New Orleans Louisiana
Things to do in New Orleans in June 2027
By TripSapien Research · Updated June 3, 2026
Use this New Orleans guide to choose June sights, neighborhoods, and seasonal highlights worth putting on your shortlist. June in New Orleans averages 32°C / 90°F highs, 24°C / 75°F nights, and about 13 rainy days. Dated picks to verify first include Southern Decadence and FKJ. Check the dated events and public holidays below, then validate your shortlist against your exact trip dates.
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New Orleans in June 2027
Weather
TempTemperature
90°F / 75°F
32.2°C / 23.7°C
RainPrecipitation
13d
7.7in · 195mm
LightDaylight
13.9h
June begins hurricane season and heavy summer rain, so use mornings for outdoor streets and museums during thunderstorms.
Events & festivals
Event calendar- Jun 1 – Jun 30
Each summer, big event for Gays and those who love and respect the Gay community.
Source: Month Signals
- Jun 10

- Jun 22

Public holidays & long weekends
Banks and government offices close; museums, restaurants and shops may have limited hours.
- Jun 18Juneteenth (substitute day)
- Jun 19Juneteenth
- Jun 18-Jun 20Long weekend
Planning checklist
- 1Check the 3 dated New Orleans events for anything that overlaps your exact June dates before assigning fixed sightseeing days.
- 2Hold flexible plans around the 2 public holidays in United States; museums, markets, and government-run sights can switch hours.
- 3Group each New Orleans day by nearby neighborhoods, then validate saved places against your dates before exporting the checked route to Google Maps.
About New Orleans
City overview
New Orleans sits on a bend of the Mississippi River, where the French Quarter, Tremé, Marigny, Bywater, Garden District, and Uptown turn Creole architecture, brass-band music, Catholic parade calendars, and river commerce into one city. The French and Spanish colonial grid, St. Charles Avenue streetcar, above-ground cemeteries, and festival schedule make the visitor map unlike any other U.S. city.
Food & drink
New Orleans food is specific: gumbo, jambalaya, red beans and rice, crawfish etouffee, po'boys, muffulettas from the Central Grocery orbit, oysters, pralines, and beignets at Cafe du Monde. Use the French Quarter for old Creole dining, Magazine Street for neighborhood restaurants, and the Treme-Marigny-Bywater corridor for music plus late meals.
Top sights
Ranked for June suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1St. Louis Cathedral
- 2National WWII Museum
- 3New Orleans Museum of Art and City Park
- 4Steamboat Natchez and Mississippi riverfront
- 5Mardi Gras World
- 6Frenchmen Street
- 7St. Charles Avenue Streetcar
- 8French Quarter and Jackson Square
- 9Audubon Park
- 10Garden District and Lafayette Cemetery No. 1
1St. Louis Cathedral
4.8★ · 5,019indoorOpen dailyThe cathedral on Jackson Square traces its parish to 1720, with the present triple-spired building completed in the 1850s after earlier fires and rebuilds. It anchors Chartres Street beside the Cabildo and Presbytere.
2National WWII Museum
4.8★ · 29,728indoorOpen dailyThe museum opened in 2000 in the Warehouse District and grew from the Higgins Boats built in New Orleans for Allied landings. Exhibits cover the European and Pacific theaters, aircraft, oral histories, and the U.S. Freedom Pavilion.
Wikipedia
3New Orleans Museum of Art and City Park
4.7★ · 5,307indoorClosed MonNOMA opened in City Park in 1911 and holds French, American, African, Japanese, and decorative arts collections. The Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden sits beside bayous and live oaks in the same park.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Steamboat Natchez and Mississippi riverfront
- 5Mardi Gras World
- 6Frenchmen Street
- 7St. Charles Avenue Streetcar
- 8French Quarter and Jackson Square
- 9Audubon Park
- 10Garden District and Lafayette Cemetery No. 1
Neighborhoods
1
French Quarter (Vieux Carre)
The Quarter is dense and old, with Jackson Square, Royal Street galleries, Bourbon Street bars, hidden courtyards, Creole townhouses, and the riverfront within a tight grid.
2Marigny and Bywater
Marigny and Bywater are downriver and music-heavy, with Frenchmen Street clubs, Crescent Park, colorful cottages, St. Claude Avenue venues, and neighborhood restaurants.
