
ValidaTrip / Things to do in Lisbon
Things to do in Lisbon in November 2026
By ValidaTrip Research · Updated May 20, 2026
Quick answer: Lisbon in November 2026 usually runs near 18C by day, 12C at night, with about 10 rainy days.
Good starting points are Oceanario de Lisboa, Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, and Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga.
Check the event list and public holidays below before assigning fixed dates.
Events, festivals, and public holidays for Lisbon, Portugal, in November 2026.
The point is making sure the places you already want to see are actually open on the days you'll be there.
Planning a Lisbon trip in November?
Paste the recommendations you've collected — from friends, a ChatGPT itinerary, or blog listicles. ValidaTrip checks every place against your November dates: opening hours, closures, what needs booking ahead, and which Lisbon events overlap your trip.
No account needed to try it.
Month context
Lisbon in November: weather, seasonal timing, and what changes.
Lisbon weather in November
High
18°C
Low
11.9°C
Rain
10d
135mm
9.8h daylight
What to prioritize in November
Prioritize Oceanario de Lisboa, Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga, Castelo de Sao Jorge, Mosteiro dos Jeronimos.
Dates to check
Events, festivals, and closures in Lisbon.
Public holidays & closures in November 2026
On these dates banks, government offices, and many attractions in Portugal close or switch to holiday hours. Worth checking before you pin a must-see to one of them.
- Nov 1All Saints Day
City context
What Lisbon is known for before you choose what to prioritize.
Known for
City context
Lisbon is a Tagus River capital built across seven hills, with Alfama lanes, Baixa Pombalina grids, Bairro Alto climbs, and Belem monuments showing how the 1755 earthquake and Atlantic navigation shaped the city. Baixa and Chiado make the central walking spine, Alfama and Graca hold the older Moorish street pattern, and Parque das Nacoes adds the Expo 98 riverfront east of the center.
Food & drink
Local flavor
Lisbon food centers on pasteis de nata, bacalhau a bras, grilled sardines, caldo verde, bifana sandwiches, amêijoas à Bulhao Pato, ginjinha, and seafood rice. Time Out Market in Mercado da Ribeira, Rua das Portas de Santo Antao, Belem pastry shops, Alfama fado restaurants, and Cais do Sodre counters give the most useful first eating route.
Things to do
Attractions and sights to consider in Lisbon.
Things to do in Lisbon
Map of top sights in Lisbon
- 1Oceanario de Lisboa
- 2Calouste Gulbenkian Museum
- 3Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga
- 4Castelo de Sao Jorge
- 5Mosteiro dos Jeronimos
- 6Se de Lisboa
- 1
Oceanario de Lisboa
4.7★ · 101,140indoorOpen dailyThe Oceanarium opened for Expo 98 in Parque das Nacoes and remains the eastern waterfront district highlight. Its central tank and marine exhibits work well with the cable car and Oriente station area.
- 2
Calouste Gulbenkian Museum
4.7★ · 17,594indoorThe Gulbenkian complex north of Baixa holds an art collection, modern center, gardens, and performance spaces. It gives Lisbon a museum day outside the older riverfront loop.
Wikipedia - 3
Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga
4.6★ · 7,471indoorThe National Museum of Ancient Art sits in the Lapa-Santos area with Portuguese, European, African, and Asian works shaped by maritime trade. It is one of the strongest indoor choices when rain interrupts viewpoints.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4Castelo de Sao Jorge
- 5Mosteiro dos Jeronimos
- 6Se de Lisboa
- 7Praca do Comercio
- 8Padrao dos Descobrimentos
- 9Torre de Belem
- 10Santa Justa Lift
Areas and routes
Neighborhoods, day trips, and getting around Lisbon.
Lisbon neighborhoods
Each district has its own character — knowing which one you're in changes what's realistic to fit in a day.
Alfama and Graca
Alfama and Graca are steep, irregular, and old, with Sao Jorge Castle, Lisbon Cathedral, fado rooms, miradouros, tile walls, and tram 28 passing tight corners.
Baixa and Rossio
Baixa is the 1755 earthquake rebuild, with Rua Augusta, Praca do Comercio, Rossio, Praca da Figueira, and flat streets that make the easiest first-day walk.
Chiado and Bairro Alto
Chiado and Bairro Alto sit above Baixa with Carmo ruins, theatres, bookstores, Rua Garrett shops, tiny bars, fado rooms, and elevators or funiculars for the climb.
Belem and Ajuda
Belem and Ajuda face the Tagus with Jeronimos Monastery, Belem Tower, the Monument to the Discoveries, the coach museum, gardens, and pasteis de nata queues.
Cais do Sodre and Santos
Cais do Sodre and Santos link ferry piers, the Time Out Market, Pink Street bars, design shops, and train access to Cascais and Estoril.
Parque das Nacoes
Parque das Nacoes is Expo 98 Lisbon, with Oriente station, the Oceanarium, river promenades, cable cars, modern hotels, and broad bike paths.
