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Clam Dunk: Boston’s winning streak of tall ships, World Cup and chowder

If Boston's on your 'been there, done that' list, 2026 will rewrite the script. Beantown will swap its history-book image for a front-row seat to milestone anniversaries, world-class sports, and cultural celebrations that will spill across neighbourhoods, piers, and parks. From tall ships filling the harbour to FIFA goals shaking the stands, Boston is building a calendar that turns a great stopover into a must-book journey.

If Boston’s on your ‘been there, done that’ list, 2026 will rewrite the script. Beantown will swap its history-book image for a front-row seat to milestone anniversaries, world-class sports, and cultural celebrations that will spill across neighbourhoods, piers, and parks. From tall ships filling the harbour to FIFA goals shaking the stands, Boston is building a calendar that turns a great stopover into a must-book journey.

Meet Boston President & CEO Martha Sheridan said the scale and variety of the line-up was “an embarrassment of riches” for travellers.

“We’ve got reasons to come now, and reasons to come back again,” she told Karryon, pointing to the mix of milestone anniversaries, major sporting events and cultural celebrations that will pull visitors into every corner of the city.

Party like it’s 1776 (and 2026)

In 2026, Boston will throw itself into the United States’ 250th birthday with a citywide program of parades, concerts and celebrations, in what Sheridan calls “a once-in-a-lifetime convergence of history and celebration.”

On 17 March, Boston will lean into its Irish roots while raising a glass to a little revolutionary payback. Evacuation Day (the anniversary of the 1776 British retreat from the city) lands squarely on St Patrick’s Day, turning the streets into a mash‑up of shamrocks, parades and pride. Call it a history lesson with a Guinness chaser.

By July, the Charles River Esplanade will be the best seat in the house for the Boston Pops’ Fourth of July concert, complete with fireworks and Harbourfest spilling across the waterfront.

“Tens of thousands line up with blankets at dawn and they stay all day for the music, the views and the energy,” Sheridan said.

Sport will take over from June to early July as Boston hosts seven FIFA World Cup matches, including a quarter-final.

And if the roar of the crowd isn’t enough, stick around as Sail Boston 2026 brings in more than 100 ships from around the globe, 25 of them towering tall ships. Hotels are even adopting vessels, like the Colonnade teaming with Italy’s Amerigo Vespucci for a harbour-meets-high-style celebration.

Chowder, cannoli and culinary curveballs

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Newbury Street in Boston is one of the many great places to grab a great bite

Visitors can still queue for a bowl of creamy clam chowder at Quincy Market or tackle a lobster roll the size of a forearm, and yes, they’re worth it, but the real surprises are tucked into Boston’s 23 neighbourhoods.

According to Sheridan, the North End delivers classic Italian fare alongside family bakeries that have been rolling cannoli dough for generations. East Boston offers Latin American menus where English isn’t always the first language. Dorchester and Roxbury dish up African and Caribbean flavours, and Chinatown, the fourth-largest in the US, remains a genuine community hub as well as a dining destination.

She added that Boston is as much a “seafood-to-table” city as it is farm-to-table, with smaller family-run restaurants serving affordable, deeply rooted, and culturally distinctive meals that reflect the city’s immigrant heritage.

Cobblestones, cocktails and tax‑free seasons

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Cobblestones and charm in Boston’s Beacon Hill.

Boston’s split personality is part of its charm. On one side, you’ve got the postcard streets of Back Bay and Beacon Hill, all brick facades and gas lamps. On the other, the Seaport District, where glass towers look out over the harbour and you can go from an F1 Arcade race to indoor golf at Puttshack, then warm up with outdoor curling or a mulled wine at Snowport’s winter pop-up.

Sheridan said winter is when the city shows its softer side, with hotel rates dropping (Boston is one of the few in the US with two Four Seasons properties), fire pits glowing, and locals lingering over hot drinks in Boston and Cambridge.

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Boston Common glows under a fresh winter blanket.

Come the winter holidays, the city turns it on: parks strung with lights, Newbury Street buzzing with shoppers, the Seaport hosting its seasonal markets, and a twice‑nightly laser show from Thanksgiving to Christmas.

And with Massachusetts waiving sales tax on items under US$175, it’s also prime time to squeeze in a little extra, from a designer scarf to a Sox cap or a Newbury Street splurge, before you zip up the suitcase.

But the real takeaway isn’t in your suitcase. It’s the city’s stories, tastes and surprises. They’re tax-free too. 

READ MORE FROM EAST COAST USA: 
Destination DC – Our exclusive interview with Elliott Ferguson, President & CEO of Destination DC, reveals the real DC—culture, food, inclusivity & beyond the monuments. Read more here.
Philadelphia CVB – In our interview with Gregg Caren, President & CEO of Philadelphia CVB, discover how the city will celebrate America’s 250th with history, food & FIFA 2026. Read here.

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This article is brought to you by Meet Boston and Brand USA:

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