The Queen City,
for the loud,
the quiet, and
everything in between.
A skyline of glass towers. A river of man-made whitewater. The tallest giga-coaster in North America, and a barn-shaped library by the same family farm where Billy Graham grew up. Charlotte is a city that does and, not or.
built by banks,
lit for everyone.
Charlotte's signature attractions.
NA's tallest
giga coaster.
Carowinds & Carolina Harbor
Four hundred acres, two states, one ticket. The marquee is Fury 325 — 325 feet of opening drop, 95 mph through six…
largest man-made
whitewater river.
U.S. National Whitewater Center
1,300 acres of recirculating whitewater, ziplines, ropes courses, and trail. An official U.S. Olympic Training Site that lets…
a 33° banked
ramp, indoors.
NASCAR Hall of Fame
The sport's official shrine, with eighteen historic stock cars staged on a full-scale banked ramp — and pit-crew simulators…
Five pro teams, year-round.
The rest of a great day in town.
library, on the
old family farm.
Billy Graham Library
Forty thousand square feet shaped like a dairy barn, entered through a forty-foot glass cross. A self-guided Journey of Faith…
they used to
mint the gold.
The Mint Museum
North Carolina's first art museum, housed in the 1837 building that was once a working branch of the U.S. Mint — relocated…
largest IMAX
Dome theater.
Discovery Place Science
A three-floor, hands-on science museum with a working rainforest habitat, aquariums, fossils, and an OMNIMAX dome theater on top…
Seven cities, in one city.
Why we keep writing about
this city.
Charlotte is a city that gets undersold by its own résumé. People will tell you it's a banking town, the second-largest after New York, with a skyline of glass-and-steel towers and a busy airport in the middle. All of that is true. But it leaves out that the same metro region holds the world's largest man-made whitewater river, the tallest giga-coaster in North America, and a small museum of mid-century European modernism that quietly owns a Niki de Saint Phalle Firebird the size of a house.
It leaves out the trees. Charlotte is the rare American downtown where the streets are shaded — the locals call themselves the Tree City — and where you can walk from a championship stadium through a leafy historic neighborhood to a 98-acre park with paddleboats in twenty minutes.
It leaves out the food. The barbecue argument. The biscuits. The fact that an old textile mill on the east side has been turned into one of the country's best food halls.
We wrote this guide because Charlotte deserves a guide that tells you what it actually feels like to be here — not just what's open on Wednesday. Wander a little. The Queen City rewards it.
— The Discover Charlotte editors
Charlotte has quietly become one of the most interesting medium-sized cities in America to spend a long weekend in — a city where you can ride a 95-mph roller coaster in the morning, paddle a class-IV rapid in the afternoon, and end the night in a converted textile mill listening to a brass band. — Travel column, March 2026
and a hundred miles
of trail nearby.
Forty-eight hours,
well spent.
We put together three honest itineraries — a single day, a long weekend, and a family trip with kids — built around how Charlotte actually flows. Most of it is walkable, the rest of it is one light-rail line.