Honestly, the subway is the single most powerful tool for navigating travel conditions in NYC. It bypasses traffic entirely. No congestion pricing headaches, no gridlocked avenues during peak hours.
But here’s the thing that trips up most visitors: local vs. express trains. Express trains skip stations and move significantly faster. The A, C, and E lines or the 2, 3, 4, and 5 trains run express on major stretches. Know which one to board before you’re standing on the platform, confused.
| Line | Express? | Best Use |
| 1 | Local only | Slower West Side stops |
| 2 / 3 | Express | Fast Midtown to Lower Manhattan |
| 4 / 5 | Express | East Side, very reliable |
| A | Partial express | JFK, West Side |
| N/Q/R/W | Mix | Times Square, Brooklyn |
Most of Manhattan runs on a numbered grid that’s actually pretty logical. Streets go east-west, avenues go north-south, and numbers increase heading uptown. Simple enough.
But the grid breaks in a few specific spots that confuse almost everyone: