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How to choose the right neighborhood for a group trip

A neighborhood-picking framework for groups, plus shortlists for Lisbon, Mexico City, Paris, Tokyo, Marrakech, Cape Town, and Medellín.

The neighborhood you pick for a group trip affects the trip more than the destination does.

Same city, two neighborhoods, completely different trips. A squad in Tokyo’s Shibuya gets a neon, late-night, bar-crawl trip. The same squad two miles east in Yanaka gets a quiet, food-walk, museum trip. Both are “Tokyo” — but the trip is shaped by the four blocks around your accommodation, not the city.

This guide is the framework for choosing neighborhoods that actually work for group travel, plus a curated shortlist for the seven destinations TripSquad covers in depth.

What you’ll find here

The 5 criteria for a group-trip neighborhood

For solo travel, neighborhood choice is mostly aesthetic. For group travel, it’s logistical. The five things that matter:

#CriterionWhy it matters
1WalkabilityCalling 7 Ubers every dinner kills momentum. Look for “everything within 15 minutes on foot.”
2Restaurant densitySquads are spontaneous. Need to be able to walk out and pick something.
3Group-accommodation availabilitySome neighborhoods are entirely studio rentals. Look for actual 2-4BR options.
4Safety at nightThe squad will be coming home at 1am. The neighborhood needs to feel fine then.
5Easy ground transportMetro / tram / cheap rideshare to the airport, the must-see spot, and any day-trip launchpad.

A great group-trip neighborhood scores 5/5. A workable one scores 4/5. Below 4 and you’re better off picking a different neighborhood in the same city.

How to evaluate a neighborhood in 10 minutes

Open Google Maps. Center it on the neighborhood. Zoom to about 8 blocks across.

  1. Count the restaurants visible. Fewer than 20? Sparse. 30-50? Good. 60+? Dense and walkable.
  2. Look at the streets. Grid-like, residential, or mixed-use? Mixed-use (shops on street level, apartments above) is what you want.
  3. Switch to satellite view. Are there parks within 5 minutes? Plazas? A waterfront? These are the squad’s natural meeting points.
  4. Check transit. Are there 2+ metro/tram stops within 10 minutes? More options = more flexibility.
  5. Read 3 recent reviews of any Airbnb or hotel in the area. The “what was it like at night” feedback is what you can’t get from photos.

If the neighborhood passes all 5, it’s a candidate. Two or three candidates per destination is enough to decide between.

Neighborhood shortlists by destination

These are the neighborhoods we’d recommend for first-time squads in each of the seven destinations TripSquad covers. Each links out to the full destination guide for context.

Lisbon (squad-fit: A+)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
AlfamaTile stairs, fado bars, oldest quarterFirst-time visit, food-focused squad, photo-ready trip
ChiadoCentral, polished, cafe-heavyMixed-age groups, central convenience
Príncipe RealBoutique, design-y, gardensSquads who want quieter mornings, design-minded

Skip: Bairro Alto (loud all night, hard for sleeping squad members), Cais do Sodré (party district, fine for some squads but not most).

Full Lisbon guide →

Mexico City (squad-fit: A+)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
Roma NorteCafés, bookshops, food-centricFirst-time squad, food + design lovers
CondesaParks, art deco, walkable streetsSlower-paced trip, brunches
Centro HistóricoColonial, museums, cathedralsHistory-focused squads, day trips

Skip: Polanco (luxury-shopping focused, less interesting), Coyoacán (charming but far from main attractions).

Full Mexico City guide →

Paris (squad-fit: limited but workable)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
Le Marais (3rd/4th)Historic, cafés, central, walkableFirst Paris trip
South Pigalle (9th)Locals more than tourists, cool food sceneRepeat visitors
Le 11ème (Bastille / Oberkampf)Bistros, late-night, less touristyYounger squads, food-focused

Skip: 7th around the Eiffel (touristy and pricey), Champs-Élysées (the bad mall of Paris).

