When to Use
User asks about Boston for any purpose: visiting, moving, working, studying, or starting a business. Agent provides practical guidance with current data.
Quick Reference
| Topic | File |
|---|---|
| Visitors | |
| Attractions (must-see vs skip) | visitor-attractions.md |
| Itineraries (1/3/7 days) | visitor-itineraries.md |
| Where to stay | visitor-lodging.md |
| Tips & day trips | visitor-tips.md |
| Neighborhoods | |
| Quick comparison | neighborhoods-index.md |
| Downtown, Back Bay, Beacon Hill | neighborhoods-downtown.md |
| Cambridge, Somerville | neighborhoods-cambridge.md |
| South End, Jamaica Plain, Roxbury | neighborhoods-south.md |
| North End, Charlestown, East Boston | neighborhoods-north.md |
| Choosing guide | neighborhoods-choosing.md |
| Food | |
| Overview & dining scene | food-overview.md |
| Seafood & New England classics | food-seafood.md |
| North End Italian & ethnic | food-ethnic.md |
| Best areas for dining | food-areas.md |
| Dietary, alcohol, practical | food-practical.md |
| Practical | |
| Moving & settling | resident.md |
| Transport (T, buses, bikes) | transport.md |
| Cost of living | cost.md |
| Safety | safety.md |
| Weather & seasonal tips | climate.md |
| Local services (banking, utilities) | local.md |
| Career | |
| Tech industry & salaries | tech.md |
| Business & legal | business.md |
| Startups & funding | startup.md |
| Visas & work permits | visas.md |
| Lifestyle | |
| Culture & customs | culture.md |
| Healthcare & hospitals | healthcare.md |
| Universities & education | education.md |
| Expat & social life | lifestyle.md |
| Driving & car ownership | driving.md |
Core Rules
1. Identify User Context First
- Role: Tourist, resident, tech worker, student, entrepreneur
- Timeline: Short visit, planning to move, already there
- Load relevant auxiliary file for details
2. Education Capital Reality
Boston metro has 50+ colleges and universities with ~250,000 students:
- Harvard (Cambridge): World's top university, drives local prestige
- MIT (Cambridge): Tech and engineering powerhouse, Kendall Square hub
- Boston University: Large urban campus, Comm Ave corridor
- Northeastern: Co-op program leader, Fenway area
- Tufts (Medford/Somerville): Research university, Davis Square access
- Boston College (Chestnut Hill): Catholic institution, Green Line end
- Berklee: World's largest music college, Back Bay
Student calendar affects everything: September move-in chaos, May exodus, summer quiet.
See education.md for complete university guide.
3. Weather Reality
Boston has true four seasons with extremes:
- Winter (Dec-Mar): 20-35F, snow common, wind chill brutal
- Spring (Apr-May): 45-65F, unpredictable, can snow in April
- Summer (Jun-Aug): 75-90F, humid, beach weather
- Fall (Sep-Nov): 50-70F, best weather, foliage season
Winter survival: Proper coat, waterproof boots, layers. The T runs slower in snow.
See climate.md for monthly breakdown and survival strategies.
4. Current Data (Feb 2026)
| Item | Range |
|---|---|
| 1BR rent (Back Bay) | $2,800-3,800/mo |
| 1BR rent (Cambridge) | $2,600-3,500/mo |
| 1BR rent (Somerville) | $2,200-2,900/mo |
| Senior SWE salary | $180K-260K total comp |
| MBTA monthly pass | $90 (CharlieCard) |
| Lobster roll | $25-35 |
| Student budget | $1,800-2,500/month |
5. Cost Reality
Boston is 3rd most expensive US metro after NYC and SF:
- Housing: 40-50% of budget typical
- September surge: Rents spike 10-20% for student turnover
- Broker fees: One month rent (unique to Boston market)
- Heating costs: Gas heat adds $100-200/month in winter
- Parking: $200-400/month, street parking near impossible
6. Transit Overview
The MBTA ("The T") is America's oldest subway:
- Four lines: Red, Orange, Blue, Green (Green is actually trolley)
- Coverage: Good in Boston/Cambridge core, limited suburbs
- Reliability: Improving but delays common, especially winter
- CharlieCard: Tap card, lower fares than cash
- Commuter Rail: Suburbs and Providence/Worcester
Most residents don't need cars if living near T. See transport.md.
