7/18/2025 • 3 min read
Budget Olympics: Best Cheap Eats & Free Things To Do Between Events
How to enjoy the Olympic Games in Los Angeles without breaking the bank. Find the best cheap eats and free activities.

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Budget Olympics: Best Cheap Eats & Free Things To Do Between Events
Watching the Olympics in Los Angeles doesn’t have to wreck your wallet. With a little planning you can feast between sessions, soak up culture, and dodge tourist traps—all while keeping cash for marquee events.
Budget playbook at a glance
- Load a TAP card with day passes instead of buying single fares—$5.25 covers unlimited Metro rides after 9 a.m.
- Anchor your lodging in a neighborhood with bundled breakfast; our best areas to stay guide highlights value pick pockets.
- Bring a reusable water bottle and snacks; outside food is permitted at many fan zones when sealed.
- Track happy hour windows—LA’s weekday deals often run 3–6 p.m., perfect between afternoon and evening sessions.
Cheap eats by venue cluster
Downtown & Coliseum Corridor
- Tacos 1986 (South Park): $4 asada tacos, open late post-ceremony.
- Smorgasburg LA pop-ups: Olympic edition brings $2 dumplings and budget-friendly boba.
- Students’ Choice Deli (USC Village): Sandwich combo under $10; ideal if you’re heading back to the Coliseum.
Inglewood & SoFi Stadium
- Dulan’s Soul Food: Split the $18 plate for a comforting pre-game meal.
- Stuff I Eat: Vegan platters ($16–$20) that easily feed two hungry fans.
- Market at Hollywood Park: Grab-and-go bowls and salads for under $12.
Santa Monica & Long Beach
- Bay Cities Deli picnic: Legendary Godmother sandwich feeds two for $14; walk it to the beach.
- Sidecar Doughnuts happy hour: Afternoon promotions align with beach volleyball breaks.
- Long Beach Waterfront food trucks: Rotating lineup with $8 poke bowls and aguas frescas.
Looking for sit-down options near crypto.com Arena? Pair this with our DTLA food & nightlife guide.
Free (or nearly free) experiences between sessions
- Exposition Park museums: Natural History Museum and California Science Center operate on donation entry during LA28 morning hours.
- Grand Park concerts: Daily programming with live DJs and cooling stations.
- Venice Boardwalk & Muscle Beach exhibitions: LA28 will host pop-up sport clinics—spectator-friendly and free to join.
- Griffith Observatory hikes: Car-free? Ride the DASH Observatory bus for $1.25 and take in sunset views.
Relaxing day needed? Check our Venice & Santa Monica itinerary for beachy, cost-conscious ideas.
Transit hacks to save cash
- Metro’s 7-Day pass ($25) pays for itself after eight rides; perfect for fans bouncing between SoFi, the Coliseum, and Long Beach.
- LADOT is offering free DASH service along Olympic corridors—download the Transit app for live tracking.
- Metrolink weekend pass ($15) covers Santa Clarita, San Bernardino, and Orange County trips for surf or hillside getaways.
- Bike share unlocks drop to $1 with Olympic code “LA28RIDE”—ideal for short hops from stations to venues.
FAQs
Q: Can I bring my own food into venues?
A: Most venues allow sealed snacks and empty water bottles. Check the LA28 spectator guide for size limits—clear bags only.
Q: How do I keep rideshare prices down?
A: Walk a block or two away from official pickup zones, share rides with other fans, or wait 20 minutes after the final whistle for surge pricing to drop.

