Your New Orleans, Louisiana Honeymoon, Planned to Perfection
New Orleans, Louisiana is one of the world's most romantic honeymoon destinations — and for good reason. New Orleans is America's most distinctive city — a place where French, Spanish, African, and Caribbean cultures have been marinating for 300 years into an utterly unique way of life expressed through the world's most soulful music, most complex cuisine, and most joyful approach to celebration.
New Orleans doesn't plan celebrations — it IS a celebration. The music, the food, the architecture, the spirit — there is nowhere in America quite like it.
As a mid-range destination, New Orleans, Louisiana offers honeymooners exactly what the first trip of your marriage deserves: French Quarter, jazz, Creole cuisine, Mardi Gras, Garden District, Second Line parades. The Wedding Unicorn plans every detail of your New Orleans, Louisiana honeymoon — from suite upgrades and private beach setups to surprise in-room amenities and exclusive sunset excursions that aren't available through standard booking.
We work with the finest resorts and boutique properties in New Orleans, Louisiana to secure the best honeymoon packages, negotiate complimentary upgrades, and arrange romantic touches that make your first week as a married couple genuinely unforgettable. Our planners have firsthand knowledge of the properties that actually deliver on their honeymoon promises.
- Best time to visit: February–May, October–December
- 3 hours from New York City
- Language: English / French Creole
- Visa: No travel requirements (domestic)
- Currency: USD
- Complimentary romance amenities negotiated
- Suite upgrades where available
- Private excursions and sunset dinners
- Airport transfers and arrival coordination
- Option to add destination wedding ceremony
7 Nights in New Orleans — Jazz, Creole Cuisine & the City That Care Forgot
The French Quarter, Po-Boys, jazz from every doorway, and the most atmospheric city in America
New Orleans is America's most unique city — a place with a culture distinct from any other in the country, shaped by French and Spanish colonial history, African American culture, Creole and Cajun traditions, and the specific geography of a city built below sea level on the Mississippi delta. The French Quarter's cast-iron balconies, Bourbon Street's 24-hour chaos, the Garden District's antebellum mansions, and the cemetery cities of the above-ground tombs all exist within a few blocks of each other in a city that has never quite followed American rules. For honeymooners, New Orleans offers a specifically romantic and hedonistic city experience: beignets at Café Du Monde at 2am, cocktails invented in this city (the Sazerac, the Ramos Gin Fizz, the Hurricane), live jazz emerging from clubs at midnight, and a food culture — Commander's Palace, Galatoire's, Dooky Chase's, and the oyster po-boy from Domilise's — that is among America's most original and most deeply rooted. Seven nights in New Orleans is barely enough to get started.
1Arrival — the French Quarter & First Beignet
Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport is 24km from the French Quarter. Walk immediately to Café Du Monde on Decatur Street for the obligatory first encounter: beignets (square fried dough pillows dusted in an obscene quantity of powdered sugar that will cover your dark clothes) and café au lait (half chicory coffee, half steamed milk). This has been the correct first experience in New Orleans since 1862 and nothing has changed. From Café Du Monde, walk Jackson Square — the great plaza in front of St. Louis Cathedral — and the Cathedral itself (the oldest continuously operating cathedral in the US, rebuilt three times since 1718). The surrounding Pontalba Buildings (the oldest apartment buildings in the US) face the square. An evening walk through the French Quarter to Frenchmen Street — the correct music street, not Bourbon Street — for jazz at d.b.a. and Spotted Cat.
- ✦ Café Du Monde beignets and café au lait — since 1862
- ✦ Jackson Square and St. Louis Cathedral
- ✦ French Quarter cast-iron balcony architecture
- ✦ Frenchmen Street jazz clubs — the real New Orleans music scene
2Commander's Palace & the Garden District
Commander's Palace in the Garden District is the most important restaurant in New Orleans history — the training ground of Emeril Lagasse, Paul Prudhomme, and Jamie Shannon, where Creole cuisine has been refined and elevated since 1880. The Saturday jazz brunch (one of the world's most celebrated restaurant experiences, with a Dixieland jazz band playing tableside) requires reservations weeks in advance. The Garden District around Commander's is New Orleans' finest residential neighborhood — a grid of antebellum mansions in Greek Revival, Italianate, and Queen Anne styles, the homes of the pre-Civil War cotton elite, with gardens of live oaks and magnolias. The streetcar on St. Charles Avenue (the oldest continuously operating streetcar line in the world, running since 1835) connects the Garden District to the French Quarter. Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 — one of the famous above-ground tomb cemeteries — is in the Garden District and open for walking.
- ✦ Commander's Palace jazz brunch — book weeks ahead
- ✦ Garden District antebellum mansion streetcar tour
- ✦ St. Charles Avenue streetcar — the world's oldest continuous route
- ✦ Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 above-ground tomb tour
3Bourbon Street & the French Quarter by Night
Bourbon Street is not New Orleans's best face, but it is its most famous and a genuinely extraordinary human spectacle that cannot be entirely skipped. The 24-hour-open bars, the Hand Grenade cocktails in green grenades, the daiquiri shops with frozen drinks in every color, and the sheer volume of people celebrating in the street is unlike anything else in America. Galatoire's on Bourbon Street — exactly the opposite of the Bourbon Street cliché — is the most traditional and most beloved old-school Creole restaurant in the city, unchanged since 1905, where the lunch tables are occupied by New Orleans's oldest families in their best clothes. For contrast: the Carousel Bar at Hotel Monteleone (the rotating bar that has been spinning since 1949), the Napoleon House for a Pimm's Cup (the house specialty since 1914), and the Preservation Hall for traditional New Orleans jazz — the small music hall that preserved Dixieland jazz when no one else cared, still performing nightly.
