This town may be ludicrously expensive, but come the warm weather months there sure are a lot of free things to do. The array can quickly become overwhelming, so we’ve assembled some of the best gratis cultural programming into this accessible guide. The options for what to do in the evening are about to feel limitless, but the below offer reliably no-cover entertainment all summer long.

🎶Music

BRIC Celebrate Brooklyn! Festival: Now in its 47th season, this grandaddy of free New York City summer programming will be bringing 15 free shows to Prospect Park’s Lena Horne Bandshell from June 4 to Sept. 19. These include performances by Sheila E., Wayne Wonder, Common and more.

Summer Stage: NYC’s other summer programming grandaddy, now in its 40th year, will be bringing over 60 free shows to 13 parks across the city starting in late May and continuing through the first of October. The performances vary widely, from the Metropolitan Opera Summer Recital series to Laurie Anderson, Spoon and Mavis Staples.

Public Service: For the fifth season, Public Service will once again be hosting an outdoor dance party with free DJ sets featuring highly groove-able beats to Bed-Stuy’s Herbert Von King Park, as well as Williamsburg’s Classon Playground and Bushwick’s Maria Hernandez Park.

Lincoln Center: The arts hub has organized hundreds of free and pay-what-you-want events for New Yorkers this summer, with a truly impressive range that includes dance shows, workshops, silent discos, kid-friendly activations and live music from June 10 to Aug. 8.

NoMad Jazz Festival Concert Series: This neighborhood-wide festival will bring free jazz performances by established and emerging performers to the NoMad Piazza, a pop-up plaza on Broadway between 25th and 27th streets.

Mannes International Piano Festival: From July 13 - 22, this concert series will showcase a new generation of globally acclaimed pianists at The New School’s Tishman Auditorium in Greenwich Village. All concerts are free with registration.

📽️Movies

Bryant Park: This annual favorite outdoor screening series is back, with free films on the Bryant Park lawn on Mondays from July 13 to Sept. 14. The lineup is yet to be announced.

The Intrepid Museum: That’s right, the World War II aircraft carrier parked in the Hudson near 46th Street will host three free movie nights (the first was on May 22) on its flight deck. The action-packed lineup includes “Independence Day” and “National Treasure.”

Brooklyn Bridge Park: The Movies With a View series is returning to Brooklyn Bridge Park for its 26th season this July and August. Dates have been released, and doors are always at 6 p.m., but the lineup is being withheld until early June.

Roosevelt Island: Take the tram and enjoy four films chosen by public vote – “Zootopia 2,” “Wicked: For Good,” “Superman,” and “Hot To Train Your Dragon” – on the island’s Southpoint Park.

🎭Theater

Shakespeare in the Park: Enjoy a play plein air at the newly revitalized Delacorte Theater. As per tradition, tickets are distributed free and day-of to those who line up early enough (and you need to line up very, very early). The season will start with performances of “Romeo & Juliet” through June 28, followed by “The Winter’s Tale” from July 25 to Aug. 23.

Sugar Sugar! at Domino Park: Only in its second year, this series will bring puppets, clowns, postmodern dance and performance art to Domino Square’s waterfront amphitheater on select dates in June.

Road to Broadway: A collaboration between Playbill.com and Rockefeller Center is bringing a month-long series entitled “Road To Broadway” to The Rink at Rockefeller Center. It will feature live performances from Broadway shows including “The Book of Mormon,” "Hadestown," and “Wicked.”

Molière In The Park: One of Brooklyn’s great but lesser known free summer theater programs is back again, this year with performances of “Don Juan” at Prospect Park’s LeFrak Center at Lakeside from Sept. 5 to Sept. 27.

🤸and more

Out of Silence: Since late April, Roosevelt Island’s Four Freedoms Park has been hosting a 15-minute sound installation by Finnish interdisciplinary artist Hans Rosenström in collaboration with Estonian vocal ensemble Vox Clamantis. It occurs throughout the day (except Tuesday, when the park is closed) and will continue through June 21.

Times Square: Times Square has done an impressive job of curating diverse, genuinely appealing summer programming in recent summers and this one appears to be no exception. The full schedule is out now and it includes free public Zumba classes, DJ sets and live music from now until late September.

Hudson River Park: The 4-mile stretch of West Side park has a full calendar of events planned for the summer, and it’s heavy on science education, family-friendly and fitness-focused programming.

Backyard at Hudson Yards: The far West Side's residential mall neighborhood is hosting a variety of programming in the public square and gardens surrounding The Vessel. This includes cardio classes, pickleball lessons, "Mozart for Munchkins" and more.

Bella Abzug Park: Just north of Hudson Yards' proverbial backyard, Bella Abzug Park is hosting yoga, a bootcamp in partnership with local Hell's Kitchen's business Speakeasy of Strength, vinyl night dance parties, bachata classes, and film screenings every Tuesday night in August, among other free offerings.

Brooklyn Army Terminal: This manufacturing hub in Brooklyn’s Sunset Park neighborhood is doubling as a venue for community markets, food festivals, rooftop film screenings and live music this summer.

Summer on the Hudson: The Riverside Park Conservancy has more than 300 free events planned for the swath of Manhattan coastline spanning 59th to 181st streets. This includes multiple film festivals, birding walks, star gazing, dance fitness, and more, all on a first-come, first-served basis.

Battery Park City: The Battery Park City Authority has put together an intimidating schedule of free entertainment this summer, from a Swedish Midsummer Festival, to a Pride event at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, to a Pollinator Week Bioblitz.

NYC Parks: In addition to all the events above, NYC Parks, the municipal steward of a huge swath of city green spaces, currently has over 7,000 free (and low-cost) events listed between now and October. That includes outdoor fitness offerings, live music, and plenty of movie screenings at outdoor spaces across the five boroughs.

There’s truly something for everyone, so you have no excuse but to go touch grass.