Bangkok Travel Guide: What to Do, Where to Stay & How to Navigate the City

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Bangkok rewards people who come without fixed ideas about what a city should be. It's chaotic and deeply calming. The streets are gridlocked and the waterways are fast and efficient. A $2 bowl of boat noodles eaten on a plastic stool will be among the best things you eat all year, and the rooftop bar on the 63rd floor of the hotel next door will give you one of the great city views on earth. Temples of extraordinary beauty sit behind noodle carts and 7-Elevens.

The trick with Bangkok is not to try to make it make sense. It doesn't conform to Western city logic — and that is precisely what makes it one of the most exciting, stimulating, and just genuinely fun cities in the world to visit.

When to Visit Bangkok

Best time: November–February. Bangkok's "cool" season — temperatures in the mid-80s°F (30°C) rather than the high 90s–100s, and significantly lower humidity. This is when outdoor sightseeing is manageable. December in particular is excellent but busy; book hotels in advance.

Hot season (March–May): Temperatures regularly exceed 100°F with brutal humidity. Songkran (Thai New Year, mid-April) is one of the most extraordinary festivals in Asia — a city-wide water fight — but Bangkok in April heat requires serious hydration strategy.

Rainy season (June–October): Bangkok receives heavy rainfall, often in intense late-afternoon downpours that pass quickly. The city doesn't stop — just carry an umbrella and embrace the rhythm. Hotels are cheaper. The city is greener. Many experienced travelers prefer this time.

Getting to and Around Bangkok

Getting In

Bangkok has two major airports: Suvarnabhumi (BKK — the main international hub) and Don Mueang (DMK — used by budget airlines including AirAsia for domestic and regional routes). If you're flying into one and connecting to the other, budget at least 3 hours.

From Suvarnabhumi: The Airport Rail Link connects to central Bangkok (Phaya Thai station) in 30 minutes for about $2. Taxis are metered but require navigating the taxi queue — insist on the meter. See our cheap flights guide for tips on finding deals into Bangkok, one of Asia's most connected hubs.

Getting Around

Bangkok's traffic is legendary. The solution is to use the elevated rail systems and waterways rather than the roads whenever possible.

BTS Skytrain: The MRT and BTS Skytrain systems cover the main tourist and business districts — Sukhumvit, Silom, Siam, Chatuchak. Clean, air-conditioned, cheap, and far faster than any road-based option in traffic.

Chao Phraya Express Boat: The river ferry connecting Nonthaburi in the north to Sathorn Pier in the south stops at many of the major temples and neighborhoods. One of the most functional and scenic ways to move around Bangkok. The tourist boat (orange flag) runs a dedicated route; local boats are cheaper and faster if you know the stops.

Tuk-tuks: Iconic, fun for short distances or photo opportunities, and prone to driver detours to jewelry shops. Agree on price before getting in, decline any "special stop" offers.

Grab: The app works seamlessly in Bangkok and is the most reliable option for longer distances or airport trips. Metered taxis from the street are also fine — just insist on the meter.

Best Things to Do in Bangkok

Wat Phra Kaew and the Grand Palace

The Grand Palace complex is Bangkok's single most visited sight — and one of the most spectacular royal architectural ensembles in Asia. The Emerald Buddha temple (Wat Phra Kaew) at its center holds a small but extraordinarily revered jade Buddha image that the king himself changes clothing on three times a year. The palace buildings are covered in gilded spires, colored glass mosaics, and mural paintings of the Ramakien epic.

Practical notes: Dress code is strict — shoulders and knees covered, no flip-flops (sarongs available to rent at the gate). Arrive when it opens at 8:30am to beat the tour groups. Buy tickets at the entrance; skip "tour guides" who approach you outside claiming it's closed.

Book a guided tour through Viator if you want historical and cultural context that transforms the visit from "very ornate buildings" to a deeply meaningful exploration of Thai royal history.

Wat Pho (Temple of the Reclining Buddha)

Just south of the Grand Palace, Wat Pho is home to a 46-meter golden reclining Buddha — one of the largest in Thailand — and one of the country's oldest and most revered temple complexes. Less crowded than Wat Phra Kaew, equally magnificent, and the home of the original Thai massage school. Book a traditional Thai massage here afterward ($10–15 for an hour) — the setting makes it remarkable.

Wat Arun (Temple of Dawn)

On the opposite bank of the Chao Phraya from Wat Pho, Wat Arun's distinctive spires covered in porcelain fragments glow at sunrise and sunset with particular beauty. Cross the river by ferry (10 baht, runs constantly) and climb the steep steps of the central prang for river and city views. Best visited at golden hour.

Chatuchak Weekend Market

One of the largest markets in the world — 15,000+ stalls across a vast outdoor complex selling everything from plants and vintage clothes to antiques, street food, and housewares. Go on Saturday or Sunday, arrive early before the heat builds, bring cash, and accept that you will get lost. The food stalls throughout the market are excellent.

Chinatown (Yaowarat)

Bangkok's Chinatown is one of the most vibrant in the world — especially at night, when Yaowarat Road transforms into a brilliant street food corridor. Roast duck, dim sum, seafood grilled on the spot, fresh-squeezed sugarcane juice, and century eggs alongside neon signs in Thai and Chinese. Come hungry at 7pm on a Friday or Saturday. The Chao Phraya boat stops at Marine Department Pier, a short walk away.

Khao San Road Area

Backpacker central, and worth seeing for the spectacle if nothing else. The surrounding streets — particularly Rambuttri Road and Phra Athit Road along the river — are much more pleasant, with good coffee shops, local restaurants, and the kind of afternoon pace that Bangkok's more intense areas don't offer.

Jim Thompson House Museum

Jim Thompson was an American silk merchant who almost single-handedly revived the Thai silk industry after World War II, then mysteriously disappeared in Malaysia in 1967. His Bangkok home — actually six traditional Thai houses assembled into one compound — is a beautifully preserved glimpse of mid-century Thai decorative arts and architecture. One of Bangkok's most interesting museums.

Day Trip: Ayutthaya

90 minutes north of Bangkok by train, Ayutthaya was Thailand's capital from 1350 to 1767 and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site — a sprawling field of temple ruins, decapitated Buddha heads, and lotus-filled moats. A full day is enough. Rent a bicycle at the station to cover the grounds efficiently. Book a guided tour through GetYourGuide for context that transforms the ruins from interesting to revelatory.

Bangkok Neighborhoods: Where to Stay

Sukhumvit

The main expat and tourist corridor — easy BTS access, excellent restaurant diversity, rooftop bars, luxury hotels and budget guesthouses on the same street. Sukhumvit Soi 11 is the social hub. The best all-around base for first-timers.

Silom / Sathorn

Bangkok's financial district by day, with excellent restaurants and the legendary Patpong night market. More businesslike than Sukhumvit but well-connected and central.

Riverside (Chao Phraya)

Staying near the river gives you easy boat access and proximity to the main temples — the Mandarin Oriental, Capella, and Anantara Riverside are all here, among the finest hotels in Bangkok. The vibe is quieter and more atmospheric than the Sukhumvit corridor.

Rattanakosin (Old City)

The historic island containing the Grand Palace, Wat Pho, and Wat Arun. Few hotels here but those that exist put you steps from the main sights. Best for travelers who want maximum temple proximity and a quieter, more local neighborhood feel.

Browse Booking.com — filter by BTS station proximity for Sukhumvit properties, which makes the lack of a car a complete non-issue.

Where to Eat in Bangkok

Bangkok is one of the great food cities in the world. The range runs from Michelin-starred restaurants to street carts that have been making one dish perfectly for 40 years.

Jay Fai: A Michelin-starred street food stall where the chef cooks over charcoal in ski goggles. Crab omelette and drunken noodles that justify the wait. Reserve far in advance.

Boat noodles: Small bowls of rich, aromatic noodle soup served from canal-side stalls for about 20–30 baht each. You need three or four bowls. This is the authentic street food experience Bangkok is famous for.

Gaggan Anand: Arguably the most famous restaurant in Asia — progressive Indian cuisine, no printed menu, 25+ courses. Book months ahead. Worth every baht for a special occasion.

Or Tor Kor Market: The upscale fresh market adjacent to Chatuchak — impeccably presented fruits, prepared foods, and cooked dishes. The mango sticky rice from the vendors here is definitive.

Rooftop bars: Lebua at State Tower, Vertigo at Banyan Tree, and Octave Rooftop Bar at the Marriott Sukhumvit all offer spectacular views at prices that are high by Thai standards and cheap by international standards.

Practical Bangkok Tips

Travel insurance: Essential for Thailand — see our best travel insurance guide for policies that cover Southeast Asia. Medical care in Bangkok is world-class but expensive without coverage.

Heat management: Bangkok is hot year-round. Plan outdoor sightseeing for early morning (before 11am) and late afternoon (after 4pm). Midday temple-hopping in July is possible; it's just miserable.

Temple scams: Near the Grand Palace, tuk-tuk drivers and well-dressed strangers may tell you a temple is "closed today for a special ceremony" and offer to take you somewhere else. It's almost never closed. Go anyway.

Respect at temples: Remove shoes before entering temple buildings. Dress modestly. Don't turn your back to a Buddha image for photos. These are active places of worship, not tourist attractions.

7-Eleven: The Thai 7-Eleven chain is a genuine cultural institution — air-conditioned refuges on every corner selling surprisingly good prepared food, fresh coffee, and cold water.

Combining Bangkok with Phuket or the Islands

Bangkok and Phuket are a natural pairing — fly or take an overnight train to Phuket after 3–4 days in the city. See our Phuket travel guide for how to plan the island portion of a Thailand trip.

Other popular extensions: Chiang Mai in the north (1-hour flight, cooler temperatures, elephant sanctuaries, night markets), Koh Samui or Koh Lanta in the south, or a side trip to Cambodia to see Angkor Wat (1-hour flight to Siem Reap).

Where to Book Your Bangkok Trip

  • Hotels: Booking.com — filter by BTS/MRT station proximity for easy navigation
  • Tours: Viator and GetYourGuide for Grand Palace tours, Ayutthaya day trips, and cooking classes
  • Flights: Bangkok is one of Asia's great hubs — our cheap flights guide covers how to find good fares from the US

Final Thoughts

Bangkok has a way of exceeding expectations that almost no other city matches. First-time visitors often arrive slightly uncertain — it's loud, hot, confusing, and enormous — and leave completely converted. The food alone would justify the flight. Add the temples, the markets, the river, the rooftops, and a city that operates at an energy frequency you don't encounter anywhere else, and you have one of the essential travel destinations on earth.

