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Seven hills means dozens of miradouros. Most are free, all have kiosks selling imperiais, and the light in the golden hour is genuinely extraordinary. Here they are, ranked.
Sintra is the obvious one but Cascais has better beaches, Setubal has dolphins, and Obidos has a medieval wall you can walk on with a glass of ginjinha. All under EUR 5 by train.
Lisbon with kids means Europe's best aquarium, tram rides, pasteis de nata tastings, and the flattest neighbourhood in the city for when the stroller defeats the cobblestones.

Lisbon is the cheapest capital in Western Europe for travellers who know where to look. Free miradouros, EUR 0.70 bicas, and tascas that charge EUR 10 for lunch with wine.
Lisbon eats well and eats cheap - a bica costs EUR 0.70, a bifana EUR 3, and a full tasca lunch with wine EUR 10-15. Here is where to go, neighbourhood by neighbourhood.
Three days is the sweet spot for Lisbon. Enough to climb the hills, eat the pasteis, find the miradouros that make the sore calves worthwhile, and still have time for a ginjinha at Rossio.
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