Day trips from Lisbon
Doable as a long day or comfortable as an overnight — each one is a destination on its own.
30km / about 40min by train from Rossio station
Sintra
Sintra has Pena Palace, the Moorish Castle, Quinta da Regaleira, forested hills, and a cooler microclimate. Start early because palace buses and ticket lines crowd by late morning.
32km / about 40min by train from Cais do Sodre
Cascais
Cascais adds beaches, marina walks, Boca do Inferno, and easy access to Estoril along the coast. It is the simplest sunny afternoon outside Lisbon.
135km / about 1.5h by train or bus from Lisbon
Evora
Evora has Roman temple columns, medieval walls, whitewashed Alentejo streets, and the Chapel of Bones. It is a longer day than Sintra but gives a different inland Portugal frame.
Getting around
Use Navegante cards for Lisbon Metro, Carris buses, trams, funiculars, suburban trains, and ferries; metro lines are strongest for airport, Baixa-Chiado, Santa Apolonia, and Oriente. Tram 15E reaches Belem from the center, tram 28E crosses Alfama and Bairro Alto hills, and walking works best inside Baixa, Chiado, and Alfama if cobblestones and slopes are manageable.
How to plan Lisbon in November
- 1
Anchor the month
Use the Lisbon weather, seasonal timing, and attraction list as the spine because the dated November event list is still sparse.
- 2
Protect closure days
Hold flexible plans around the 1 public holiday in Portugal; museums, markets, and government-run sights can switch hours.
- 3
Group and validate
Group each Lisbon day by nearby neighborhoods, then validate the saved places against your trip dates before exporting the checked route to Google Maps.
Best rainy-day things to do in Lisbon in November
November averages 10 rainy days in Lisbon, so keep these indoor stops as realistic backups.
Oceanario de Lisboa
The Oceanarium opened for Expo 98 in Parque das Nacoes and remains the eastern waterfront district highlight. Its central tank and marine exhibits work well with the cable car and Oriente station area.
Calouste Gulbenkian Museum
The Gulbenkian complex north of Baixa holds an art collection, modern center, gardens, and performance spaces. It gives Lisbon a museum day outside the older riverfront loop.
Museu Nacional de Arte Antiga
The National Museum of Ancient Art sits in the Lapa-Santos area with Portuguese, European, African, and Asian works shaped by maritime trade. It is one of the strongest indoor choices when rain interrupts viewpoints.
Castelo de Sao Jorge
The hilltop castle above Alfama preserves medieval walls, towers, archaeological layers, and some of the clearest views over Baixa and the Tagus. The site crowns the rock that helped Alfama survive the 1755 earthquake better than the lower town.
Mosteiro dos Jeronimos
The Manueline monastery in Belem is tied to Portugal maritime expansion and Vasco da Gama memory. Its church, cloisters, carved stonework, and proximity to the Belem riverfront make it the anchor sight west of the center.
What to pack for Lisbon in November
Pack from the monthly climate profile, not a generic Lisbon checklist.
- Layerable daytime clothes for average highs around 18C.
- A light evening layer because nights average 12C.
- Compact rain gear and shoes that handle wet pavement across about 10 rainy days.
How many days do you need in Lisbon
4 days covers the main Lisbon highlights at a realistic pace. Add 3 extra days if you want the listed day trips.
Is Lisbon worth visiting in November
Yes. Lisbon in November: 18°C high, 11.9°C low, 135mm rain over 10 days, 9.8h daylight. Mild but rainy — flexible plans pay off.
Validate your list
Turn this into a Lisbon plan that actually works
All your recs in one place
Paste what friends, ChatGPT, and blogs gave you for Lisbon. ValidaTrip pulls out each place and sorts it — no spreadsheet by hand.
Open on your dates
Every place checked against the days you're actually in Lisbon, with timed tickets and reservation-only spots flagged while you can still get a slot.
Export to Google Maps
Send the cleaned, checked, and neighborhood-grouped plan to Google Maps so your Lisbon days are ready to navigate.
Questions
- What's on in Lisbon in November 2026?
- We're still compiling the November 2026 event list for Lisbon. Public holidays and opening-hour checks still apply to whatever you're planning.
- Are there public holidays in Lisbon during November 2026?
- All Saints Day (Nov 1). Banks, government offices, and some attractions close or run holiday hours on these days.
- Will the places on my list be open when I'm in Lisbon in November?
- Not always. Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season, and holiday. Paste your Lisbon list into ValidaTrip and it checks every place against the exact dates you're there, flagging closures before the trip instead of at a locked door.
- How do I plan Lisbon days without crossing the city twice?
- ValidaTrip groups your places by neighborhood so each day stays in one or two areas instead of zig-zagging. It also flags what needs booking ahead, so timed tickets and reservations don't fall through.