3Tremé
Tremé is tied to Black New Orleans culture, with Congo Square, Backstreet Cultural Museum, brass-band history, Creole cottages, and second-line routes near North Rampart Street.
4Garden District and Lower Garden District
The Garden District is mansion-lined and leafy, with St. Charles Avenue, Magazine Street shops, Lafayette Cemetery No. 1, Commander's Palace, and streetcar stops.
5Uptown and Carrollton
Uptown stretches along St. Charles and Magazine, with Tulane, Loyola, Audubon Park, Maple Street bars, old oaks, and po'boy counters.
6Warehouse District and CBD
The Warehouse District and CBD feel more modern, with the National WWII Museum, Ogden Museum, Julia Street galleries, hotels, Superdome access, and convention crowds.
Day trips
85km / 1-1.5h by car from the French Quarter
Oak Alley and River Road plantations
River Road sites such as Oak Alley, Whitney Plantation, and Laura Plantation interpret sugar estates, architecture, and enslaved labor along the Mississippi.
30km / 35-45min by car from the French Quarter
Barataria Preserve
The Jean Lafitte National Historical Park preserve has boardwalks through swamp, bayou, marsh, alligator habitat, and birding areas close to the city.
70km / 1h by car across Lake Pontchartrain Causeway
Abita Springs and the Northshore
The northshore route adds Abita Brewery, the Abita Mystery House, small towns, and the long bridge crossing over Lake Pontchartrain.
Getting around
RTA streetcars and buses cover the French Quarter edge, St. Charles Avenue, Canal Street, Rampart Street, cemeteries, City Park, and parts of Uptown using Le Pass fares. Walking works in the Quarter and Marigny, the St. Charles streetcar works for Garden District days, and rideshare is practical for late-night Bywater or airport trips.
Check this shortlist against your dates
TripSapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure, and neighborhoods for your exact June dates.
Common questions about New Orleans in June
- Will the places on my list be open when I'm in New Orleans in June?
- TripSapien checks each place against the exact dates you're in New Orleans and flags closures before the trip.
- How do I plan New Orleans days without crossing the city twice?
- TripSapien groups your places by neighborhood so each day stays in one or two areas instead of zig-zagging. It also flags places that sell out, so timed tickets and reservations don't fall through.
- Best rainy-day things to do in New Orleans in June
June averages 13 rainy days in New Orleans, so keep these indoor stops as realistic backups.
- St. Louis Cathedral — The cathedral on Jackson Square traces its parish to 1720, with the present triple-spired building completed in the 1850s after earlier fires and rebuilds. It anchors Chartres Street beside the Cabildo and Presbytere.
- National WWII Museum — The museum opened in 2000 in the Warehouse District and grew from the Higgins Boats built in New Orleans for Allied landings. Exhibits cover the European and Pacific theaters, aircraft, oral histories, and the U.S. Freedom Pavilion.
- New Orleans Museum of Art and City Park — NOMA opened in City Park in 1911 and holds French, American, African, Japanese, and decorative arts collections. The Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden sits beside bayous and live oaks in the same park.
- Steamboat Natchez and Mississippi riverfront — The Natchez paddlewheeler docks near the Toulouse Street wharf and runs jazz cruises on the Mississippi River. The Moonwalk and Woldenberg Riverfront Park give free views of ships, bridges, and the French Quarter levee edge.
- Mardi Gras World — Blaine Kern's warehouse on the riverfront shows parade floats, sculpted props, costumes, and workshop processes used by Carnival krewes. It is near the Convention Center and Warehouse District.
- What to pack for New Orleans in June
Pack for June's weather, not a generic New Orleans checklist.
- Light, breathable daytime clothes for average highs around 32°C / 90°F.
- Breathable evening clothes because nights stay near 24°C / 75°F.
- Compact rain gear and shoes that handle wet pavement across about 13 rainy days.
- How many days do you need in New Orleans
- 4 days covers the main New Orleans highlights at a realistic pace. Add 3 extra days if you want the listed day trips.
- Is New Orleans worth visiting in June
- Yes. June in New Orleans averages 32°C / 90°F highs, 24°C / 75°F nights, and about 13 rainy days.