
Fort Worth
Where the West Begins with Cowboy Culture
Fort Worth keeps it real. While Dallas chases skyscrapers, Cowtown stays true to its roots with daily cattle drives, honky-tonk bars, and the kind of barbecue that makes Texans weep. The Stockyards still smell like leather and history. Downtown museums house world-renowned art collections. And the locals? They'll tip their hats and mean it. This isn't some theme park version of the West — it's the genuine article, served with a side of Texas hospitality.
Best Months
MAR · APR · MAY · OCT · NOV
~25°C · high crowds
Culture & Context
COWTOWN, NOT DALLAS
Fort Worth has a running joke among locals: it's a small town wearing a big city's hat. That's not an insult. People here genuinely say hello to strangers, hold doors, and mean it when they ask how you're doing.
Compared to Dallas, which can feel showy and status-driven, Fort Worth is slower-paced and less concerned with appearances. The Western heritage isn't cosplay here. The Fort Worth Stockyards has been operating since the late 1800s, and the twice-daily cattle drives (11:30am and 4pm on Exchange Avenue) aren't a tourist gimmick so much as a tradition that just happens to attract cameras.
Billy Bob's Texas on the Stockyards is billed as the world's largest honky-tonk. That's not marketing spin. The place is genuinely enormous, with 127,000 square feet, live bull riding on weekends, and enough neon to light a small neighborhood.
Fort Worth also has serious art credentials that visitors often miss entirely. The Kimbell Art Museum and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth both sit in the Cultural District, and the Modern's building — all 40-foot glass walls and concrete Y-shaped columns hovering above a shallow reflecting pond — is worth the visit even if you don't set foot inside. The city currently goes by several nicknames: Cowtown (the cattle history), Panther City (a different legend), Funkytown (from a song), and Where the West Begins (the official motto).
Locals use all of them depending on context and mood.
Local Customs
EVERYTHING IS COKE
Calling Fort Worth 'Cowtown' is fine and even affectionate — locals use it too. Calling it a suburb of Dallas is not fine and will earn you a cold stare.. Any carbonated drink is a 'Coke' here regardless of brand.
When ordering, they'll ask what kind — that's your cue to specify Sprite, Dr Pepper, or whatever you actually want.. The cattle drive on Exchange Avenue happens twice daily at 11:30am and 4pm. It's genuinely worth watching once, but don't stand directly in the street when the longhorns come through..
Tipping 20% at sit-down restaurants is standard. Joe T. Garcia's runs on family-style plates and a cash-only policy for certain items — check ahead..
Summers in Fort Worth are brutal. Locals plan outdoor activities before 10am or after 7pm from June through September. If you're out at noon in July, no one will help you — they're all inside..
The parking situation around Sundance Square is manageable but not free. The garages off Commerce and 3rd Street are your best options on busy weekend nights.. Billy Bob's Texas has live bull riding on Friday and Saturday nights.
It's free with admission. Standing near the ring is loud, chaotic, and genuinely fun — don't skip it if you're there.. Fort Worth B-Cycle bike share is available but check the map before riding — dedicated lanes are limited and some stretches require real confidence on a bike..
When someone says they're 'fixin' to' do something, they mean they're about to do it — not that anything is broken.. At the Stockyards, the shops and restaurants on Exchange Avenue get very touristy and prices reflect that. Walk one block off the main drag and things get more local and cheaper.
Safety
WATCH YOUR CAR
Fort Worth gets a C+ overall crime grade in 2026, with an overall crime rate sitting about 3% below the national average. It's meaningfully safer than Dallas and Houston, though that's a low bar. The bigger concern is property crime.
The Stockyards and Cultural District see the highest volume of property offenses, specifically larceny and vehicle break-ins. Don't leave anything visible in your car, anywhere. Tourist areas like Sundance Square and the Cultural District are generally safe during the day and in the early evening.
After 9pm, much of downtown outside Sundance Square empties out fast. Take a rideshare late at night rather than walking unfamiliar blocks. The east side of Fort Worth has the highest crime concentration.
Areas like Stop Six and parts of the southeast rate poorly. You won't accidentally end up there as a tourist, but it's worth knowing. For visitors, the main day-to-day risks are petty theft and car break-ins, not violent crime.
Keep your bag close at crowded festivals. The northwest side of the city (Keller, Park Glen, Cobblestone) is the safest part of town for residents. Fort Worth Police have a Crime Data Center dashboard online where you can check specific neighborhoods before you go.
Getting Around
CAR OR WALKABLE
Fort Worth is easier to navigate than Dallas because it's smaller and the major attractions cluster into three zones: the Stockyards (north), Downtown/Sundance Square (center), and the Cultural District (west). Trinity Metro calls these the Western Triangle. A car is the most practical tool, but you can manage without one if you're staying downtown and not straying far.
Bus Route #15 gets you from downtown hotels to the Stockyards on Saturdays. Routes #1 and #2 cover Magnolia Avenue and Camp Bowie respectively. For the airport, TEXRail from T&P Station or Central Station runs to DFW Terminal B for $2.
50 each way. The train runs 7 days a week. One quirk: signage at the T&P Station is confusing.
Walk through the brew pub attached to the building to find the actual train entrance. On the platform, the train may display "Fort Worth" rather than "DFW" — don't panic, just confirm with another passenger which direction you're heading. If you're headed to Dallas for any reason, the TRE is the sensible call.
Traffic on I-30 between the two cities is genuinely brutal during rush hours. For 2026, the FIFA World Cup brings nine matches to nearby AT&T Stadium in Arlington. Officials say plan for 90 minutes travel time and start heading out four hours before kickoff.
Useful Phrases
Where to Stay in Fort Worth
3 recommended properties
Itineraries coming soon
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Money-Saving Tips
- 1.Free cattle drives happen twice daily in the Stockyards — 11:30am and 4pm
- 2.Many museums offer free admission on select days — check individual websites
- 3.Happy hour at Stockyards bars runs 4-7pm with $3 beer specials
- 4.Street parking downtown is free on weekends and after 6pm weekdays
- 5.Food trucks around downtown serve $8-12 meals versus $20+ at sit-down restaurants
- 6.Trinity Bike Share day passes cost $8 versus $15+ for rideshares between attractions
Travel Tips
- •Wear comfortable walking shoes — Stockyards sidewalks are uneven brick and wood
- •Bring cash for Joe T. Garcia's and some Stockyards vendors
- •Download the TEXRail app for easy train tickets between downtown and DFW Airport
- •Book Stockyards hotels early during Stock Show season (January) — prices triple
- •Check severe weather alerts March-May — Fort Worth sits in tornado alley
- •Many attractions close Mondays — plan museum visits Tuesday through Sunday