Full Paris guide →

Tokyo (squad-fit: 2-4 ideal)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
ShibuyaEnergy, nightlife, shoppingSquads who want the maximalist Tokyo
ShimokitazawaIndie, vintage, cafe-quietYounger squad, design-minded
Yanaka / NezuOld Tokyo, temples, traditionalSlower-paced, history + food

Skip: Roppongi (expat bar district, doesn’t represent Tokyo), Akihabara (specific niche, fine to visit but don’t sleep there).

Full Tokyo guide →

Marrakech (squad-fit: A)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
MedinaInside the old walls, riads, souksFirst-time visit, full sensory immersion
Gueliz (New City)Modern, restaurants, less intenseRepeat visitors, mixed-age squads
HivernageHotels, palm-lined boulevardsOlder squads, milestone trips

Skip: Anywhere far from the medina if it’s a first trip — you’ll spend the whole trip commuting in.

Full Marrakech guide →

Cape Town (squad-fit: A)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
Sea Point / Green PointCoastal, walkable, great foodFirst-time squad, summer trips
Camps BayBeach-front, sunset viewsMilestone trips, photogenic squads
Bo-KaapColorful houses, centralPhoto-walking, mid-stay base

Skip: Newer suburbs like Century City (sterile, far from anything).

Full Cape Town guide →

Medellín (squad-fit: A)

NeighborhoodVibeBest for
El PobladoCafés, nightlife, expat-friendlyFirst-time visit, younger squads
LaurelesLocal, quieter, residentialSquads who want less tourist density
Centro / Comuna 13Day-trip area, not a baseComuna 13 street-art day, but don’t sleep here

Skip: El Centro for sleeping (great for day visits, not safe at night for tourists).

Full Medellín guide →

Common mistakes squads make

1. Picking the cheapest neighborhood without checking the commute. Saving $50/night and then spending $30/day in rideshares wipes the savings.

2. Picking a “trendy” neighborhood that’s exclusively studios. Trendy = young = solo travelers = small apartments. If you need a 4BR, the trendy neighborhood probably doesn’t have one.

3. Defaulting to the city center. City centers are often touristy, expensive, and dead at night when locals go home. The “neighborhood the locals actually live in” is usually a 15-minute walk away and twice as good.

4. Splitting the squad across two neighborhoods to save money. The split breaks the squad chat dynamic. Better to upgrade everyone to one good neighborhood than spread across two okay ones.

5. Not checking the neighborhood’s walkability score. Sites like walkscore.com give a quick read. Below 70 = car-dependent.

FAQs

How much does the neighborhood matter compared to the property? About equal. A great property in a bad neighborhood is a worse trip than an okay property in a great neighborhood. The squad spends 10-12 hours/day outside the property; the location matters more than people expect.

What if our squad has different neighborhood preferences? Most cities have 2-3 neighborhoods that satisfy 80% of preferences. Find the one that’s the median and book there. Use approval voting on a shortlist of 3 if needed.

Should we book the airbnb or the neighborhood first? Pick the accommodation configuration first (Airbnb-style or hotel-style), then narrow to neighborhoods where that configuration is achievable in budget, then pick the specific property.

How do we know a neighborhood is safe at night? Look at recent Google Maps reviews of restaurants in the neighborhood — note any mentions of “felt unsafe walking back.” Check r/travel for the city. Ask in r/[city] if you’re unsure. Local subreddits are usually candid about which neighborhoods to avoid after dark.

Are tourist-heavy neighborhoods bad? Not always. They’re typically safe, walkable, and have lots of options — that’s why tourists are there. The trade-off is higher prices and lower authenticity. For a squad’s first trip to a city, a moderately tourist-heavy neighborhood is usually right. For repeat visits, branch out.


Written by the team at TripSquad — the group-coordination app that handles invites, voting, accommodation picks, and booking lock-in for trips of 1 to 12. Try it free →