Give it four days minimum. Use the BTS. Eat on the street. Wake up early for the temples. Stay up late for Chinatown. And come back — because everyone does.

Amalfi Coast Travel Guide: How to Plan the Perfect Trip

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The Amalfi Coast is one of those places that makes you feel slightly guilty about how beautiful it is. Pastel villages stacked on cliffs above a sea that cycles through every possible shade of blue. Lemon trees draping over stone walls. A winding road that the Romans probably would have considered excessive. It's the kind of scenery that feels like it was designed as a backdrop for a film, and then people moved in and started actually living there.

The honest truth is that the Amalfi Coast is genuinely worth it — and genuinely logistically challenging. The road is narrow and terrifying by bus. Everything is more expensive than the rest of Italy. July and August are so crowded that Positano's famous staircase becomes a traffic jam of humans in linen. But go in the right season, stay in the right town, and accept that getting around requires more patience than you're used to — and you'll understand why people keep coming back.

When to Visit the Amalfi Coast

Best time: May–June and September–October. The weather is excellent (75–85°F), the sea is warm enough to swim, and the crowds — while still present — are manageable. Restaurants and hotels are fully open. The light in late September and October on those cliffside villages is something photographers will tell you about at length.

Peak season (July–August): Absolute capacity. Positano's narrow streets become nearly impassable. Hotel prices surge. The ferry lines are long. The spaghetti alle vongole still tastes incredible. If this is when you can go, book every hotel and boat excursion months in advance. It's worth it — you just need to lower your expectations about having anything to yourself.

Shoulder season (April, November): April can be cool and rainy but is increasingly popular — the coast is green, prices are lower, and some visitors actually prefer it. November sees many hotels and restaurants close, but the ones that stay open are quiet and atmospheric.

Winter: Most of the coast shuts down. A few year-round towns like Amalfi itself and Ravello remain open, and the experience is peaceful and very local — but you're missing the sea-swimming dimension entirely.

Getting to the Amalfi Coast

By train + ferry from Rome: Take the high-speed train from Rome Termini to Naples (70 minutes), then a Circumvesuviana train to Sorrento (1 hour), and from Sorrento take a ferry to Positano or Amalfi. This is the most scenic approach and avoids the road entirely for most of the journey.

By train + bus from Naples or Sorrento: The SITA bus runs the entire Amalfi Coast road (the SS163) — it's cheap, frequent, and hair-raising. If you're prone to motion sickness, sit on the sea side and take something before boarding.

By rental car: Only recommended if you have serious experience driving narrow European roads and a high tolerance for stress. Parking is extremely limited in most towns. That said, having a car opens up the inland towns (Ravello, Scala) and eliminates bus schedule dependence.

By private transfer: For groups or travelers who want to avoid both public transit and driving themselves, pre-booked private transfers from Naples or Sorrento are reasonable value split between multiple people. Book through Viator or GetYourGuide.

Which Town Should You Base Yourself In?

This is the most important decision of an Amalfi Coast trip — choose wrong and you'll spend half your visit in transit.

Positano

The most photographed town on the coast — the stacked pastel houses, the beach, the church dome, the general Mediterranean perfection of it. It's genuinely as beautiful as advertised and genuinely as crowded. Staying in Positano gives you the most iconic base and easy ferry access to the rest of the coast. It's also the most expensive, and the vertical terrain (everything is stairs) can be challenging with luggage.

Best for: First-timers, honeymooners, travelers who want the quintessential Amalfi experience.

Praiano

About 5km east of Positano, often overlooked, and dramatically quieter. Praiano sits on a less developed stretch of cliffside with a small beach, fewer tourists, better prices, and ferry access to both directions along the coast. A genuinely excellent alternative for travelers who don't need to be in Positano specifically.

Best for: Budget-conscious travelers, couples who want quiet, return visitors who already have Positano checked off.

Amalfi Town

The historic capital of the medieval Amalfi Republic, with a spectacular cathedral (free entry to the cloister), a working waterfront, and good ferry connections in all directions. More of a functional town than a picture-postcard village — but central, affordable relative to Positano, and less vertically exhausting.

Best for: Practical travelers, those doing day trips in multiple directions.

Ravello

Perched 350 meters above the sea, Ravello is a world apart — quiet, cool, with extraordinary gardens (Villa Rufolo and Villa Cimbrone) and views down the coast that stop conversation. No beach access without descending to Minori or Atrani, but the atmosphere is unmatched. The Ravello Festival (classical music in the Villa Rufolo gardens) runs June–September.

Best for: Culture-focused travelers, those who want peace above the tourist fray.

Best Things to Do on the Amalfi Coast

Explore Positano

Walk every staircase you can find — the streets below the main road reveal a village that feels almost untouched compared to the main drag. The beach (Spiaggia Grande) is small, pebbly, and beautiful. Walk around the headland to the less-crowded Fornillo Beach in the late afternoon.

Shop for limoncello, ceramic tiles, and local sandals — Positano has been making leather sandals to order since the 1950s and several cobblers on the main steps still do it properly in 20 minutes.

Boat Tour of the Coast

Renting a small boat or booking a private boat tour is the finest way to experience the Amalfi Coast — you see the cliffs and villages from the water, stop at sea caves inaccessible from land, and swim off the back in clear turquoise water. GetYourGuide has well-reviewed full-day boat tours; for private charters, book directly through operators in Positano's marina.

Villa Cimbrone Gardens (Ravello)

The Terrazzo dell'Infinito — a terrace at the edge of Villa Cimbrone's gardens, with busts of classical figures looking out over a sheer drop to the coast below — is one of the great viewpoints in Italy. Go late afternoon when the light is golden and most day visitors have left.

Hike the Path of the Gods (Sentiero degli Dei)

One of the most spectacular hikes in Italy: a 7.5km trail along the ridgeline between Bomerano and Nocelle (above Positano), with the entire coast spread below you for most of the walk. Moderate difficulty, best done west to east (downhill finish into Positano). Take the local bus up to Bomerano from Amalfi. Allow 3–4 hours.

Book a guided version through Viator for historical context and to ensure you don't miss the trailhead.

Grotta dello Smeraldo (Emerald Cave)

Accessible by boat from Amalfi or via elevator from the SS163 road, this sea cave has an otherworldly emerald glow from refracted light through underwater openings. Touristy, quick (15–20 minutes inside), and genuinely impressive. Worth including as a stop on a boat tour rather than making a separate trip.

Day Trip to Capri

From Positano or Amalfi, high-speed ferries reach Capri in 40–60 minutes. The Blue Grotto, the Faraglioni rock stacks, the Gardens of Augustus, and the perfectly preserved Roman Villa Jovis are all worth a day. Capri in July and August is as crowded as Positano — go early and leave by mid-afternoon before the day-tripper masses arrive.

Where to Stay on the Amalfi Coast

The range is extraordinary — from $80/night agriturismos to $1,500/night cliffside villas.

Positano splurge: Le Sirenuse is the most famous hotel on the coast — impeccably maintained, with a saltwater pool and breakfast terrace that justify the price for special occasions. Hotel Poseidon is an excellent mid-tier alternative.

Positano mid-range: Several family-run pensioni and B&Bs on the staircase streets offer comfortable rooms with terraces at $150–250/night — far more charming than chain hotels at the same price elsewhere. Search Booking.com filtering for Positano with sea view.

Praiano value pick: Hotel Onda Verde sits right on the water with a private dock, excellent breakfast, and prices significantly below comparable Positano properties.

Ravello: Hotel Caruso (Belmond) is legendary — infinity pool, impeccable gardens, unreal views. Palazzo Avino is comparable. Both require serious commitment. The Villa Maria is a beautiful and affordable alternative.

Where to Eat on the Amalfi Coast

The rule: The closer to the waterfront in Positano, the more you're paying for location. Walk uphill or inland for better food at better prices.

Lo Guarracino (Positano): On the path to Fornillo Beach, this terrace restaurant serves the freshest seafood on the coast at prices that feel almost reasonable for Positano. Reserve in advance.

Da Gemma (Amalfi): An institution since 1872. The scialatielli ai frutti di mare (local pasta with mixed seafood) is worth the trip to Amalfi on its own.

Cumpa' Cosimo (Ravello): A family-run trattoria that has been feeding Ravello since 1929. The mixed pasta plate — seven pastas, seven sauces — is extraordinary value and quantity.

Il Pirata (Praiano): A beach club and restaurant right on the rocks, accessible by the staircase in the center of Praiano. Fresh fish grilled simply, local wine, and the sea lapping against the rocks below. One of the great lunches on the coast.

Combining Amalfi with Rome or Naples

The natural bookends for an Amalfi Coast trip are Rome to the north and Naples to the southeast.

Rome: The Amalfi Coast makes an excellent extension of a Rome trip. See our Rome travel guide — fly into Rome, spend 3 days, then take the train south. Two different Italys in one trip.

Naples and Pompeii: If you're routing through Naples, add a half-day at Pompeii (35 minutes by Circumvesuviana train) — one of the most remarkable ancient sites in the world. Naples itself is a compelling, rough-edged city with the best pizza on earth (Pizzeria Da Michele, cash only, two options on the menu, extraordinary).

Practical Amalfi Coast Tips

Book everything early: Hotels in Positano in peak season fill up months in advance. Same for popular restaurants. Don't wing it.

Pack light: You will carry your luggage up stairs. This is non-negotiable in most Amalfi Coast towns. A rolling suitcase on the Positano staircase is a form of self-torture.

Ferry over bus: Wherever possible, take the ferry between towns — faster, more scenic, and significantly less stressful than the coast road bus.

Cash: Many smaller restaurants and local shops are cash-only. Keep euros on hand.

Where to Book Your Trip

Final Thoughts

The Amalfi Coast requires more planning than most destinations — the logistics are genuinely complicated and the peak-season crowds are real. But the payoff is proportional. That first view of Positano from the ferry as you round the headland, or the Terrazzo dell'Infinito at golden hour, or lunch with your feet dangling above the Tyrrhenian Sea — these are the moments that people mean when they talk about travel changing how you see the world.

Plan carefully, pack light, take the ferry, and eat as far uphill as you can manage. The view from the top is worth it in every possible sense.

Phuket Travel Guide: Best Beaches, Things to Do & Where to Stay

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Phuket is Thailand’s largest island and one of Southeast Asia’s most visited destinations — which means it contains multitudes. There’s the Patong Beach version: loud, neon-lit, relentlessly touristy, and genuinely fun if that’s what you’re after. And there’s the other 80% of the island: quiet fishing villages, limestone karst viewpoints, pristine national park islands a short boat ride away, world-class cooking at local markets, and beaches that look like screensavers but are somehow real.

