Free & Cheap

10 Free Things to Do in Chattanooga (That Locals Actually Do)

Most "free things to do in Chattanooga" lists are written by people who don't live here. They'll tell you to "walk the Walnut Street Bridge" like that's an activity. It's a bridge. You walk over it in three minutes.

Here's the actual list — what locals do on weekends when we don't feel like spending money. No filler, no "look at the river" entries, no places that are technically free but require $20 of parking.

The TL;DR

Best free thing: First Friday art crawl downtown. Best free outdoor: Stringer's Ridge sunset. Most underrated: the Hunter Museum's free Sundays.

1. First Friday Art Crawl (Bluff View & Downtown)

The first Friday of every month, downtown galleries open up free, the streets get festive, and you can wander between Bluff View, the Arts District, and Southside without spending a dollar (unless you buy art, which… don't tell us how to live).

Why locals like it: It's the closest thing Chattanooga has to a regular street festival. Even if you don't care about art, the people-watching is elite.

2. Stringer's Ridge at Sunset

Skip Lookout Mountain (parking, crowds, the works). Stringer's Ridge has one of the best downtown skyline views in the city, it's a 10-minute hike up, and it's free. Bring a beer if you want — we won't tell.

Pro tip: Park at the Spears Avenue trailhead, not the lower lot. The upper lot fills up fast on weekends.

3. The Hunter Museum, Free Sundays (First of the Month)

The Hunter is the best art museum in town and it's free on the first Sunday of every month. Most people don't know this. Be one of the people who knows.

"The first Sunday of the month at the Hunter is a quiet weapon every Chattanooga local should have in their back pocket."

4. Coolidge Park Carousel Riding (Fine, $1)

Okay, this one is technically a dollar. But the park itself is free, the splash pad is free, and the people-watching is unbeatable. If you have kids, this is your default Saturday move.

5. The Riverwalk (But Only the Good Sections)

The Riverwalk is 13 miles long and most of it is great. But not all of it is great. The stretch from Coolidge Park east to the Bluff View art district is the magic part. The stretch past the Aquarium toward Ross's Landing is also worth it.

Skip: anything south of Amnicola Highway unless you're specifically there to bike.

6. Audubon Acres (Mornings)

Free until 10 a.m. weekdays, this nature preserve has 130 acres of trails, a swinging bridge, and basically zero crowds before noon. It's a 12-minute drive from downtown. Pack coffee.

7. Nightfall Concert Series (Friday Nights, Summer)

Free outdoor concerts at Miller Plaza every Friday from May through August. Local openers, headliners that punch above their weight, and a beer garden if you decide to stop being free.

8. Open Mic at Heaven & Ale (Wednesdays)

Free, weekly, and surprisingly good. Chattanooga has a real songwriter scene and Wednesdays at H&A is where you'll catch people before they get big enough to charge a cover.

9. The Public Library Rooftop (Yes, Really)

The downtown library has a rooftop. It's open to the public. The view is excellent. Almost nobody knows this. You're welcome.

10. Walking Tour of the Bluff View Art District

Yeah, I know — but the Bluff View district is genuinely beautiful, the gardens are free, and you can spend a whole afternoon there pretending you're on vacation. Bring snacks (or $4 for a pastry at Rembrandt's).

Got a free spot we missed?

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Last updated April 29, 2026. We refresh this guide monthly. Things close, hours change, ridges erode — let us know if anything's off.