal to walk past on the way to the Louvre, and which cafe-and cozy corner table-is your favorite. Or imagine spending an evening in Dublin without a clock in sight, deep in conversation with a stranger at a pub that's become your go-to spot. That feeling of belonging is the difference between passing through a city and spending quality time in one.

With return-to-office schedules making every day of paid time off precious, a new generation of weeklong, single-city itineraries is giving travelers the chance to go deeper, rather than faster, unpacking once in a centrally located hotel and spending a full eight or nine days making one of Europe's most beloved cities feel like home.

EF Go Ahead Tours' experts picked six destinations that deserve an immersive weeklong stay and explained why each tour rewards travelers who stay long enough to experience the destinations they visit.

 Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours
Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours



1. Paris, France: Where more time means more discovery

Why Paris stands out

Paris is one of those cities that seems fully knowable from the outside. You've seen the Eiffel Tower, and you know that the croissants are good and the art is next-level. But Paris is also a city of endless surprises for those who choose to settle in and explore it on a deeper level. Exploring the city's neighborhoods alone could take a whole week: The grand boulevards of the 8th arrondissement feel nothing like the galleries of the Marais, which bears no resemblance to the village-quiet streets of Montmartre. Add in museums, markets, and day trips into the surrounding countryside, and one week starts to feel not indulgent but necessary.

In France, moments of authenticity, culture, and connection require sufficient time. Meals are long. Conversations are slow. Relationships with local shopkeepers are built over repeated visits. Time is a luxury afforded to travelers who decide to stay in place longer rather than rushing off to another city every few days.

A week in Paris

A fantastic week in Paris might begin inside the Louvre, with ample time to take in its priceless works (bonjour, Madame Mona Lisa) and grand architecture. It continues with regional exploration beyond the city: Giverny, where Monet cultivated the water lily garden that became his life's obsession, and Normandy, where the D-Day beaches offer a profound counterpoint to the opulence of the capital. It ends at a farewell dinner in a historic Parisian cafe, at a table that feels briefly, beautifully, your own. Travelers who want to extend the experience can head into the Bordeaux wine country for a few more days.

 Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours
Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours



2. London, England: Layers that only reveal themselves over time

Why London stands out

Many English-speaking travelers underestimate London precisely because it feels familiar before they've arrived. But there's so much more to the capital city than its obvious and iconic attractions. London is one of the most historically dense, culturally layered, and neighborhood-distinct cities on Earth. The East End is distinctly different from Notting Hill. Southwark stands apart from Chelsea. Greenwich is totally different from Shoreditch. A week gives you enough time to settle into a rhythm, to find your favorite market, establish go-to shortcuts, and discover that Borough Market at 8 a.m. on a weekday is an entirely different experience from Borough Market on a Saturday afternoon.

The city's museums alone, including the British Museum, the Victoria and Albert (or the V&A in local shorthand), the National Gallery, and the Tate Modern, could each occupy a full morning. That's before adding palaces, parks, theater, and off-the-beaten-path neighborhoods into the mix.

A week in London

A very special week in London might start at the Tower of London, where a Yeoman Warder-a retired military veteran with at least 22 years of service-turns a guided tour of one of England's most visited landmarks into a private history lesson. It includes afternoon tea-complete with fluffy finger sandwiches, freshly baked scones, and, of course, a steaming cuppa-and a walk through Borough Market that doubles as lunch. Day trips to Stonehenge and Salisbury extend the experience into the English countryside. For travelers who want to explore farther north, an extension to Edinburgh might just be in order.

 Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours
Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours

3. Amsterdam, Netherlands: A compact city that reveals more the longer you stay

Why Amsterdam stands out

Amsterdam is one of the most walkable, bikeable, and instantly navigable cities in the world, and it consistently surprises visitors with all it has to offer beyond its regularly touted highlights. Each of the city's canals has its own character. The museums cluster in the south, but the best galleries are scattered throughout. The neighborhoods beyond the tourist center-De Pijp, the Jordaan, Amsterdam Noord-are rich with the character and traditions of the locals who live there.

A week in Amsterdam gives you enough time to settle into the daily rhythm: to find a coffee spot, to understand the bike lanes, to arrive at the Rijksmuseum on a quiet morning when you can actually get up close to Rembrandt's "Night Watch."

A week in Amsterdam

An exciting week in this dynamic Dutch city might include a prebooked visit to the Anne Frank House, a significant and in-demand experience that belongs on every Amsterdam itinerary. When you've worked up an appetite, refuel with a food tour through local markets, and learn to make your own dessert in a hands-on stroopwafel workshop. It might just end up being one of the most memorable parts of your trip. Day trips to Delft (the birthplace of Vermeer and the home of the famous blue-and-white pottery) and Rotterdam, with its striking modern architecture, round out a stay that highlights the best of not just Amsterdam but also the areas that surround it. A three-day extension to Brussels-the seat of European Union power and home to serious beer culture-is available for travelers who are hungry for more.

 Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours
Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours



4. Barcelona, Spain: A city shaped by one extraordinary architect, and so much more

Why Barcelona stands out

Antoni Gaudí spent his life designing what are now Barcelona's most iconic and celebrated landmarks: La Sagrada Família, Park Güell, Casa Batlló, Casa Milà, the Palau Güell, the Bellesguard tower. Gaudí's work is not merely architecture-it's a complete aesthetic vision applied to an entire city, drawing from natural forms, Catalan Gothic traditions, and a religiosity so deeply felt that Gaudí was buried inside the basilica he never saw completed. A week in Barcelona gives you enough time to explore these buildings inside and out, and from many different perspectives, rather than to simply photograph them.

But Gaudí is only the beginning. The Gothic Quarter, built over Roman walls that are still visible in places, is worthy of a full morning on its own. Brimming with local specialties, La Boqueria market is a feast for the senses (but especially the palate). The local bar culture runs on vermouth in the afternoons and something stronger later, at hours that take most visitors two or three days to fully adjust to.

A week in Barcelona

An awe-inspiring week in Barcelona might include dedicated time inside La Sagrada Família-begun in 1882 and finally nearing completion. Take a guided walk through the Gothic Quarter, topped off with a flamenco workshop, which turns appreciation into participation. A day trip to Girona, one of Spain's most beautifully preserved medieval cities with a Jewish quarter and a cathedral that commands the skyline, extends the experience beyond the city. Want more of Spain's tapas culture? Book an extension to Madrid and compare and contrast Cataloñia's capital city with Spain's.

 Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours
Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours



5. Rome, Italy: The city that makes every other one feel new

Why Rome stands out

Rome is the city that recalibrates your sense of time. The Colosseum was completed in 80 A.D. The Pantheon, still standing nearly two millennia later, was site of the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome for more than a thousand years. Julius Caesar was assassinated in a theater that is now a cat sanctuary. Walking through the Roman Forum-the political and commercial center of Western civilization for centuries-is not sightseeing in any conventional sense. It's an invitation to contemplate the enormity of history.

And yet Rome is also entirely, vibrantly alive. The 2.8 million people who live here eat extraordinarily well, have very strong opinions about coffee, and seem unbothered by the fact that their city is the most historically significant place in which most visitors will ever set foot. A week is enough time to see two Romes: the ancient version and the vibrant, present-day version that still honors traditions.

A week in Rome

A fulfilling week in Rome could include combined access to the Colosseum and the Roman Forum, plus curated neighborhood tours through areas like Trastevere and Testaccio, where locals eat and where cooking is a painstakingly, and lovingly, preserved tradition. A day trip to the Castelli Romani-the volcanic hills southeast of the city, where the hilltop town of Frascati has been producing wine since the 16th century-pairs wine tasting with a landscape that Romans have been retreating to for centuries. A visit to the papal summer residence at Castel Gandolfo, on the shores of Lago Albano, rounds out a trip that shows Rome's reach beyond its walls. For those excited by Renaissance art and architecture, and wine, Tuscany offers reasons to stay a little longer. An extension to Florence provides a can't-miss chance to see Michelangelo's David in the (perfectly chiseled) flesh, and to venture into the countryside for a Chianti tasting.

 Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours
Courtesy of EF Go Ahead Tours



6. Dublin, Ireland: Where the culture lives in the conversation

Why Dublin stands out

Dubliners are known for their congeniality. The city's pub culture, which is more accurately described as a social institution than a drinking tradition, creates ideal conditions for real conversation to unfold between strangers. A week here gives you enough time to find your pub, to become a regular in some small way, and to understand why the Irish are widely considered among the most welcoming people in Europe.

The city's cultural depth is easy to underestimate. Trinity College is one of the great university campuses in the world. The Book of Kells, housed in its library, is an illuminated manuscript produced by Celtic monks around 800 AD and is considered one of the finest examples of medieval art in existence. Its colors are still vivid after 12 centuries. Brú na Bóinne, the Neolithic passage tomb complex north of the city, predates the Egyptian pyramids by 500 years.

A week in Dublin

A week in Dublin that just might quench a traveler's thirst could involve entry to Trinity College's library to see the Book of Kells, an Irish dancing experience that invites you to experience your inner River Dancer, and whiskey tastings at a distillery with genuine craft behind it. And don't forget the Guinness. A day trip to Brú na Bóinne brings the prehistoric past to life in a way that no museum can replicate. The coastal village of Howth-30 minutes from the city center, where Dubliners go on weekends to snack on fish and chips on a pier-is an afternoon that stays with you. What could be better? How about seeing the Irish experience in Belfast, just a short trip away if you want to book a few more days on the Emerald Isle.

Europe's most beloved cities aren't meant to be rushed. The best version of Paris, London, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Rome, and Dublin isn't the version you see in a day; it's the version that reveals itself slowly, over the course of a week, with time to savor it exactly how you want.

This story was produced by EF Go Ahead Tours and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Copyright 2026 Stacker Media, LLC

This story was originally published June 4, 2026 at 6:30 AM.

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