This guide is about how to get the best of both — or, if the Patong scene isn’t for you, how to find the Phuket that exists entirely outside of it.


When to Visit Phuket

Phuket’s weather is governed by two monsoon systems, which makes timing important.

Best season (November–April): The dry season, when the Andaman Sea is calm, visibility for snorkeling and diving is excellent, and beach conditions are ideal. December–February are peak months — the weather is perfection but crowds and prices reflect it. Book accommodations well in advance for December and January.

Shoulder season (April–May and October–November): The transitions between seasons can bring occasional rain but also lower prices and manageable crowds. May is when the southwest monsoon begins building; October is when it starts to wind down. Both can be good value months with some weather gambling involved.

Monsoon season (May–October): The southwest monsoon brings heavy rain, rough seas on the west coast (Patong, Kata, Karon), and red flags on many beaches. This doesn’t mean Phuket is closed — it rains, usually in bursts, and the island stays green and beautiful. The east coast (Rawai, Ao Yon) and areas near Phang Nga Bay are more sheltered. Prices drop dramatically. Experienced travelers who don’t need beach swimming often prefer this season.


Getting to Phuket

Phuket International Airport (HKT) receives direct flights from Bangkok (1 hour — multiple daily with Thai Airways, Bangkok Airways, AirAsia), Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong, and a growing number of other Asian hubs. From the US, you’ll connect through Bangkok, Singapore, or another Asian hub.

See our how to find cheap flights guide for tips on finding deals on Southeast Asia routes — Thai budget carriers like AirAsia can be dramatically cheaper than mainline carriers on the Bangkok–Phuket leg.

From the airport: Metered taxis (agree on meter-on before getting in), Grab (the Southeast Asian equivalent of Uber), or pre-booked hotel transfers. The drive to Patong Beach is about 45 minutes; to the southern beaches (Kata, Karon) slightly longer.

Getting around the island: Renting a scooter is the most efficient way to explore Phuket independently — it’s cheap (about $8–12/day) and gives you total flexibility. Be honest with yourself about your comfort level; Thai traffic is assertive and the roads have real risk. Tuk-tuks and Grab are good alternatives for shorter trips. Songthaews (shared red trucks) run fixed routes cheaply between major beaches.


Phuket’s Beaches: Which One Is Right for You?

The beach you choose largely determines what kind of trip you’ll have.

Patong Beach

The most famous and most developed beach in Phuket — 3km of sand backed by an unbroken wall of hotels, restaurants, tour operators, and the legendary (or notorious, depending on your perspective) Bangla Road nightlife strip. If you want maximum access to restaurants, nightlife, beach clubs, and organized activities at every price point, Patong delivers. If you want peace and quiet, it doesn’t.

Kata Beach and Kata Noi

South of Patong and a significant step down in intensity. Kata has good surf (it hosts surf competitions October–March), a lively but not overwhelming strip of restaurants and bars, and a genuine mix of families, couples, and surfers. Kata Noi (just around the headland) is smaller, less crowded, and very beautiful. Both are excellent bases.

Karon Beach

Long, wide, and gentler than Patong — Karon has good infrastructure without the Bangla Road energy. A solid choice for families or couples who want beach access and beach-town amenities without the party scene.

Surin Beach and Bang Tao Beach

North of Patong, these beaches have a more upscale, laid-back character — Surin in particular is known for its clear water and proximity to excellent seafood restaurants (the Sunday Walking Street market at Phuket Town is worth making the trip for). Bang Tao is home to the massive Laguna resort complex as well as some excellent independent hotels.

Rawai and Nai Harn

On the southeastern tip of the island, Rawai is more of a local fishing village than a beach resort — rough-and-ready seafood restaurants right on the water, longtail boat charters, and a distinctly non-touristy vibe. Nai Harn, just around the headland, is one of the most beautiful beaches on the island, backed by a lake and relatively uncrowded. This corner of Phuket is where expats and long-term visitors tend to settle.


Best Things to Do in Phuket

Phang Nga Bay Day Trip

One of the most spectacular natural environments in Southeast Asia — limestone karsts rising from emerald water, sea caves, mangrove forests, and the famous “James Bond Island” (Khao Phing Kan, from The Man with the Golden Gun). A full-day tour from Phuket by speedboat or traditional longtail covers the highlights.

Best approach: Skip the mass-market James Bond Island tours, which put you on a boat with 50+ people and spend most of the day at the tourist pier. Book a small-group sea kayak tour through Viator or GetYourGuide — you’ll paddle into the hongs (sea caves accessible only at low tide), see sections of the bay that tours skip, and have a dramatically better experience.

Phi Phi Islands

About an hour by speedboat from Phuket, the Phi Phi archipelago is one of Thailand’s most iconic destinations — Maya Bay (The Beach) with its limestone bowl and turquoise water, snorkeling at Shark Point, and the animated Phi Phi Don village. Day trips from Phuket are easy; staying overnight on Phi Phi Don gives you the place in early morning before day-trippers arrive.

Note on Maya Bay: It was closed for several years for ecological recovery and has reopened with strict visitor limits. Check current access restrictions before your trip — swimming is regulated and the experience is now better managed than the pre-closure days.

Diving and Snorkeling

The Andaman Sea around Phuket holds some of the best diving in the world. King Cruiser wreck, Shark Point, Anemone Reef, and the famous Similan and Surin Islands (a 2-hour speedboat journey away) offer visibility up to 30+ meters, reef sharks, leopard sharks, manta rays, and extraordinary coral. November–April is peak diving season when seas are calm and visibility is best.

Beginner divers: Phuket has excellent PADI certification courses — most resorts and all dive operators offer Open Water certification over 3–4 days.

Old Phuket Town

The historic center of Phuket City is genuinely excellent and genuinely undervisited. Sino-Portuguese shophouse architecture dating from the tin-mining era lines the streets of the old town; the Sunday Walking Street market (Lard Yai) draws local food vendors, crafts, and live music. The food scene in Old Town has exploded in recent years — this is the best place on the island to eat.

Tiger Kingdom and Ethical Wildlife Encounters

A note on wildlife tourism in Phuket: Tiger Kingdom (where you can pose with tigers) uses sedated or habitually managed animals and is not an ethical wildlife experience. For genuine encounters, the Elephant Jungle Sanctuary (feeding and bathing, no riding) is the responsible choice if elephants are on your list. Check operator credentials carefully.

Thai Cooking Classes

Several excellent cooking schools operate in Phuket — half-day classes typically include a market tour, instruction in 4–6 dishes, and lunch. You’ll leave with skills that travel home with you. Book through GetYourGuide.


Where to Stay in Phuket

Luxury: The Amanpuri (Surin Beach) is one of the finest resort properties in Asia — exceptional service, private beach access, extraordinary design. The Trisara and Keemala (boutique pool villa hotel in the hills) are also outstanding.

Mid-range: Kata has a good range of mid-tier hotels with pools and beach access at reasonable prices. The Kata Rocks and Boathouse are both excellent. In Bang Tao, the Anantara Layan is very good value for a luxury-ish property.

Budget: Guesthouses in Kata and Karon offer clean rooms with pools for $30–60/night. Patong has the widest range of budget options, including hostels.

Browse Booking.com — filter by beach, and read reviews carefully for location (many “beachfront” hotels are a 10-minute walk from the water).


Where to Eat in Phuket

Local markets: The best food in Phuket is at markets — Lard Yai Sunday Walking Street in Old Town, the Chillva Market in Phuket City (Thursday–Sunday evenings), and the night markets that operate in various locations. Pad thai, satay, mango sticky rice, boat noodles, massaman curry — all cooked fresh, all under $3 a dish.

Kan Eang@Pier (Chalong): A local seafood restaurant by the water, cooking fresh catch from local boats. A genuine local institution, not a tourist trap. Order the grilled sea bass and green mango salad.

Suay Restaurant (Phuket Town): Modern Thai cooking from a chef who trained in France — creative, refined, and approachable. One of the best restaurants on the island.

Patong night food court: Behind the main beach road in Patong, a covered food court serves authentic Thai street food at local prices. This is where to eat in Patong if you want to avoid tourist markup.


Phuket vs. Bali: How to Choose

The comparison comes up constantly. Our take: they’re different experiences more than they are competitors. Phuket is primarily a beach destination with excellent island-hopping opportunities; the culture is more in the background than the foreground. Bali has a more immersive cultural dimension — temples, ceremonies, rice terraces — alongside good beaches. Both are excellent.

If you’re choosing between them, see our Bali travel guide for a full breakdown of what Bali offers — many Southeast Asia trips combine both.


Practical Phuket Tips

Travel insurance: Non-negotiable for Thailand. Motorbike accidents are the single most common reason travelers end up in hospitals in Phuket. Medical care is good but expensive without coverage. See our best travel insurance guide for policies that cover adventure activities and medical evacuation.

Currency: Thai Baht (THB). Airport ATMs are fine; avoid currency exchange booths advertising “no commission.” Carry cash — many local restaurants and markets are cash-only.

Dress for temples: Thailand is a Buddhist country and temple visits require covered shoulders and knees. Carry a light scarf.

Water: Don’t drink tap water. Bottled water is cheap and widely available; many hotels provide refill stations.

Sun protection: The Andaman sun is intense. SPF 50, hat, rash guard if you’re snorkeling — sun poisoning on day one of a two-week trip is a real and avoidable disaster.


Quick 5-Day Phuket Itinerary

Day 1: Arrive, settle into base beach, sunset at Promthep Cape (the island’s southernmost point — spectacular)

Day 2: Phang Nga Bay sea kayak tour (full day)

Day 3: Phi Phi Islands speedboat day trip

Day 4: Old Phuket Town morning (Sunday market if timing works), afternoon beach, cooking class evening

Day 5: Dive or snorkel locally, afternoon at leisure, departure


Where to Book Your Phuket Trip

  • Hotels: Booking.com — filter by beach and read distance-to-water notes carefully
  • Tours: Viator and GetYourGuide for Phang Nga Bay, Phi Phi day trips, and diving
  • Flights: Our cheap flights guide — Phuket routes from the US reward flexibility on routing through Asian hubs
  • Insurance: Critical for Thailand — see best travel insurance picks that include motorbike and adventure activity coverage

Final Thoughts

Phuket at its best is one of Southeast Asia’s great travel destinations — the bay trip alone is worth the flight. The trick is knowing which version of the island you want and choosing your base accordingly. Patong if you want maximum energy and options; Kata or Karon if you want a beach holiday with some nightlife access; Rawai or Surin if you want to feel like you’ve found the real thing.

