
A dozen date ideas that won't break the bank
Why it matters: A tight budget can make socializing feel more stressful than fun.
The big picture: Whether you're on a first date, looking to surprise a longtime partner with something creative or just get out with friends, here are some local date ideas that won't break the bank.
🖼️ Newfields for free
Experience all that Newfields has to offer for free on the first Thursday of every month.
The offer includes free general admission to the Indianapolis Museum of Art and grounds, live musical performances, open studio hours and gallery conversations.
The museum is open until 8pm Thursdays.
🌮 Beer and tacos
Cheap and delicious? You're welcome.
Head to Turner's Bar in the Stutz for a $3 High Life and order the best $5 taco you've ever had at the window into Julieta Taco Shop next door.
Add rice and beans for just $3 more and you've got a great meal and perfect dive bar vibes for under $15.
🍷 Wine tasting at Easley
The downtown winery offers a curated tasting experience with a self-guided flight of seven wines with crackers for just $8 each.
Enjoy your tasting inside or outside in the wine garden.
🚲 Go for a bike ride
Bikes not needed! Rent e-bikes for just $5 or regular bikes for $2 and then 25 or 20 cents/min from one of the stations dotted all around town. Marion County residents can also sign up for an IndyRides Free pass, which gives you free unlimited 30-minute rides.
Ride from one station and return at any other.
A ride along the Monon Trail with a stop for ice cream at Lick sounds like a pretty great (and inexpensive) date to us!
🎨 First Fridays
There are plenty of free gallery exhibits and open studio spaces on the first Friday of every month but one of our favorites is the Harrison Center in the beautiful Old Northside neighborhood.
There are new exhibitions in multiple galleries, plus open studio spaces and usually a food truck or two.
Afterwards, head two blocks south and catch live jazz ($6 donation suggested) at McGowan Hall's first Friday after party.
🦌 Free admission at the Eiteljorg
The museum of American Indians and Western Art is free the first Friday of each month from 5-7pm.
🍻 Don't forget about happy hour
It's legal now! And dozens of bars and restaurants have deals.
Some of our favorites are found at St. Elmo Steakhouse, Bocca and Social Cantina.
👀 People watch downtown
Grab a shady seat at SPARK on the Circle and watch downtown life pass you by.
You can grab a drink from the concession stand and play free games like ping pong and chess.
SPARK is open every day through September from 11am to dusk.
🧗 Reach new heights
It's just $20 for a day pass to North Mass Boulder and first-timers can rent their climbing shoes for free.
With climbing routes for all skill levels and no equipment needed, it's the perfect date for experienced climbers and newbies alike.
Afterwards, head upstairs to the Top Out Cafe and grab a beer or coffee and exercise your mind with one of their many free-to-play board games.
🏖️ Have a beach day
Morse Beach in Noblesville is open through Labor Day.
It's just $6 per person and for an extra $3 you can bring your own cooler full of snacks (no booze, though).
The beach is open weekends from noon-6pm.
👫 Take a stroll
Hold hands and go for a walk along one of Indy's most scenic paths.
