Burlington
CITY GUIDE

Burlington

Vermont's lakeside college town with craft beer culture

Burlington sits pretty on Lake Champlain's eastern shore, where University of Vermont students mix with craft beer enthusiasts and outdoor lovers. This isn't your typical college town—it's got the energy of youth but the sophistication of a place that takes its food and drink seriously. The Adirondacks rise across the water while Church Street buzzes with local shops and restaurants that source from Vermont farms. You'll find more breweries per capita here than almost anywhere else, plus a waterfront that actually lives up to the hype.

Best Months

MAY – OCT

~23°C · high crowds

Culture & Context

PROGRESSIVE COLLEGE TOWN

Burlington is the largest city in Vermont, which still only puts it at around 45,000 people. That size is important. It means you get a real downtown with a music scene, good restaurants, and a university (UVM), but without the anonymity of an actual city.

People make eye contact. Strangers say hello. It's not small-town performative friendliness either — it's just a place that hasn't gotten too big yet.

The city has a strong independent, progressive streak going back to Bernie Sanders' time as mayor in the 1980s. Buying local is genuinely a value here, not a marketing slogan. The outdoor culture is serious.

Lake Champlain in summer and ski resorts (Stowe, Sugarbush, Bolton) in winter define a lot of how residents spend their free time. And Vermont's farm-to-table food movement started somewhere — it started here and in the farms surrounding the Champlain Valley. One honest downside: Burlington can feel a bit insular.

It's a small city that knows it's special, and that self-awareness occasionally tips into smugness. The rents keep rising, longtime residents are getting priced out, and housing is a genuine tension point. Also worth noting: the rest of Vermont quietly insists that Burlington isn't really Vermont.

Which tells you something about both places.

Local Customs

BUY LOCAL, THINK POLITICS

Vermonters describe distance in time, not miles. 'It's 45 minutes from here' might mean 10 miles on a back road or 60 miles on the interstate. Ask for time estimates, not distances..

Green Up Day is the first Saturday of May statewide. Everyone picks up roadside trash. If you're visiting that weekend and someone hands you a bag, just go with it..

Tipping norms are the same as the rest of the US. 20% is the baseline at sit-down restaurants in Burlington. Church Street spots can feel like they're pushing hard for it.

Use your judgment.. Burlington has a strong buy-local culture. Locals will notice if you walk past independent shops to hit a chain.

The Church Street co-op (City Market) is where locals actually shop.. The lake is the social center of summer. Everyone has a plan involving Lake Champlain from May through September.

Sunsets at Battery Park are a nightly ritual, not a special occasion.. Nudity is technically legal in Vermont in public. This comes up more in hiking contexts than in Burlington proper, but worth knowing..

Dogs are everywhere, indoors and out. Many Church Street restaurants have outdoor seating that's dog-friendly. Nobody thinks twice about it..

Politics come up. Burlington is progressive. It was Bernie Sanders' political launchpad.

If you're visiting from somewhere with different politics, just listen more than you talk.

Safety

MOSTLY SAFE, WATCH CARS

Burlington is one of the safer small cities in the US. Violent crime is well below the national average. That said, property crime (especially theft from cars) is higher than you'd expect for a city this size.

Lock your car and leave nothing visible inside. The Old North End and North Winooski Avenue see more activity late at night, and the area around the bus terminal has visible signs of the opioid crisis that Vermont is dealing with honestly and openly. None of this is aimed at tourists.

But walking around at 2 AM alone in unfamiliar areas is never smart in any city. Vermont's Good Samaritan law protects people who call 911 for a suspected overdose. Emergencies go to UVM Medical Center at 111 Colchester Ave, about a mile from downtown.

MedExpress Urgent Care near University Mall handles non-emergencies for less. Winter weather is the underrated hazard. Burlington gets over 80 inches of snow annually.

If you're driving, make sure your tires are actually winter-rated, not just all-season. Ice on hills near the waterfront is no joke.

Getting Around

WALKABLE, BIKE-FRIENDLY DOWNTOWN

Green Mountain Transit (GMT) is the city's bus system, run out of the Downtown Transit Center on Saint Paul Street between Pearl and Cherry streets. It's functional for getting around Burlington and reaching South Burlington, Winooski, and surrounding towns. As of August 2025, buses run every 15 minutes between downtown and South Burlington's City Center.

UVM students and staff ride free with a valid ID. Uber and Lyft both operate in Burlington. Wait times are reasonable during the day, less reliable late at night after bar close.