- ✦ Galatoire's for traditional Creole cuisine — unchanged since 1905
- ✦ Carousel Bar at Hotel Monteleone — rotating since 1949
- ✦ Napoleon House Pimm's Cup — the house specialty since 1914
- ✦ Preservation Hall traditional jazz — the home of New Orleans Dixieland
4Bayou Boat Tour & Cajun Country
The bayous and swamps surrounding New Orleans are the ecological and cultural foundation of Louisiana — a labyrinth of cypress swamps, Spanish moss, alligators, and the Cajun culture that arrived when the French Acadians were expelled from Nova Scotia in 1755. Barataria Preserve (Jean Lafitte National Historical Park), 30 minutes south of New Orleans, has excellent boardwalk walks through the cypress-tupelo swamp with regular alligator sightings and extraordinary birdlife. Boat tours of the surrounding bayous are the classic Louisiana experience: flat-bottomed airboats through the channels, guide pointing out alligators sunning on the banks, and the specific atmosphere of a swamp landscape unlike any other in North America. Return via the Ninth Ward for the Hurricane Katrina memorial walk and the Bywater neighborhood, home to some of New Orleans's best small restaurants and art galleries.
- ✦ Bayou boat tour through cypress swamps with alligator sightings
- ✦ Barataria Preserve boardwalk swamp walk
- ✦ Spanish moss hanging from ancient cypress trees
- ✦ Ninth Ward Katrina memorial and Bywater creative neighborhood
5Po-Boy Pilgrimage, Gumbo & the Saints
New Orleans has arguably the finest sandwich culture in America — the po-boy (a French bread roll filled with fried shrimp, oysters, roast beef, or hot sausage) is the definitive local street food. Domilise's Po-Boy & Bar on Annunciation Street has been making the city's finest fried shrimp po-boys since 1918 in a kitchen the size of a kitchen. Mosca's on the West Bank is the legendary Italian-Creole roadhouse where the spaghetti bordelaise and baked oysters have attracted generations of New Orleans families since 1946. For the complete gumbo experience: Dooky Chase's Restaurant in Tremendé — where Leah Chase ("Queen of Creole Cuisine") cooked for 70 years and served Martin Luther King Jr., Ray Charles, and Louis Armstrong. The Superdome (Caesars Superdome) tour and the New Orleans Saints history in the most beloved NFL team of a city that lives and dies with football.
- ✦ Domilise's fried shrimp po-boy — the city's finest since 1918
- ✦ Dooky Chase's — Leah Chase's legendary Creole gumbo and history
- ✦ Mosca's baked oysters —kat the legendary roadhouse since 1946
- ✦ Caesars Superdome Saints history tour
6National WWII Museum & the Warehouse District
The National WWII Museum is the most visited attraction in Louisiana and one of the finest history museums in the United States — a 400,000-square-foot complex documenting the full American experience of World War II with extraordinary exhibitions, personal testimonies, and the immersive Solomon Victory Theater. The museum was founded by Stephen Ambrose (author of Band of Brothers) and its road pavilions covering the Pacific, Atlantic, and European theaters are each outstanding. The Warehouse Arts District surrounding the museum has the greatest concentration of contemporary art galleries in the South —kat including the Contemporary Arts Center, Ogden Museum of Southern Art, and hundreds of private galleries. Cochon restaurant (James Beard Award-winning chef Donald Link's definitive Southern food) is in the Warehouse District for a final serious dinner.
- ✦ National WWII Museum — one of the finest history museums in the US
- ✦ Solomon Victory Theater immersive WWII experience
- ✦ Warehouse Arts District contemporary galleries
- ✦ Cochon restaurant — James Beard Award Southern cooking
7Final Morning & Departure
Louis Armstrong Airport is a direct Uber from the French Quarter. A final morning belongs to the French Market on Decatur Street (a covered market of artisan food stalls, craft vendors, and the Creole Tomato sauce that is a Louisiana pantry essential) and a final beignet at Café Du Monde. Take home Zatarain's crab boil seasoning, Community Coffee (the chicory blend that makes café au lait correctly), Tabasco from Avery Island (a 45-minute drive west of New Orleans, where the pepper sauce has been made since 1868), and a bottle of Sazerac rye (the whiskey that makes the Sazerac cocktail, invented in New Orleans in 1838). New Orleans is the only American city that genuinely requires multiple visits — each trip uncovers a neighborhood, a restaurant, and a music venue you missed last time.
- ✦ French Market final morning and Café Du Monde farewell beignet
- ✦ Community Coffee, Zatarain's seasoning, and Sazerac rye to take home
- ✦ Final walk through the French Quarter in the morning quiet
- ✦ Uber to Louis Armstrong International Airport
Where to Stay
The grande dame of New Orleans hotels — open since 1886 on Royal Street, with the legendary Carousel Bar, a literary history (Truman Capote, William Faulkner, Tennessee Williams all stayed here), and the most atmospheric location in the French Quarter.
New Orleans' grandest hotel — the Sazerac Bar (where the Sazerac cocktail was invented) in an extraordinary 1893 lobby, Blue Room supper club, and the most complete full-service luxury hotel experience in the city.
The most beautiful small hotel in the French Quarter — two early 19th-century Creole townhouses with a courtyard and some of the most characterful and atmospheric rooms in New Orleans at mid-to-upper prices.
This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.
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