Fall leaves in NYC
Photograph: Shutterstock
Photograph: Shutterstock

Things to do on a Sunday in New York

Have fun like there’s no tomorrow with the best things to do on a Sunday in New York including events, brunch and more.

Rossilynne Skena Culgan
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There’s a reason Sunday rhymes with Funday. It’s another chance to make it a great day here in New York City!

Whether you’re planning a day trip from NYC, looking for an awesome festival, or finally have the time to see some of the best museum exhibitions in NYC, we’ve scoured all our listings to put together our favorite things to do on Sunday in NYC right here (as well as on Saturday and this weekend. And if you blew all your cash on Saturday, stick with our picks for the best free things to do in town.

RECOMMENDED: The best things to do in NYC right now

Things to do on Sunday

  • Sports and fitness
  • Sports & Fitness

Free yoga in Bryant Park is officially back for the summer, which means midtown office workers are once again about to spend their mornings attempting crow pose on the lawn surrounded by tourists.

The beloved free outdoor series, now entering its 23rd season, returns on May 27 and will run twice weekly through September 16, bringing hundreds of yoga mats to the heart of Manhattan all summer long.

This year’s edition of Bryant Park Yoga presented by Halara will once again offer completely free classes for all ages and skill levels, with sessions split between peaceful Tuesday mornings and Wednesday evening flows. Tuesday classes will take place at 10 am on the Upper Terrace, while Wednesday sessions will take place at 6 pm directly on the lawn.

  • Things to do
  • Events & Festivals

It's raining elephants! Mark your calendars because the ninth annual Dumbo Drop is set for Friday, May 29 when thousands of tiny elephants will fall from the sky during one of the neighborhood's most beloved events.

For one night only, the rooftops lining Washington Street, the most Instagrammed block in the borough, will become launchpads for a fleet of parachuting toy elephants. At 5pm and again at 7pm, thousands of these tiny, trunked treasures will float gracefully down to the car-free streets below. Each year's drop features custom-designed parachutes by a local artist, with Christian Vera assuming the duties for 2026.

The drop also doubles as a block party you won't want to miss, with music, food and plenty of fun. You can catch a live set by The Jelly, join a flash mob dance party or get your hands dirty with crafts from Creatively Wild. If all that "elephant watching" works up an appetite, "Restaurant Row" will be serving up local tastes for just $7.

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  • Things to do
  • Events & Festivals

No, the world's collective Heated Rivalry horniness has not waned in the months since we said a fond farewell to Shane Hollander (Hudson Williams), Ilya Rozanov (Connor Storrie) and their steamy cottage shenanigans. And it looks like that obsession will only continue into summer as NewFest has officially included the queer hockey romance among its stacked programming for Pride 2026: On Sunday, May 31, the smash-hit Crave original will have its open-air debut at Pier 17 at South Street with an outdoor screening event, and it's free to attend. 

Tthe episode in question will be the famed fifth installment, "I'll Believe in Anything," with organizers teasing that the Pier 17 event will give "fans the chance to relive Scott Hunter’s championship moment." (IYKYK.) That penultimate episode of the Peabody-winning drama received widespread acclaim from both critics (the ep has a perfect 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes) as well as casual viewers, who gave it a rare 10-out-of-10 rating on IMDb, tying it with Breaking Bad's "Ozymandias" as the highest-rated television episode of all time in December 2025. 

  • Things to do
  • Events & Festivals

A cherished New York City tradition returns to the heart of Manhattan thisweek. On Friday, May 22, The Public Theater officially kicks off its summer season of Free Shakespeare in the Park with the highly anticipated first preview of Romeo & Juliet.

Marking the first time the Bard’s ultimate tragedy has graced the Delacorte Theater stage in nearly 20 years, this production arrives with a revitalized energy. Directed by Saheem Ali, the staging offers a bold linguistic twist: while the warring world of the Montagues and Capulets operates in English, the star-crossed lovers share their private scenes in Spanish—a secret language reserved solely for their romance. Set in a border town where ideological violence spills into the streets, the production promises a visceral, contemporary resonance.

This year's season opener marks the grand reopening of the newly revitalized Delacorte Theater. To celebrate, The Public is hosting a massive kickoff event on Saturday, May 30, featuring family-friendly festivities, concessions, a pop-up from Wonder and meet-and-greets with the theater’s unofficial mascot, Romeo the Raccoon.

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  • Things to do

Psychedelia comes to the New York Botanical Garden with Flower Power, a groovy, garden-wide takeover celebrating blooms as symbols of peace, love and counterculture cool. Running May 23 through October 18, the exhibition mixes vibrant botanical displays with ’60s-era art, plus trippy installations, live music and after-hours light shows. Wander through technicolor plantings, spot photo ops and lean into the feel-good nostalgia—it’s part flower show, part time warp. And honestly, we could all use a little nature (and time travel) these days.

  • Things to do

Summer in Midtown officially kicks off as Bryant Park Picnic Performances returns on May 28 with its biggest season yet. The beloved free series transforms the lawn into an open-air stage for almost four months of music, dance, opera and more, with highlights from New York City Opera and Carnegie Hall. With skyline views and a come-one-come-all vibe, it’s one of the city’s most democratic cultural pleasures: no tickets, no fuss, just world-class performance under the stars and subways conveniently nearby.