The Burlington Bike Path runs 8 miles along the waterfront and is one of the best ways to get around in warm months. You can rent bikes from local shops near the waterfront. Patrick Leahy Burlington International Airport is in neighboring South Burlington, about 3 miles from downtown.

It's small and easy to navigate. No direct rail into Burlington proper, but Amtrak's Vermonter and Ethan Allen Express serve nearby stations. Megabus runs from the Downtown Transit Center to Boston.

For exploring the wider region, you really need a car. Vermont's roads are beautiful and the distances between towns are real.

Useful Phrases

FlatlanderFLAT-lan-der
Anyone who wasn't born in Vermont. It's technically a mild insult from old-timers, but most people use it affectionately now. If someone calls you a flatlander, take it as an invitation to prove them wrong.
Jeezum Crow!JEE-zum Crow
Vermont's polite version of 'Jesus Christ.' Use it when something surprises or frustrates you. Locals will grin.
You can't get there from hereStandard English
What a Vermonter says when you ask for directions east or west. The roads don't go in straight lines. This is not a joke. It is just true.
Hard tellin', not knowin'Hard TEL-in, not KNO-in
Nobody knows. The Vermont shrug. Use when asked about the weather, the wait at a restaurant, or anything else that's genuinely uncertain.
CreemeeCREAM-ee
Soft-serve ice cream. Maple creemee is the local version. Do not call it soft serve. You will be identified as a flatlander immediately.
The 802Eight-oh-two
Vermont's area code, used as a shorthand for the state and its identity. 'Are you 802?' means 'Are you from Vermont?'
Stick seasonStandard English
The stretch between when the leaves fall and when the snow arrives. Everything is brown and bare. Not a tourist season. Locals actually love it.
Mud seasonStandard English
Late winter into spring, when snowmelt turns dirt roads into something close to quicksand. Vermont's unofficial fifth season. Plan boots accordingly.

Where to Stay in Burlington

2 recommended properties

Itineraries coming soon

We're working on adding amazing itineraries for Burlington. In the meantime, try the app to create your own!

Downtown Burlington puts you in the thick of things. Church Street Marketplace is pedestrian-only and lined with local shops, while the nearby waterfront gives you lake views without the tourist trap feel. The Hill Section, just south of downtown, offers Victorian B&Bs and easy walks to everything. Look, if you want chain hotels, head to South Burlington near the airport. But you'll miss the character. The Hilton Burlington on Battery Street gives you downtown convenience with actual parking—a rare find here. For something different, try the Made Inn Vermont on Shelburne Road, where each room has local art and craft beer on tap. Shelburne, 10 minutes south, works if you prefer quiet luxury. The Inn at Shelburne Farms sits on a working farm with Lake Champlain views. But you'll need a car to get anywhere, and downtown Burlington's energy is the whole point of coming here.

Money-Saving Tips

  • 1.Happy hour at most breweries runs 4-6 PM with $1-2 off pints
  • 2.Church Street Marketplace has free WiFi and public restrooms
  • 3.Burlington City Parks offer free beach access at North Beach and Leddy Park
  • 4.UVM campus tours are free and include the beautiful Lake Champlain views
  • 5.Many restaurants offer early bird specials before 6 PM
  • 6.Green Mountain Transit day passes cost $3 for unlimited rides
  • 7.Free parking is available at the waterfront on weekends after 6 PM
  • 8.Burlington Farmers Market on Saturday mornings has free samples
  • 9.The Flynn Center offers $10 student rush tickets 30 minutes before shows
  • 10.Bike rentals cost less per day than downtown parking fees

Travel Tips

  • Download the Green Mountain Transit app for real-time bus schedules
  • Make dinner reservations at least a week ahead, especially for Hen of the Wood
  • Bring layers even in summer - lake breezes can be surprisingly cool
  • Church Street Marketplace shops close early on Sundays
  • The Island Line Trail gets crowded on sunny weekends - go early morning
  • Vermont doesn't allow billboards, so GPS can be unreliable in rural areas
  • Most breweries stop serving food by 9 PM even if they're open later
  • Burlington International Airport is small - arrive 90 minutes early max
  • Lake Champlain can have strong currents - swim at designated beaches only
  • Parking meters downtown are free after 6 PM and all day Sunday

Frequently Asked Questions

Absolutely. Downtown Burlington and the waterfront are completely walkable, and you can reach most restaurants and attractions on foot. The city runs free shuttles to UVM, and bike rentals let you explore the lakefront trail. You'll only need a car for day trips to places like Stowe or Montpelier.

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