Go in dry season if you can, get out to the islands, eat at the markets, and don’t let the tourist infrastructure make you think that’s all there is. Phuket has depth. You just have to look for it.

Prague Travel Guide: What to Do, Where to Stay & How to See It Right

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Prague belongs in a different category from most European capitals. Where Paris is beautiful in a curated, self-aware way, and Amsterdam is beautiful in a compact, lived-in way, Prague is beautiful in a way that feels almost accidental — as if the city never quite got around to demolishing the medieval core, and now suddenly it’s one of the best-preserved historic city centers on the continent. Spires everywhere. A river that does exactly what a river in a fairy tale city should do. A castle that dominates the horizon from nearly every angle.

It’s also, compared to Western European capitals, remarkably affordable. A full dinner with drinks for two rarely tops $40. A good hotel room in a decent location runs $80–120. The beer — Czech lager, arguably the best in the world — costs less than water in some places.

This Prague travel guide is built from real time in the city: what hit different in person, what the map makes look walkable but isn’t, and exactly how we’d plan 3–5 days if we were doing it again.


When to Visit Prague

Best overall: May–June and September–October. The weather is excellent (65–75°F), the light is extraordinary, and the city is animated without being overwhelmed. Spring brings tulips in the parks; fall brings golden light on the red rooftops.

Peak summer (July–August): Prague is one of the most visited cities in Europe, and summer crowds in Old Town can be intense. Charles Bridge at 10am in August is a wall of people. The city is still wonderful — you just need to plan around the crowds.

Winter (December–February): Prague in December, with Christmas markets in the main squares, is genuinely magical. Cold (often below freezing), but the city doubles down on warmth inside — cozy wine bars, excellent hearty food, and holiday markets that are among the best in Europe. January and February are the quietest months; prices drop significantly.

Shoulder season tip: Prague rewards early mornings year-round. Charles Bridge, Old Town Square, and the castle complex are dramatically less crowded at 7–8am than at 10am. Plan big sights early and use midday for lunch and museums.


Getting Around Prague

Prague’s historic center is very walkable — Old Town, Malá Strana (Lesser Town), and the castle district can all be reached on foot if you’re staying centrally. The main complication is the hills between Malá Strana and Hradčany (the castle area), which are steep but have good paths.

Tram: Prague’s tram system is one of the best in Europe. Trams connect all major neighborhoods and run until midnight, with night trams after that. A 24-hour pass (about $4) is excellent value. The 22 tram is a tourist attraction in its own right — it goes from Vinohrady through Malá Strana up to the castle.

Metro: Fast and cheap for getting between farther neighborhoods. Three lines (A, B, C) cover the main tourist areas.

Taxi/Rideshare: Bolt (the European Uber equivalent) works well in Prague and is cheap. Avoid hailing street taxis — metered rates in Prague can be predatory for tourists.


Best Things to Do in Prague

Charles Bridge (Karlův Most)

Built in 1357, lined with 30 Baroque statues, and offering views of the Vltava River and Prague Castle that have not materially changed in centuries — Charles Bridge is the defining image of Prague for good reason. Touch the statue of John of Nepomuk (the bronze plaque is worn smooth by millions of hands) for good luck, per local tradition.

When to go: Before 8am for the best experience. The bridge is atmospheric in any light — fog in the morning, golden hour in the evening — but crowds arrive fast once tourist hours kick in.

Prague Castle (Pražský Hrad)

The largest ancient castle complex in the world by area — a medieval compound of palaces, churches, gardens, and galleries spread across the hilltop above Malá Strana. The St. Vitus Cathedral inside is one of the great Gothic cathedrals in Europe; the climb up the south tower repays the effort with sweeping city views.

Plan at least 3–4 hours. Buy a combined ticket that covers the cathedral, Old Royal Palace, St. George’s Basilica, and Golden Lane (a charming lane of tiny historic houses where Franz Kafka briefly lived). Book tickets through Viator to skip ticket lines — the queues at the castle can be long in peak season.

Old Town Square (Staroměstské Náměstí)

The showpiece of historic Prague — Gothic church towers, Baroque palaces, and the famous Astronomical Clock (Orloj) drawing crowds every hour on the hour when its mechanical figures perform. The square is undeniably touristy and worth seeing anyway; what’s extraordinary is that these buildings have been here for 600+ years.

Astronomical Clock tip: The mechanical show itself lasts about 45 seconds and is honestly less spectacular than the clock face, which is an intricate astronomical instrument showing solar time, lunar phases, and the positions of the sun and moon. Arrive a few minutes early and spend time looking at the whole mechanism.

Josefov (the Jewish Quarter)

Prague’s former Jewish ghetto is one of the most historically significant and sobering areas of the city. Six synagogues (each architecturally distinct), an old Jewish cemetery where 12,000 people are buried in layers — some graves marked by 12 stacked tombstones — and the Pinkas Synagogue, whose walls are covered with the names of 77,297 Bohemian Jews murdered in the Holocaust. Allow several hours. The combined ticket to the Jewish Museum covers all six sites.

Vyšehrad

Most tourists don’t make it to Vyšehrad, a second castle complex on a bluff south of the historic center — which means you nearly have it to yourself. The views of the Vltava from the ramparts are superb, the Romanesque church is beautiful, and the cemetery holds the graves of Czech luminaries including Dvořák and Smetana. A 20-minute tram ride from Old Town.

Malá Strana (Lesser Town)

The neighborhood between Charles Bridge and the castle is a warren of Baroque palaces, hidden gardens, cobblestone lanes, and excellent wine bars. Wander without a specific agenda. Don’t miss Kampa Island (a tiny island just off Charles Bridge with a watermill and park), Vrtba Garden (one of the finest Baroque gardens in Central Europe, usually uncrowded), and the Franz Kafka Museum on the riverbank.

Day Trip: Český Krumlov

Two and a half hours south of Prague by bus, Český Krumlov is a medieval town listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site — a castle on a bend in the Vltava, a preserved old town of Renaissance and Baroque buildings, and half the tourists of Prague. It’s one of the most beautiful small towns in Europe and a natural day trip. Book transport through GetYourGuide for organized day trips that include a guide.


Where to Stay in Prague

Old Town (Staré Město)

The most central location — walkable to Charles Bridge, Old Town Square, and Josefov. Prices are higher here than elsewhere but the convenience is real, particularly for first-time visitors who want to walk out the door and be immediately in historic Prague.

Malá Strana (Lesser Town)

Arguably the most atmospheric neighborhood to stay in — quieter than Old Town at night, beautiful streets, and short walks to both the castle and Charles Bridge. A slightly more romantic option.

Vinohrady

A residential neighborhood southeast of the center — beautiful Art Nouveau architecture, excellent local restaurants and coffee shops, and significantly lower hotel prices than Old Town. Twenty minutes by tram to the historic center. Our recommendation if you’re staying more than 4–5 days and want to feel like you’re actually living in Prague.

Browse Booking.com — filter by neighborhood and free cancellation. Prague has excellent boutique hotel options at prices that feel remarkably reasonable compared to Paris or Amsterdam.


Where to Eat and Drink in Prague

Czech food: Traditional Czech cuisine is hearty, meat-forward, and excellent in the right context — svíčková (beef sirloin in cream sauce with bread dumplings), goulash, roast pork knee, trdelník (though the chimney cakes sold on the tourist strip are a modern invention, not a Czech tradition). For authentic Czech cooking, go to a local pivnice (pub) or restaurace off the main tourist squares.

Lokál: A chain of Czech beer halls — not trendy, not fusion, just impeccably served Pilsner Urquell and classic Czech food at reasonable prices. Multiple locations. The one in Dlouhá street near Old Town is reliably excellent and consistently full of Czechs.

Café Louvre: A grand old Viennese-style café that’s been operating since 1902. Franz Kafka and Albert Einstein were regulars. Great for breakfast or afternoon coffee.

Manifesto Market: A street food market of shipping containers in Vinohrady with rotating international vendors. A good option for a relaxed lunch with variety.

Field: Fine dining in Old Town — seasonal Czech ingredients treated with serious technique. One of the best restaurants in the country. Book in advance on their website.

Beer: Czech lager is not the same thing as Czech lager elsewhere in the world. Pilsner Urquell, Kozel, and Budvar (the original Budweiser, which predates the American brand by centuries) all taste markedly different on draft here. Order a pint (půl litru) anywhere. The price should be under $2.50.


Practical Prague Tips

Currency: Czech Republic uses the Czech Koruna (CZK), not the Euro. Don’t exchange money at airport kiosks — rates are terrible. Use ATMs in the city center. Avoid currency exchange booths advertising “0% commission” — they make it up on the spread.

Language: Czech is not easy, but Czechs in the tourist industry speak English well. Learning “prosím” (please), “děkuji” (thank you), and “pivo” (beer) will be appreciated.

Scams: Prague has a few well-known tourist scams — taxi overcharging (use Bolt), strip club touts on the tourist strip (just don’t), and short-changing at some tourist-area restaurants. Pay attention to your bill and count change.

Data: A Czech SIM card or EU data plan works well. Or simply download Google Maps offline for Prague before you arrive — the map accuracy is excellent.


Prague Itinerary (3 Days)

Day 1: Old Town — Astronomical Clock, Old Town Square, Josefov Jewish Quarter, afternoon Charles Bridge (ideally at golden hour), dinner in a Malá Strana wine bar

Day 2: Prague Castle (early), Malá Strana wander, Kampa Island, Vrtba Garden, Vyšehrad afternoon, dinner in Vinohrady

Day 3: Day trip to Český Krumlov or explore beyond-tourist Prague — Vinohrady market, Žižkov TV Tower, local lunch, jazz club in the evening

If you have more time, add a half-day at the National Museum, a morning at the Mucha Museum (dedicated to the Czech Art Nouveau master), and an evening concert — Prague’s classical music scene is exceptional and tickets are affordable.


Combining Prague with Other European Destinations

Prague sits in the middle of Europe with excellent rail and budget airline connections:

  • Vienna: 4 hours by train — a natural pairing, two great Central European capitals
  • Berlin: 4.5 hours by train
  • Budapest: 7 hours by train or a short flight — another underrated Central European gem
  • Amsterdam: Easy budget airline connection — see our 3 Days in Amsterdam guide
  • Paris: Budget flights from Prague to Paris are often surprisingly cheap — see our Paris in 4 Days guide

Use our how to find cheap flights guide for tips on budget airlines and flexible date searches within Europe.