🍿 Catch a movie
Drive-in movies are A) romantic and B) a great deal.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Axios
2 days ago
- Axios
A dozen date ideas that won't break the bank
Everything is getting more expensive — from restaurants and groceries to energy bills. Why it matters: A tight budget can make socializing feel more stressful than fun. The big picture: Whether you're on a first date, looking to surprise a longtime partner with something creative or just get out with friends, here are some local date ideas that won't break the bank. 🖼️ Newfields for free Experience all that Newfields has to offer for free on the first Thursday of every month. The offer includes free general admission to the Indianapolis Museum of Art and grounds, live musical performances, open studio hours and gallery conversations. The museum is open until 8pm Thursdays. 🌮 Beer and tacos Cheap and delicious? You're welcome. Head to Turner's Bar in the Stutz for a $3 High Life and order the best $5 taco you've ever had at the window into Julieta Taco Shop next door. Add rice and beans for just $3 more and you've got a great meal and perfect dive bar vibes for under $15. 🍷 Wine tasting at Easley The downtown winery offers a curated tasting experience with a self-guided flight of seven wines with crackers for just $8 each. Enjoy your tasting inside or outside in the wine garden. 🚲 Go for a bike ride Bikes not needed! Rent e-bikes for just $5 or regular bikes for $2 and then 25 or 20 cents/min from one of the stations dotted all around town. Marion County residents can also sign up for an IndyRides Free pass, which gives you free unlimited 30-minute rides. Ride from one station and return at any other. A ride along the Monon Trail with a stop for ice cream at Lick sounds like a pretty great (and inexpensive) date to us! 🎨 First Fridays There are plenty of free gallery exhibits and open studio spaces on the first Friday of every month but one of our favorites is the Harrison Center in the beautiful Old Northside neighborhood. There are new exhibitions in multiple galleries, plus open studio spaces and usually a food truck or two. Afterwards, head two blocks south and catch live jazz ($6 donation suggested) at McGowan Hall's first Friday after party. 🦌 Free admission at the Eiteljorg The museum of American Indians and Western Art is free the first Friday of each month from 5-7pm. 🍻 Don't forget about happy hour It's legal now! And dozens of bars and restaurants have deals. Some of our favorites are found at St. Elmo Steakhouse, Bocca and Social Cantina. 👀 People watch downtown Grab a shady seat at SPARK on the Circle and watch downtown life pass you by. You can grab a drink from the concession stand and play free games like ping pong and chess. SPARK is open every day through September from 11am to dusk. 🧗 Reach new heights It's just $20 for a day pass to North Mass Boulder and first-timers can rent their climbing shoes for free. With climbing routes for all skill levels and no equipment needed, it's the perfect date for experienced climbers and newbies alike. Afterwards, head upstairs to the Top Out Cafe and grab a beer or coffee and exercise your mind with one of their many free-to-play board games. 🏖️ Have a beach day Morse Beach in Noblesville is open through Labor Day. It's just $6 per person and for an extra $3 you can bring your own cooler full of snacks (no booze, though). The beach is open weekends from noon-6pm. 👫 Take a stroll Hold hands and go for a walk along one of Indy's most scenic paths. 🍿 Catch a movie Drive-in movies are A) romantic and B) a great deal.

Indianapolis Star
3 days ago
- Indianapolis Star
Devour Indy returns for summer with more than 150 restaurants. See who's included
The summer edition of Devour Indy has arrived, bringing special menus and lower prices to more than 150 Indianapolis-area restaurants through Aug. 31. The two-week event, devised as a way to boost business at local restaurants during slow seasons, spans a wide range of cuisines and price points — guests at Commission Row can savor a $67 three-course dinner, while patrons at Turner's Bar in the Stutz Building can feast on a $12 spread that features chips ("Fritos go fast," the menu warns), a hot dog and a choice of one alcoholic beverage (or three, if they're all Miller High Lifes). New to Devour this year are six participating eateries located in the Indianapolis International Airport Civic Plaza and Concourse B: the 1993 Lounge and HC Tavern by St. Elmo, Circle City Beer Garden, the Farmers' Market featuring Indiana Grown restaurant and grab-and-go market, Harry and Izzy's, Pacers Courtside Club and The Tap.


