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Getting Around
The Charleston peninsula is best explored on foot or bicycle — the historic district is compact, flat, and rewards slow movement. The DASH trolley connects the visitor center to the French Quarter and City Market for free. A car is useful for Magnolia Plantation, McLeod Plantation, Folly Beach, and Sullivan's Island, but parking within the historic district is genuinely scarce and expensive. Pedicabs are the most atmospheric transit option for short hops between neighborhoods.
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Cash or Card
87% Card, 13% Cash. Charleston is fully card-friendly throughout the historic district restaurants, hotels, and tour operators. Keep cash for the City Market sweetgrass basket vendors who often prefer cash, the carriage tour operators who accept tips in cash only, and the occasional roadside seafood stand on James Island or Johns Island that operates cash-preferred on weekends in peak season.
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Good to Know
The historic district streets — particularly South of Broad and the Battery — are residential neighborhoods requiring quiet behavior after dark and respect for private garden walls and piazza gates. Rainbow Row is privately owned; photograph from the street. The Spoleto Festival USA in late May and early June doubles hotel rates and fills every room weeks in advance — book nine to twelve months ahead. Hurricane season runs June through November; check the National Hurricane Center if visiting August through October.
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ATMs
Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and First Citizens ATMs are available on King Street, Meeting Street, and East Bay Street throughout the historic district. ATM access thins considerably south of Broad Street and in the French Quarter's narrower alleys. Withdraw cash before heading to the City Market, the carriage tour operators, or the James Island and Johns Island restaurant corridor where several cash-preferred establishments operate.
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Currency
The US Dollar is the currency. Charleston prices at a significant premium for a Southern city — a room at a historic district inn runs $200–$600 per night, dinner at Husk, The Ordinary, or McCrady's will cost $80–$160 per person, and the Spoleto Festival ticket prices add a further premium in late May. The Upper King Street corridor offers the widest range of price points; the French Quarter and South of Broad neighborhoods are uniformly expensive.
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Plugs
Type A and B (120V, 60Hz) — standard North American outlets throughout. No adapters needed for US devices. European visitors need a Type C or G adapter. The older historic inn properties — particularly those in 18th and early 19th-century buildings — can have limited outlet placement due to the age of the original electrical infrastructure; a short power strip is practical for travelers with multiple devices.
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Safety
Charleston is a safe, well-policed city. The primary practical risk is summer heat — 90°F temperatures with 90% humidity from June through September make extended outdoor walking genuinely dangerous without hydration and shade breaks. The cobblestone streets are treacherous in rain — bring shoes with grip. The peninsula is at sea level and vulnerable to tidal flooding during major storms; check surge maps if a named storm is anywhere in the Atlantic basin during your visit.
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Airports
Charleston International Airport (CHS) is 12 miles northwest of the historic district with direct service from New York, Washington DC, Charlotte, Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, and Philadelphia — 20–25 minutes by ride-share. Savannah/Hilton Head International (SAV) is 110 miles south and provides a secondary option with strong low-cost carrier coverage for budget-conscious visitors arriving from Florida or the Gulf Coast.