Where to Book Your Prague Trip

  • Hotels: Booking.com — great selection across Old Town, Malá Strana, and Vinohrady
  • Tours & Activities: Viator and GetYourGuide for Prague Castle skip-the-line, Český Krumlov day trips, and river cruises
  • Travel Insurance: Our best travel insurance guide covers Europe trip policies

Final Thoughts

Prague is one of those cities that people visit once thinking they’ll check it off the list and end up returning — sometimes within the same year. There’s something about the scale of it (big enough to be genuinely urban, compact enough to feel navigable), the price (affordable in a way that almost nothing else in Europe is), and the sheer density of beautiful things to look at.

Go early in the day. Wander off the maps. Find a pivnice and order a Kozel. The Charles Bridge at 7am in the fog, with almost no one else there, is one of the great free travel experiences in Europe. Don’t let the crowds at noon make you think you’ve missed it — you just need to show up earlier than everyone else.

Cabo San Lucas Travel Guide: What to Do, Where to Stay & How to Do It Right

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places and things we’ve personally used or vetted.


There’s a version of Cabo San Lucas that’s all swim-up bars, bachelor parties, and overpriced shots on the marina strip — and there’s a version that’s one of the most dramatic coastal landscapes in the Western Hemisphere, with world-class sport fishing, spectacular whale watching, desert mountains dropping straight into turquoise sea, and some genuinely excellent food if you know where to find it.

Both versions exist simultaneously. This guide is about making sure you get the second one — or at least the best possible blend of both.


Los Cabos vs. Cabo San Lucas: What’s the Difference?

“Los Cabos” refers to the entire region at the southern tip of Baja California — including Cabo San Lucas, San José del Cabo, and the 20-mile Tourist Corridor connecting them. Most visitors stay in one or the other:

Cabo San Lucas is the lively, party-forward end: the famous arch (El Arco), the marina, the sport fishing boats, the beach clubs, and most of the nightlife. This is what people mean when they say “Cabo.”

San José del Cabo is the quieter, more colonial town about 20 miles northeast — an actual Mexican town with a historic art district, excellent local restaurants, and a calmer vibe. Worth a day trip even if you’re staying in Cabo.

The Corridor between them is where the big luxury resort strips are — Palmilla, Chileno Bay, and the golf courses.


When to Visit Cabo

Best overall: November–April. Baja California Sur sits in a desert climate, which means Cabo is warm and sunny nearly year-round — but November through April is peak season for good reason. Temperatures are in the low 80s, humidity is low, and the Pacific whale migration (December–April) brings gray whales to the area in spectacular numbers.

Whale watching peak: December–March. Gray whales migrate through the Sea of Cortez on their way to Baja’s lagoons to give birth. A morning whale watching tour is one of the most extraordinary wildlife experiences you can have anywhere in Mexico.

Summer (June–September): Cabo is hot and humid in summer, with temperatures in the high 90s–100s and higher humidity than the winter months. Hurricane season runs June–November, with August and September carrying the most risk. That said, summers are cheaper and the Sea of Cortez gets warm enough for snorkeling — many families travel then. Just book travel insurance.

Spring break (March): Popular and crowded, with prices reflecting it. Great energy if that’s what you’re after; book several months in advance.


Getting to Cabo

Los Cabos International Airport (SJD) receives direct flights from dozens of US cities — it’s one of the most connected resort airports in Mexico. From most major US cities, you’re looking at a 2–4 hour flight. See our guide to finding cheap flights for tips on scoring deals on Cabo routes, which can be surprisingly affordable if you’re flexible on dates.

From the airport: The airport is about 30 minutes from San José del Cabo and 45 minutes from Cabo San Lucas. Pre-book a shuttle or private transfer — the taxi situation at SJD can be chaotic and prices aren’t regulated. Most resorts offer transfers; book through them or through Viator for a reliable rate.


Best Things to Do in Cabo San Lucas

El Arco (Land’s End)

The dramatic rock arch at the very tip of Baja California is Cabo’s defining image — and in person it earns the hype. The arch marks where the Pacific Ocean meets the Sea of Cortez, and the contrast between the wild Pacific side (rough, often dangerous surf) and the calm Caribbean-blue Cortez side is striking.

You can only reach El Arco by boat — water taxis operate from the marina for about $20–25 round trip. The tour typically includes Playa del Amor (Lover’s Beach) on the Cortez side, sea lion colonies on the rocks, and a pass through the arch itself if conditions allow.

Whale Watching (December–April)

If you’re visiting during whale season, this is the single highest-priority activity on the list. Gray whales are massive, frequent surfacers, and watching one breach next to your panga boat is something you’ll talk about for years. Humpbacks are also present. Tours run 2–3 hours from the marina; book through Viator or your hotel’s tour desk — quality varies and a good naturalist guide makes a significant difference.

Sport Fishing

Cabo is one of the great sport fishing destinations in the world. The waters off the tip of Baja hold marlin, dorado (mahi-mahi), wahoo, tuna, and roosterfish in concentrations that attract serious anglers from around the world. The Bisbee’s Black & Blue Tournament in October is one of the largest cash fishing tournaments on earth.

You don’t need to be a serious angler to enjoy a half-day fishing charter — most boats will clean and prepare your catch and many local restaurants will cook it for you. Book through the marina or GetYourGuide.

Medano Beach

The only swimmable beach in Cabo San Lucas proper (the surf everywhere else is too rough). Médano is a long stretch of calm water with a steady parade of beach clubs, water sports rentals, and taco vendors. Rent a kayak, book a parasail, or simply stake out a palapa and order from one of the roving vendors. The best beach clubs here include The Office (worth it for the “feet in the sand” experience), Mango Deck, and Nikki Beach.

Snorkeling at Chileno Bay and Santa Maria Bay

Two protected coves on the Corridor between Cabo and San José are the best snorkeling in the area — calm water, good visibility, and healthy reef life. Chileno Bay is accessible by taxi along the highway (free public beach access); Santa Maria Bay is a little harder to reach without a tour. Both are worth the effort over the marina area snorkeling.

Todos Santos Day Trip

About an hour north of Cabo on the Pacific side, Todos Santos is a UNESCO Magical Town — an artsy colonial village with excellent restaurants, galleries, and the famous (and slightly mythologized) Hotel California. The drive through the Baja desert is part of the appeal. This is the best easy day trip from Cabo if you want a dose of authentic Mexico.

ATV and Off-Road Tours

The desert landscape around Cabo begs to be explored by ATV — tours run into the Sierra de la Laguna foothills, along Pacific coastline, and to viewpoints that most visitors never see. It’s dusty, fun, and a genuinely different look at Baja. Viator has a wide range of options.


Best Beaches Near Cabo

Playa del Amor (Lover’s Beach): Accessible only by water taxi from the marina — the calm Cortez-side beach adjacent to El Arco. Bring water and snacks; there are no services.

Médano Beach: The main town beach. Lively, swimmable, social.

Chileno Bay: Best snorkeling, relatively uncrowded, protected cove.

Playa Palmilla: A calm, beautiful beach in the Corridor near the One&Only Palmilla resort. Public access exists but is easier with a car.

Playa Los Cerritos: About 45 minutes north on the Pacific side near Todos Santos — a surf beach with a completely different energy than Cabo. Worth the drive.


Where to Stay in Cabo

All-Inclusive Resorts

Cabo has excellent all-inclusive options that make a lot of sense if you’re going primarily to relax, eat, and drink. The Riu Santa Fe and Riu Palace are popular and well-reviewed. Sandos Finisterra has one of the best locations in Cabo proper.

We have a full breakdown of best all-inclusive resorts in Mexico if you’re comparing options across the country.

Boutique and Luxury Hotels

Las Ventanas al Paraíso (Corridor): One of the most acclaimed luxury hotels in Mexico. The service is extraordinary.

Chileno Bay Resort: A newer luxury property on the best snorkeling beach in the area. Very well designed.

The Cape, a Thompson Hotel: The best boutique option in Cabo proper — rooftop infinity pool overlooking El Arco, excellent design, central location.

Browse Booking.com for the full range — filter by beach access, all-inclusive, and Cabo San Lucas vs. San José to narrow down.

Budget Options

Cabo is not a budget destination, but Airbnb condos and smaller hotels in the marina area offer reasonable rates compared to the big resorts — especially if you’re traveling in a group and splitting a full apartment with a kitchen.


Where to Eat in Cabo

The Office (Médano Beach): Iconic beach restaurant with tables literally in the sand. The fish tacos and frozen cocktails are the move. More atmosphere than culinary excellence, but a genuine Cabo experience.

Maro’s Shrimp House: A no-frills local spot serving shrimp in a dozen preparations at prices that are genuinely reasonable by Cabo standards. Order the coconut shrimp.

Acre (San José del Cabo): Set in a mango orchard, Acre is the most impressive restaurant in all of Los Cabos — farm-to-table cooking with serious technique. Worth the drive to San José. Book in advance.

El Merkado (San José del Cabo): A stylish food hall with multiple vendors, rooftop bar, and excellent local options. The Saturday art walk in San José’s gallery district is nearby.

Tacos Gardenias: Ask any local where to eat tacos. This name comes up constantly. Cheap, busy, excellent.


Practical Cabo Tips

Currency: Pay in Mexican pesos where possible — USD is widely accepted but the exchange rate at restaurants and shops is rarely favorable. ATMs in town dispense pesos at better rates than airport exchange counters.

Safety: The tourist areas of Cabo San Lucas and San José del Cabo are generally safe and have been for years. Standard precautions apply — don’t flash expensive gear, be aware of your surroundings at night around the marina bar strip.

Water: Don’t drink tap water. Every hotel provides bottled water; buy more at OXXO convenience stores (ubiquitous and useful for snacks and drinks throughout the trip).

Timeshare presentations: You will be approached. The offers are “free tours” and “gifts” in exchange for sitting through a presentation. They take 3+ hours and employ high-pressure sales tactics. Just say no politely and walk on.


Where to Book Your Cabo Trip

  • Hotels & Resorts: Booking.com — compare all-inclusive vs. room-only across the Corridor
  • Tours: Viator and GetYourGuide for whale watching, fishing, snorkeling, and ATV tours
  • Flights: Our cheap flights guide — SJD has strong competition from US carriers
  • Travel Insurance: Hurricane season is real — see our best travel insurance picks for Mexico trips

Final Thoughts

Cabo is easy to do badly — stick to the marina strip, overpay for mediocre food, and spend your days in the hotel pool without ever seeing the real Baja. It’s also completely possible to do it brilliantly: a whale watching morning, an afternoon snorkeling Chileno Bay, fish tacos from a local joint, and the El Arco water taxi at golden hour.