7. Tech Hub Context
Greater Boston is a top-5 US tech hub:
- Kendall Square (Cambridge): Biotech capital, Google, Microsoft, startups
- Seaport: New innovation district, Amazon, Reebok HQ
- Route 128: Traditional tech corridor (now less trendy)
- Harvard/MIT pipeline: Constant talent flow
Biotech and healthcare tech dominate. Pure software less common than Bay Area.
See tech.md for industry details.
8. Neighborhood Matching
| Profile | Best Areas |
|---|---|
| Young professionals | South End, Cambridge (Central/Harvard), Somerville |
| Families | Brookline, Newton, Arlington, Lexington |
| Students | Allston, Brighton, Fenway, Medford |
| Budget-conscious | Dorchester, East Boston, Malden, Quincy |
| Tech workers | Kendall Square, Seaport, Central Cambridge |
| Walkability seekers | Back Bay, Beacon Hill, South End |
Healthcare Hub Context
Boston has world-class healthcare and medical research:
- Mass General Hospital: Top-ranked US hospital, Harvard-affiliated
- Brigham and Women's: Research powerhouse, also Harvard
- Dana-Farber Cancer Institute: World's leading cancer research
- Boston Children's: #1 pediatric hospital in US
- Beth Israel Deaconess: Major teaching hospital
Healthcare jobs represent ~20% of Boston employment.
Medical tourism brings international patients year-round.
See healthcare.md for patient and professional guidance.
Boston-Specific Traps
- September 1st madness — 65% of leases turn over. Streets packed with moving trucks. Book movers in June.
- Broker fees — Most rentals require one month fee to broker. Budget accordingly.
- Winter underestimation — Wind chill makes 20F feel like 0F. Proper gear essential.
- The T reliability — Allow 15+ min buffer for appointments. Track delays on MBTA app.
- Parking nightmares — Street parking is permit-only by neighborhood. Snow emergencies tow instantly.
- Snow emergency routes — Your car WILL be towed within hours if on marked routes during storm.
- Jaywalking culture — Bostonians cross anywhere, but tourists get ticketed occasionally.
- Cash-only places — Some iconic spots (Regina Pizzeria, Santarpio's) cash only.
- Sunday alcohol — Liquor stores open at noon on Sundays.
- Happy hour ban — Massachusetts banned happy hour drink specials in 1984. Still illegal.
- Rotary confusion — Traffic circles ("rotaries") have unintuitive right-of-way rules.
- Last call at 2am — All bars close at 2am. The T stops around 12:30am.
- College sports indifference — Boston is pro sports obsessed; college games are afterthought.
- Red Sox ticket myth — Games aren't always sold out since 2013. Check day-of availability.
Sports Culture Warning
Boston has the most intense sports culture in America:
- Red Sox: Fenway Park (1912) is sacred ground. Rivalry with Yankees is real.
- Patriots: Six Super Bowls. Now rebuilding post-Brady but still religion.
- Celtics: 18 NBA titles. TD Garden gets loud.
- Bruins: Hockey matters here. Original Six franchise.
Game days affect traffic, restaurant availability, and general city mood.
Don't wear Yankees gear unless you want commentary.
See lifestyle.md for sports calendar and culture.
Historical Context
Boston is America's most historically significant city:
- Freedom Trail: 2.5 miles connecting 16 historic sites
- Harvard (1636): America's oldest university
- Boston Common (1634): America's oldest public park
- Fenway Park (1912): America's oldest baseball stadium
- The T (1897): America's first subway
History is everywhere but doesn't dominate daily life. Most locals rarely walk the Freedom Trail.
See visitor-attractions.md for historical sites worth visiting.
Related Skills
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