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  • Things to do

QC Spa New York is home to a lot of things, a new Italian-leaning restaurant and whimsical wellness rooms that include waterbeds and saunas across its 15,000-square-foot sprawl. But its location is part of what makes this spa so serene, as it gazes upon the beautiful skyline of Lower Manhattan. The best times to drink in the sights? Definitely at sunset to watch the fleeting orange and red sky fall over the city. Adding to the view, the Italian-born spa is setting the tone with a little DJ session. 

Starting on May 8, QC Spa New York is launching Sunset Sessions. The first of an ongoing DJ series, Sunset Sessions will bring a relaxed beach vibe to the spa. DJ Elektra will be playing sets at the spa's outdoor garden, making it easy to enjoy the music among the blooming florals or while soaking in one of the property's infinity pools. Guests can also take a complimentary scented paper fan, handcrafted and shipped from Italy, as a keepsake.

Sunset Sessions will be held from now until September 8. DJ sets start at 6pm; no ticket needed. Reserve your spot here

  • Eating

Roman centurions are taking over Manhattan, but don't worry—they're friendly. The legions are here to celebrate the first-ever National Pinsa Day on Thursday, May 28, courtesy of Italian baking pioneer Di Marco. The centerpiece of this grand activation is an exclusive pinsa kiosk in partnership with Eataly, popping up near Madison Square Park from May 27 through June 30.

For the uninitiated, pinsa is not just another pizza. Invented by Di Marco and rapidly gaining popularity across the United States, this modern evolution of traditional Roman baking is renowned for its signature light, airy texture and high digestibility. Crafted from a unique blend of flours, a remarkable 80% hydration level and a long fermentation process, pinsa provides a crispier, lighter base that won't leave you feeling weighed down.

To kick off the month-long residency, New Yorkers can get a firsthand taste of this culinary delight completely free. From May 27 through May 31 (between 11am and 7pm), the Madison Square Park kiosk will be handing out free samples of freshly prepared Original Roman Pinsa, while supplies last, with a voucher you can snag here. For the rest of June, the kiosk will remain open daily to serve up the tasty flatbreads from 9am to 9pm.

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  • Things to do
  • Weird & Wonderful

Now through June 9, visitors to the AKC Museum of the Dog in Midtown can check out an unusual exhibition that reimagines some of the world's most famous artworks using thousands of pieces of dog kibble. Think Mona Lisa, The Scream, The Kiss and Girl with a Pearl Earring—except every brushstroke has been replaced by carefully arranged pet food.

The installation, dubbed The Art of Breed, was created by pet nutrition company Royal Canin to celebrate the launch of its new breed-specific diet for corgis, the first new addition to the company's breed-focused nutrition line in five years. The exhibit uses kibble from Royal Canin's various breed formulas, with each shape, size and texture becoming part of the artistic medium.

  • Art

It seems that New Yorkers just can’t get enough of Andy Warhol, and the Whitney Museum of American Art is leaning into that appetite. Running through October 19, the museum will debut "Andy Warhol: Family Album," a new exhibition featuring 732 Polaroid photographs taken between 1972 and 1973 of the famed artist, specifically focusing on his social and personal life.

The selection of Polaroids is drawn from one of six Holson albums—those vintage collections that were once ubiquitous—containing hundreds of prints that Warhol himself assembled as part of his personal archive. Considering that Warhol bought his first Polaroid camera in the mid-1960s, the display draws from an archive of thousands of photographs. This exhibition, in particular, will feature a wide range of shots, from friends visiting Warhol on Long Island to images of the artist’s dog, Archie, as well as photographs from European vacations, together encompassing Warhol’s eye for capturing everyday life as a way to document relationships and social interactions.

Free things to do this Sunday

  • Shakespeare
  • Central Park
Romeo and Juliet, the earliest of Shakespeare's major tragedies, is the timeless story of teenagers who, in rebellion against their disapproving parents, have sex and then die after scoring drugs from a local priest. This version is helmed by the Public’s associate artistic director, Saheem Ali, whose credits include last year's Twelfth Night in the Park as well as Broadway's Buena Vista Social Club. Daniel Bravo Hernández and Ra’Mya Latiah Aikens play the star-crossed lovers; the supporting cast includes Deirdre O'Connell, Francis Jue, LaChanze, Glenn Fleshler and Caleb Joshua Eberhardt. Tickets are free, as always; see our complete guide to Shakespeare in the Park tickets for details.
  • Shakespeare
  • Central Park
The industrious New York Classical Theatre devotes its latest summer season to the Bard's historical tragedy, in which Roman senators bloodily veto a popular general after his leadership turns toward tyranny. If you missed the Public Theater's controversial Trump-themed production in 2017, here's another chance to see the play, minus the orange Julius. Stephen Burdman directs this peripatetic staging; the cast of nine includes Oneika Phillips and Carine Montbertrand as the honorable Brutus and Cassius, Clay Storseth as the ambitious Caesar and Paul Deo Jr. as the Roman ear borrower Mark Antony. The show kicks off in Central Park (June 2–21) before moving east to Carl Schurz Park (June 23–28) and south to Battery Park (June 30–July 5). Attendance is free, but reservations are suggested and donations are welcome. 
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  • Shakespeare
  • Carroll Gardens
William Shakespeare's tragedy imagines a world in which republican senators actually stand up to a populist leader who is arrogating imperial authority for himself. Crazy, right? Smith Street Stage's Jonathan Hopkin's directs this Brooklyn production, which marks his company's 15th year of presenting free classical theater outdoors. Louis Butelli, Amara James Aja, Katie Willmorth and Bryce Foley lead the cast of 12. (Reserve in advance to ensure chair seating, or feel free to bring your own seats and blankets.)

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