The difference is mostly planning. Go in the right season, look beyond the resort bubble, and leave a day for Todos Santos or San José. The Baja Peninsula is one of the most geographically dramatic places on earth — the least you can do is look up from the swim-up bar occasionally.

Also check our Tulum travel guide if you’re considering other Mexico coastal destinations — very different vibe, equally rewarding.

Santorini Travel Guide: What to Do, Where to Stay & How to Plan Your Trip

Santorini Greece travel guide - white-washed buildings and blue domes of Oia overlooking the Aegean Sea

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places and things we’ve personally used or vetted.


Santorini is one of those places that almost every traveler has a complicated relationship with before they go. The images are everywhere — the white and blue domed churches, the caldera drop, the sunset over Oia that’s been photographed a billion times. You want to go. You’re also slightly suspicious. Can it possibly live up to it?

Here’s our honest answer after visiting: yes, with asterisks. The views are more dramatic in person than any photo conveys. The sunsets are genuinely extraordinary. The wine is excellent and costs less than you’d expect. The food (done right) is some of the best you’ll eat in Greece. The caldera is something else entirely when you’re standing at its edge.

The asterisks: it’s crowded in peak season, it’s expensive relative to the rest of Greece, and the most photographed spots require strategy or you’ll spend your golden hour shoulder-to-shoulder with tour groups. This guide is about how to do Santorini in a way that actually delivers.


When to Visit Santorini

Best time: May–June and September–October. You’ll get excellent weather, manageable crowds, and prices that are still reasonable. The water is warm enough to swim (particularly by late May), the landscape is lush from spring rains, and the towns haven’t hit their August peak saturation.

Peak season (July–August): Santorini is at full capacity. Prices for caldera-view hotels reach eye-watering levels, Oia at sunset is a wall of people, and the beaches are packed. If this is when you can go, book everything months in advance and lower your expectations about having any iconic spot to yourself.

Shoulder (May, October): Our recommendation for most travelers. May in particular is magical — wildflowers still visible, temperatures perfect for walking, and a genuine sense of the island before tourist season fully locks in.

Off-season (November–March): Much of the island closes down. The views are still stunning, prices plummet, and you’ll essentially have the caldera villages to yourself — but many restaurants, hotels, and activities won’t be operating.


Getting to Santorini

By air: Santorini (Thira) International Airport (JTR) receives direct flights from Athens (45 minutes) and seasonal direct flights from many European cities. From the US, you’ll connect through Athens or a European hub. The how to find cheap flights guide covers strategies for finding good fares on Greece routes.

By ferry: Ferries run from Athens’ Piraeus port to Santorini (standard: 8 hours; high-speed: 4–5 hours) and connect to other Cycladic islands including Mykonos, Naxos, and Paros. If you’re island-hopping, the ferry system is well-organized — Ferryscanner and Ferryhopper are the best booking tools.

From the port: Arriving by ferry deposits you at Athinios port, at the base of steep cliffs. A bus, taxi, or pre-arranged hotel shuttle gets you up to the main towns. Agree on taxi price before getting in — meters aren’t always used.


The Main Villages: Which to Base Yourself In

Oia

The most photographed village on the island — the iconic domed churches and caldera views that define Santorini’s image are largely from Oia. It’s genuinely beautiful, particularly at the northern tip where the castle ruins sit. The main shopping street (Nikolaou Nomikou) is charming. The sunset from the castle is extraordinary.

The catch: everyone knows this. At sunset, Oia is elbow-to-elbow. Stay here if you want immersive caldera views from your accommodation and are willing to navigate crowds — but explore strategically.

Best for: Honeymoons, special occasions, travelers who want the iconic Santorini experience.

Fira (Thira)

The island’s capital is the most practical base — more restaurants, more price range options, excellent caldera views, and a central location for getting around the island. It’s more bustling than Oia, less “picture-perfect,” and frankly a good choice for travelers who don’t want to pay the Oia premium.

The path from Fira down to the old port (and back up) is one of the best walks on the island — 580 steps, donkeys, and caldera views the whole way.

Best for: Travelers who want flexibility, value, and easy access to the whole island.

Imerovigli

Between Fira and Oia, perched on the island’s highest caldera point, Imerovigli is quieter and more residential than either. The views are exceptional and the Skaros Rock hike — a former castle promontory jutting into the caldera — is one of the most dramatic walks on Santorini. Many luxury cave hotels are here.

Best for: Couples seeking quiet, caldera views without Oia’s crowds.

Pyrgos

An inland village that most tourists skip entirely, Pyrgos is a medieval village of winding lanes, local restaurants, and a castle at its peak with 360-degree island views. No caldera, but genuine Cycladic atmosphere and a fraction of the prices. The Canava Roussos winery, just below the village, produces some of the island’s best wines.


Best Things to Do in Santorini

Oia Sunset (Strategically)

Yes, everyone does the Oia sunset. That doesn’t mean you should skip it — it’s spectacular. The strategy is to arrive 45–60 minutes early and position yourself either at the castle ruins (crowded but dramatic) or somewhere along the caldera path toward Fira, where you’ll have nearly identical views with a fraction of the people.

The truly insider move: watch the sunset from one of the caldera-view restaurant terraces with a glass of Vinsanto in hand. You pay a premium for the drinks but get a reserved seat with arguably better views than the castle.

Akrotiri Archaeological Site

This is the one Santorini sight that genuinely surprises visitors. Akrotiri is a Bronze Age city buried under volcanic ash around 1600 BCE — essentially the Pompeii of the Aegean. The preservation is extraordinary: multi-story buildings, frescoes, drainage systems, and storage vessels have all been recovered intact. A large canopy now covers the excavation, making it accessible in any weather.

Arrive when it opens. Guided tours through Viator add excellent historical context, but going independently is straightforward — audio guides are available on-site.

Caldera Boat Tour

A boat trip around the caldera is one of the most dramatic experiences Santorini offers. Most tours circle the outer caldera, stop at the active Nea Kameni volcano (you can hike to the crater), visit the hot springs at Palea Kameni, and often stop at Thirassia island. The scale of the caldera — what remains of a massive volcanic explosion circa 1600 BCE — is only comprehensible from water level.

Book through GetYourGuide or your hotel. Private sailboat charters are available and worth the premium for sunset cruises.

Red Beach and Perissa

Santorini’s beaches are unusual — volcanic black and red sand that holds heat intensely and has a drama to it that white-sand beaches don’t. Red Beach, near Akrotiri, is the most striking — vivid red volcanic cliffs rise directly from the shoreline. It’s small (get there early) and swimming conditions vary; check before you go.

Perissa and Perivolos, on the south coast, are long stretches of black sand with good swimming, beach bars, and a fraction of Oia’s prices.

Santo Winery

Santorini’s wine scene is one of the island’s great underrated pleasures. The local Assyrtiko grape produces a distinctive, mineral, acidic white wine that pairs beautifully with the island’s seafood. Santo Wines’ terrace — perched on the caldera above Pyrgos — offers some of the finest wine-tasting views you’ll find anywhere. Book ahead; the sunset terrace session fills up.

Canava Roussos and Domaine Sigalas are also excellent if you want to explore multiple producers.


Where to Stay in Santorini

The accommodation divide in Santorini is essentially: caldera view or not.

Caldera-view cave hotels (Oia and Imerovigli): These are the iconic Santorini accommodations — hewn into the cliff face, with private terraces or plunge pools overlooking the caldera. They are not cheap. A mid-range caldera-view room in Oia in peak season runs $400–800/night. The experience is extraordinary and worth it for a special occasion; for budget-conscious travelers, it’s genuinely not necessary to enjoy Santorini.

Fira/non-caldera hotels: You can get an excellent hotel with a pool, good food, and easy island access for $100–200/night, particularly in the shoulder season. Many have partial caldera views; none have the dramatic cliff-edge experience.

Browse Booking.com and filter for caldera view, cave hotels, and free cancellation — the property photos on this island are unusually accurate, which helps.


Where to Eat in Santorini

Budget warning: dining on the caldera is expensive everywhere. Expect €20–40 per main course at any restaurant with caldera views.

To Psaraki (Vlychada): On the south coast, far from the tourist circuit, this fish taverna is run by a local family and serves some of the freshest seafood on the island at reasonable prices. The drive or taxi is worth it.

Metaxy Mas (Exo Gonia village): One of the most beloved local restaurants on the island — no caldera view, no tourist markup, genuinely excellent Santorinian cooking including fava (yellow split peas), white eggplant, and fresh catch. Reservations essential.

Roka (Fira): A small, atmospheric restaurant tucked into the back lanes of Fira. Great local dishes at prices that won’t wreck your budget.

Any bakery, any morning: Santorini’s traditional breakfast pastries (koulouri, spanakopita) from local bakeries are one of the great simple pleasures of the island.


How Long to Spend in Santorini

3 days: Enough to see the key sights — Oia, Akrotiri, one beach, one boat tour, a proper sunset. You’ll feel the highlights without feeling rushed.

5 days: The sweet spot for most travelers. Allows for a slower pace, a winery afternoon, a day on the south coast beaches, and enough time to discover spots that aren’t on the top-10 lists.

7+ days: You’ll start to run out of structured activities and either deeply relax (excellent) or feel restless (common). Santorini rewards slow travel but punishes trying to fill every day with attractions.


Santorini + Greece Island Hopping

Santorini is often combined with other Greek islands. Natural pairings:

  • Naxos: Less touristy, excellent food and beaches, great hiking, just 2 hours by ferry
  • Mykonos: Lively nightlife and beaches — very different vibe, 3 hours by fast ferry
  • Crete: The largest Greek island and could be its own trip; a 2-hour flight from Santorini

If you’re combining Santorini with mainland Greece, Athens is a natural add-on (direct flights, 45 minutes). Don’t leave the country without spending at least 2 days in Athens — the Acropolis and food scene alone justify it.


Where to Book Your Santorini Trip

  • Hotels: Booking.com — best selection of cave hotels and caldera properties
  • Tours & Activities: Viator and GetYourGuide for caldera sailing, Akrotiri tours, and winery experiences
  • Flights: Our guide to finding cheap flights covers strategies for Europe routes
  • Travel Insurance: Greece is generally safe but travel disruptions (ferry delays, strikes) happen — see our best travel insurance picks

Final Thoughts

Santorini lives up to the photos — and in some ways surpasses them. The caldera has a scale that images can’t capture. The wine is a genuine discovery. The Bronze Age ruins at Akrotiri might be the most underrated ancient site in Europe.

Go in shoulder season. Book caldera-facing accommodation at least once if you can stretch the budget (even one night is worth it). Eat away from the tourist-strip. Position yourself for sunset early. And give yourself enough time to find the island that exists beyond the famous Instagram frame — it’s worth finding.