Atlantic
6 days ago
- Atlantic
What Muriel Spark Knew About Childhood
This is an edition of the Books Briefing, our editors' weekly guide to the best in books. Sign up for it here. The most recent issue of The Atlantic taught me that the Scottish author Muriel Spark had, according to Judith Shulevitz, 'a steely command of omniscience,' and frequently played with 'selective disclosure, irony, and other narrative devices.' I knew that Spark was funny, and that her work was highly recommended by people whose taste I respect. But I quickly realized I had very few other facts at my disposal. Most important, I'd never read her writing. So before I'd even finished Shulevitz's review of a new biography of the novelist, I downloaded The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie —Spark's best-known work—from my local library. First, here are four new stories from The Atlantic 's Books section: How not to fix American democracy 'Surface Support,' a poem by Michael D. Snediker Literature's enduring obsession with strange sisters Why so many MIT students are writing poetry The novella's title character works at an Edinburgh school for girls in the 1930s; she's an outré teacher who has marked a special group of pupils as 'hers.' She cares very little for teaching the approved curriculum. Instead, she takes her students to the theater; she walks them through Edinburgh's Old Town; she regales them with tales of her former loves; she praises the fascist regimes of Mussolini and Hitler. Her girls, she notes, will benefit far more from the artistic education provided by Brodie 'in her prime'—unmarried and pushing 40, she is entirely aware of her sexual and intellectual power, which are both at their peak. But the story, while named for Brodie, is not actually about her; it is primarily told through the recollections of the girls, and one in particular: Sandy, who in her adulthood has become a nun. The book's main question is not what will become of Brodie—we know from the early pages that she will be fired from the school, 'betrayed' by one of her chosen girls. Instead, it investigates the heady, hormonal days of adolescence, and the moral education of the students. That last theme is where Spark's 'central concern,' as Shulevitz puts it, becomes clear. The author was a Catholic convert, and her writing is full of characters searching for, asking about, and turning to God. For the girls, whom Brodie begins shaping when they're barely tweens, their teacher is something like a deity: at times hard to understand, often capricious, but ultimately fascinating, beautiful, and never wrong. As they grow up, most of the kids simply become who they were always going to be, shaking off Brodie's rules and stipulations and following their own whims. But Sandy feels her teacher's authority for the rest of her life. Her entanglement with Brodie, which continues into her late teens, leads her down a winding path that culminates in her own conversion to Catholicism. Her act of submission to the Church, which requires her to shed her individuality, is actually her final moment of separation from her former mentor: She has allowed God to dethrone her teacher. But even though Sandy's conversion mirrors Spark's own, I was surprised and pleased to see that the author doesn't make Sandy a perfect nun, devoted solely to the Church, free of Brodie's shadow. Instead, Spark is realistic about the effect a particularly magnetic figure can have on a young, impressionable person. Many years later, when Sandy is asked who or what most influenced her, it's Brodie's name on her lips. Similarly, Spark's is on mine. I've now got Memento Mori and Loitering With Intent, two of her other novels, waiting for me on my e-reader. The Judgments of Muriel Spark By Judith Shulevitz The novelist liked playing God—a very capricious one. What to Read The Backyard Bird Chronicles, by Amy Tan Tan coped with the political tumult of 2016 by returning to two of her childhood refuges: nature and art. Drawing was an early hobby of hers, but she'd felt discouraged from taking it seriously. At 65, she took 'nature journaling' lessons to learn how to depict and interpret the world around her—most notably the inter-avian dramas of the birds behind her Bay Area home. The Backyard Bird Chronicles is a disarming account of one year of Tan's domestic bird-watching, a book 'filled with sketches and handwritten notes of naive observations,' she writes. That naivete is endearing: The accomplished novelist becomes a novice, trying to improve through eager dedication. Over the course of this engaging book, her illustrations grow more sophisticated, more assured—leaving readers with a portrait of the hobbyist as an emerging artist. — Sophia Stewart Out Next Week 📚 Baldwin: A Love Story, by Nicholas Boggs 📚 Where Are You Really From, by Elaine Hsieh Chou 📚 Dominion, by Addie E. Citchens Your Weekend Read The Logic of the '9 to 5' Is Creeping Into the Rest of the Day By Julie Beck Over the past couple of years, the vloggers of social media have taken to documenting their routines from 5 to 9 p.m. Some creators also make a morning version, the '5 to 9 before the 9 to 5,' starting at 5 a.m. These routines are highly edited, almost hypnotic, with quick cuts, each mini-scene overlaid with a time stamp. Hours pass in just a couple of minutes, and the compressed time highlights a sense of efficiency. The videos have big to-do-list energy; the satisfaction they offer is that of vicariously checking boxes.