Heading to the rest of Europe before or after? Our Paris in 4 Days guide is a good starting point for extending your trip.

New York City Travel Guide: What to Do, See, Eat & Skip (From People Who’ve Been Many Times)

New York City travel guide - Empire State Building skyline aerial view Manhattan

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places and things we’ve personally used or vetted.


New York City does something interesting to travelers: it meets you wherever you are. Come for Broadway and luxury hotels and it delivers. Come with $50/day and a MetroCard and it delivers that too. It’s the most visited city in the Western Hemisphere, and yet on any given street corner in Brooklyn or Queens or the Bronx, you can find a version of New York that feels nothing like a tourist city at all.

We’ve been to New York more times than we can count, across different seasons and different budgets. This guide is what we’d tell a friend who’s going for the first time: what’s actually worth doing, where to eat without feeling ripped off, which neighborhoods reward aimless wandering, and what to skip without missing anything.


When to Visit New York City

Best overall: April–June and September–October. The city is at its most pleasant — temperatures in the 60s–70s, outdoor dining season, Central Park in full bloom or fall color. These are also the most popular months, so book hotels in advance.

Summer (July–August): Hot and humid, but New York’s outdoor culture is in full swing — rooftop bars, free concerts in the park (the New York Philharmonic plays Central Park for free in summer), and long daylight hours. Crowds are heavy but manageable. Air conditioning is your friend.

Fall (September–October): Our favorite time. The light is extraordinary, the weather is perfect for walking, and you’ll encounter every kind of New Yorker at their most outdoorsy. The marathon runs in early November if that’s of interest.

Winter (December–February): New York at Christmas is genuinely magical — the Rockefeller Center tree, ice skating, holiday window displays at the department stores. January and February are the coldest and slowest months; hotel prices drop and museums are quiet. Pack serious layers.


Getting Around New York City

The Subway: Do not take taxis or rideshares for routine travel within the five boroughs. The subway is fast, runs 24/7, and costs $2.90 per ride (or get an unlimited MetroCard). It connects nearly everywhere you’d want to go. Download the NYC Subway map app or use Google Maps — it’s accurate and shows real-time delays.

Walking: New York is profoundly walkable. Manhattan is laid out on a grid above 14th Street — numbered streets go east-west, avenues go north-south. A crosstown block is about 250 feet; a block along an avenue is about 800. Most first-timers dramatically overestimate how far things are on a map and underestimate how much they’ll want to walk.

Rideshare: Uber and Lyft are useful for getting to JFK or Newark from Manhattan, or for reaching parts of Brooklyn and Queens that the subway doesn’t serve well.

Airport tips: JFK connects to Manhattan via the AirTrain + subway (cheapest option, about an hour). Newark EWR takes a NJ Transit train to Penn Station (45 min, very convenient). LaGuardia is the worst — the Q70 bus exists but a car/Lyft from LGA is often worth the cost.


Best Things to Do in New York City

The Neighborhoods (This Is the Real New York)

Every first-time visitor goes to Times Square. Most of them quickly realize Times Square is not New York — it’s a commercial district designed to sell merchandise to tourists. Give it 30 minutes, take your photo, buy nothing.

The New York that locals actually inhabit — and that rewards travelers — is in the neighborhoods:

Greenwich Village and the West Village: Tree-lined streets, incredible restaurants, great people-watching. The kind of neighborhood that makes you want to move to New York.

DUMBO (Brooklyn): The Manhattan Bridge view with cobblestones is one of the great New York photographs. Brooklyn Bridge Park along the waterfront is excellent. The adjacent neighborhoods of Brooklyn Heights and Carroll Gardens are beautiful for walking.

Williamsburg (Brooklyn): The epicenter of Brooklyn’s creative culture — coffee shops, vintage stores, excellent restaurants, and the music venue scene. Take the L train.

Harlem: World-class gospel brunch (try Sylvia’s on Sundays), a deep culinary and music history, and the kind of street life that reminds you why people love this city. Walk Malcolm X Boulevard (Lenox Ave) and Frederick Douglass Boulevard.

The Lower East Side: Historic Jewish deli culture (Katz’s Delicatessen is mandatory), excellent cocktail bars, and the Tenement Museum — one of the most interesting museums in the city.

Astoria, Queens: Underrated and undervisited. Extraordinary diversity of food — Greek, Egyptian, Colombian, Chinese, everything — at prices that would be a third of Manhattan. The Museum of the Moving Image is here, if you’re into film.

Central Park

Central Park is 843 acres in the middle of Manhattan and is genuinely one of the great urban parks in the world. Enter from any point on the perimeter, wander, and follow what interests you. Key landmarks: Bethesda Fountain, the Ramble (a dense woodland that attracts extraordinary migratory birds in spring and fall), Belvedere Castle, and the Reservoir.

Rent a bike at any of the Citi Bike stations around the park’s perimeter — circling the park on a bike takes about an hour and gives you a different scale than walking.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Met is one of the greatest museums on earth, full stop. It holds over 5,000 years of art across every civilization in human history. You cannot see it all in one visit or ten. Strategy: pick two or three departments that genuinely interest you and go deep rather than skimming everything.

Suggested departments: Egyptian Art (the Temple of Dendur alone is worth the trip), the American Wing (the architecture and period rooms are extraordinary), Greek and Roman Art.

Entry is pay-what-you-wish for New York state residents; suggested admission for others is $30. Book timed entry tickets in advance at metmuseum.org.

The High Line

An elevated park built on a former freight rail line running through Chelsea and the Meatpacking District on Manhattan’s west side. It’s beautifully designed, free to enter, and connects to Hudson Yards and Hudson River Park at its southern end. Best visited on weekday mornings — weekends in summer can feel like a shopping mall. The Whitney Museum of American Art sits at its southern entrance and is worth a visit.

One World Observatory or Edge

If you want a high-up view of New York — and you should — the choices are: One World Observatory at One World Trade Center, EDGE at Hudson Yards (the stepped outdoor viewing platform), or the classic Empire State Building. All three are legitimate; One World has the most history and the best southern views; EDGE is the most dramatic outdoor experience.

Book tickets in advance through Viator to skip lines — the savings in time are real.

Brooklyn Bridge Walk

Walk across the Brooklyn Bridge from the Manhattan side (access point near City Hall). It takes about 20 minutes and the views are excellent. On the Brooklyn side, you’re in DUMBO — from there, continue to Brooklyn Bridge Park for the Manhattan skyline view that appears in approximately every New York movie ever made.

Go early morning for the best light and the fewest people.

Museum of Natural History

A New York institution — the whale alone (94-foot blue whale suspended in the Hall of Ocean Life) is worth the trip. The planetarium (Hayden Planetarium) runs excellent astronomy shows. Good for all ages. Full day if you do it properly.


Where to Stay in New York City

New York hotel prices are reliably shocking. Budget in the $250–400/night range for a decent Manhattan hotel room — this is not luxury, it’s median. Options for managing costs:

Stay in Brooklyn: Williamsburg, DUMBO, and Park Slope are all well-connected to Manhattan and hotel prices are 20–40% lower. The travel time is real but manageable.

Stay in Long Island City, Queens: 5–7 minutes from Midtown Manhattan by subway. Some of the best value hotels in the metro area are here.

Midtown vs. Downtown: Midtown is convenient (central, close to major sites) but feels corporate. Lower Manhattan (Financial District, Tribeca) is less convenient to uptown sights but the neighborhoods are interesting and prices are sometimes lower on weekends when the business traveler clears out.

Browse Booking.com — filter by neighborhood, check-in date, and free cancellation. New York hotel pricing is extremely date-sensitive; midweek is often cheaper than weekends.


Where to Eat in New York City

You could eat a different excellent meal three times a day for years in New York and not run out of options. A few that are genuinely worth it:

Katz’s Delicatessen (Lower East Side): Open since 1888. The pastrami sandwich is a genuine New York experience — expensive (about $25) and completely worth it. Go on a weekday to avoid weekend crowds.

Levain Bakery (Upper West Side, multiple locations): The cookies are the size of a softball and probably the best in New York. The line looks daunting and moves quickly.

Joe’s Pizza (Greenwich Village, multiple locations): $3.50 for a slice of perfectly calibrated New York pizza. No seating required. Eat standing.

Xi’an Famous Foods (multiple locations): Northwest Chinese hand-ripped noodles and lamb dishes at prices that seem impossible for Manhattan. The spicy cumin lamb burger is extraordinary.

Smorgasburg (Williamsburg, weekends): An outdoor food market in Brooklyn with 80+ vendors — the best food market in the country, we’d argue. Brooklyn Bridge Park location on Sundays. Open April–November.

For a splurge: Gramercy Tavern has been one of New York’s finest restaurants for 30 years. Book a month in advance on Resy.


Tours Worth Doing in New York

  • Brooklyn Bridge and DUMBO food tour: Combines the walk with neighborhood tastings — a good way to orient yourself to Brooklyn on arrival.
  • Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island: Don’t try to just show up. Book tickets in advance at nps.gov/stli. The Ellis Island immigration museum is genuinely moving — if your family came through here, budget extra time.
  • Street art tour in Bushwick: The Bushwick Collective in Brooklyn is one of the largest outdoor street art installations in the world. A guided tour provides context; or you can wander independently.

Browse full options on GetYourGuide and Viator — both have strong New York inventory.


Quick New York Itinerary (5 Days)

Day 1: Arrive, drop bags, walk the High Line, dinner in the Meatpacking District
Day 2: Central Park, Museum of Natural History, Upper West Side lunch, Met Museum (afternoon)
Day 3: Brooklyn Bridge walk, DUMBO, Brooklyn Bridge Park, Williamsburg dinner
Day 4: Lower East Side (Katz’s lunch, Tenement Museum), One World Observatory, Financial District
Day 5: Harlem morning, Metropolitan Museum of Art if you didn’t finish it, Times Square (briefly), afternoon flight


Practical Tips for New York

Don’t carry a large bag: Pickpocketing is rare but real, and you’ll walk 5+ miles a day. A daypack or crossbody is ideal.

Tipping: Standard is 20% at restaurants. Counter service and coffee shops have tip prompts — 0–10% is reasonable, 20% is generous. Taxis and rideshares: 15–20%.

Safety: New York is safer than its reputation, particularly in Manhattan and the tourist-frequented parts of Brooklyn and Queens. Normal urban awareness applies — be aware of your surroundings, don’t flash valuables on the subway at night.

Luggage: For flying into NYC, see our picks for best carry-on luggage — carry-on only makes the arrival experience dramatically easier.


Where to Book Your New York Trip

  • Hotels: Booking.com — compare across neighborhoods, filter for free cancellation
  • Tours & Activities: Viator and GetYourGuide
  • Flights: Our how to find cheap flights guide — New York has three major airports (JFK, Newark, LaGuardia) and competition between carriers keeps prices competitive from most US cities

Final Thoughts

First-time visitors to New York often try to see too much — the Top 10 sites in 3 days, the whole island in a weekend. The city that rewards the most is the one you find by walking an unfamiliar neighborhood until you’re hungry, then finding somewhere local to eat.

Give yourself at least 5 days. Pick two or three things each day that you genuinely want to do and let the rest happen. The serendipitous stuff — the jazz coming from a restaurant window, the park conversation, the perfect slice from a counter you’d never find in a guidebook — is what people actually remember about New York.

It’s the kind of city that makes you want to come back, usually before you’ve even left. That’s not a cliché. It’s just true.

Oahu Travel Guide: Best Things to Do, Where to Stay & What to Eat

Oahu Hawaii travel guide - Ko'olau Mountains volcanic peaks Honolulu

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places and things we’ve personally used or vetted.


Oahu gets a reputation as “the tourist island” — the one with the resort strip, the Wal-Mart, the chain restaurants within walking distance of the beach. And yes, parts of Waikiki live up to that description. But write off Oahu entirely and you’re missing one of the most diverse, surprising, and flat-out beautiful islands in the Hawaiian chain.

The same island that has a Cheesecake Factory on the waterfront also has a rainforest hiking trail to a 400-foot waterfall, a world-class surf mecca on the North Shore, a Chinatown that punches well above its weight for food, and some of the most historically significant sites in the entire Pacific. Oahu rewards the traveler who looks past the obvious.

This Oahu travel guide is built from real visits — what we thought was worth it, what we’d skip, and exactly how we’d plan the trip if we were doing it again.


Why Visit Oahu (Beyond Waikiki)

The easy answer is: Waikiki Beach itself is actually stunning, despite the crowds. The water is warm and impossibly blue, Diamond Head looms behind you, and there’s a reason people have been honeymooning here for a century.

But the better answer is that Oahu is three different islands in one. There’s the urban Honolulu-Waikiki corridor, with excellent restaurants, nightlife, and Pearl Harbor. There’s the windward side — lush, green, relatively uncrowded, with locals who barely interact with tourists. And then there’s the North Shore, which from November to February becomes the most consequential stretch of surf real estate on the planet and in summer transforms into a mellow, laid-back beach town.


When to Visit Oahu

Best overall: April–June and September–October are the sweet spot — weather is excellent, crowds are manageable, and prices are reasonable. You’ll get warm water, blue skies, and enough elbow room to actually enjoy yourself.

Peak season (December–January, July–August): Crowds are at their heaviest and prices spike. If this is when you’re going, book accommodations and popular tours well in advance. The North Shore surf competitions in November–January are worth the crowds if you’re into big wave surfing culture.

Shoulder season (September–October): Our personal favorite time. Hurricane season technically applies to Hawaii, but storms rarely make direct impact. You’ll get great weather, lower rates, and the North Shore shifts from quiet summer mode to early surf season.


Getting Around Oahu

Renting a car gives you the most flexibility and we’d generally recommend it — especially if you want to explore the North Shore, windward coast, or hiking trails outside of Honolulu. Book early; rental cars on Oahu have been chronically undersupplied and prices can be shocking if you wait.

That said, Waikiki is walkable and The Bus (Oahu’s public transit system) is surprisingly functional for getting to most major sights. Uber and Lyft operate on the island. If you’re spending most of your time in Waikiki and Honolulu proper, you might be able to skip the rental car.

Parking tip: Parking in Waikiki is expensive and limited. If you do rent a car, look for hotel parking packages or use the Ala Moana Shopping Center (validated parking with various purchases).


Best Things to Do on Oahu

Pearl Harbor

This is the most historically significant site in Hawaii and genuinely one of the most moving memorials in the country. The USS Arizona Memorial — accessible only by boat and managed by the National Park Service — sits directly over the sunken battleship where 1,177 sailors are still entombed. Give it several hours and go with appropriate gravity.

Book in advance: Free NPS passes to the Arizona Memorial are released at specific times and go fast. Reserve through Recreation.gov before your trip or arrive very early.

The Pearl Harbor aviation museum and USS Missouri battleship tours can be booked as a combined package — Viator has good guided options that include round-trip transportation from Waikiki.

Diamond Head State Monument

The hike to the summit of this extinct volcanic crater is one of the most iconic walks in Hawaii. It’s about 1.6 miles round-trip with a steep but manageable ascent, and the views from the top — Honolulu, Waikiki, and the Pacific in every direction — are extraordinary. Go early morning (first entry is at 6am) to beat both the heat and the crowds.

Parking reservations and entry tickets must be booked online in advance at Hawaii’s state parks website.

The North Shore

Spend at least a day here — it’s only about an hour from Waikiki but feels like a completely different world. From November to February, waves at Banzai Pipeline, Sunset Beach, and Waimea Bay reach 20–40 feet, drawing the world’s best big wave surfers for competitions like the Vans Triple Crown. Even if you’re not a surf person, watching a set roll through Pipeline is an experience that’s hard to put into words.

In summer, the same breaks become calm and swimmable, the shrimp trucks line Kamehameha Highway, and the vibe is deeply relaxed. Stop at Matsumoto Shave Ice in Haleiwa — it’s touristy and worth it.

Hanauma Bay Nature Preserve

One of the best snorkeling spots in Hawaii and one of the most protected. Hanauma Bay has strict capacity limits — reservations open 30 days in advance at hanaumabaystatepark.com and fill up almost immediately. Plan this on day one of your trip planning, not day one of your actual trip.

The bay’s reef hosts hundreds of species of tropical fish, sea turtles, and the kind of underwater visibility that makes you forget you’re a person for a minute. A required educational video plays before you enter, which is short and worth watching.

Manoa Falls Trail

Tucked into the lush hills behind Honolulu, this 1.5-mile round-trip trail leads to a gorgeous 150-foot waterfall through dense tropical rainforest. It’s an easy to moderate hike that feels dramatically removed from the Waikiki strip. Go prepared for mud and mosquitoes — long pants and bug spray are your friends.

The trailhead parking area is small; arrive early or take a rideshare. No reservations required.

Kailua Beach

On the windward (northeastern) side of the island, Kailua Beach is consistently rated one of the best beaches in the US — long, uncrowded (by Oahu standards), with powdery sand and crystal water. The town of Kailua itself has excellent local restaurants and coffee shops. This is a good day-trip from Waikiki or a smart base for travelers who want to avoid the resort-corridor entirely.


Where to Stay on Oahu

Waikiki — Best for First-Timers and Beach Access

Waikiki has every price point, walkability to the beach, and easy access to Honolulu’s restaurants and nightlife. It’s the obvious choice for first visits.

Mid-range pick: Outrigger Waikiki Beach Resort puts you directly on the beach — the location is hard to beat.

Splurge: The Royal Hawaiian (the Pink Palace) is an Oahu institution and worth it for a special occasion — the beach access and service are excellent.

Budget: There are hostel options and budget hotels on the fringe of Waikiki, but be prepared for more walk time to the water.

Browse the full range of Waikiki hotels on Booking.com — filters for beachfront and pool access narrow things down quickly.

Kailua — For a Local Feel

If you want to avoid the resort corridor entirely, renting a vacation home in Kailua puts you on one of the best beaches on the island. Prices are competitive with Waikiki hotels and you get more space, a kitchen, and actual neighborhood life.

North Shore — For Surf Culture

A handful of vacation rentals and a few small hotels dot the stretch from Haleiwa to Sunset Beach. This is a niche choice — logistics are harder, restaurant options are sparse — but if you’re coming specifically for surf season or want maximum separation from tourist infrastructure, it delivers.


Where to Eat on Oahu

Leonard’s Bakery (Honolulu): Original malasadas — Portuguese donuts — made fresh all day. Get the original glazed. The line moves fast.

Helena’s Hawaiian Food (Honolulu): James Beard Award-winning Hawaiian plate lunch spot in a strip mall. The short ribs and kulolo (taro pudding) are extraordinary. Cash only, closes early.

Giovanni’s Shrimp Truck (North Shore): The original garlic shrimp truck, operating from the same spot since 1993. Messy, delicious, absolutely required.

Marukame Udon (Waikiki): Assembly-line udon for under $10 a bowl — the line looks daunting but moves quickly. Best cheap meal in Waikiki by a wide margin.

The Pig and the Lady (Chinatown): Creative, Vietnamese-inflected farm-to-table cooking that could hold its own in any major city. Book a reservation.


Oahu With Kids

Oahu works exceptionally well for families. The beach at Waikiki is calm and shallow enough for young kids. The Honolulu Zoo and Waikiki Aquarium are both solid half-day activities. The Polynesian Cultural Center on the windward side — a large living museum featuring the cultures of Hawaii, Fiji, Tonga, Samoa, and more — is genuinely excellent for kids and adults alike. Book tickets through GetYourGuide for deals on packages that include the evening luau show.

Check our Kauai with Kids guide if you’re combining Hawaii islands — Kauai is a natural add-on and very family-friendly.


Tours Worth Booking on Oahu

  • Circle Island Tour: A guided day-trip covering Punchbowl Cemetery, North Shore, Dole Plantation, and the windward coast. Good for visitors with limited time who want to see the whole island. Browse tours on Viator
  • Sunset Catamaran Sail (Waikiki): A two-hour sunset sail along the Waikiki coastline with Diamond Head in view. Touristy in the best way — drinks included on most charters.
  • Surf Lessons: If you’ve never surfed, Waikiki’s gentle waves are the best place in the world to learn. Instructors operate directly from the beach — most beginners stand up on their first lesson.
  • Guided Hike to Ka’au Crater: A more challenging off-trail hike to twin waterfalls and a volcanic crater. Not recommended solo — guides know the route and the terrain genuinely requires it.

Where to Book Your Oahu Trip


Quick Oahu Itinerary (5 Days)

Day 1: Arrive, settle into Waikiki, sunset walk along the beach
Day 2: Pearl Harbor (morning), Chinatown lunch, Diamond Head hike (late afternoon)
Day 3: Hanauma Bay snorkeling (early — arrive at opening), Kaimana Beach, local dinner
Day 4: Full day North Shore — Haleiwa shrimp trucks, Waimea Bay, Sunset Beach
Day 5: Manoa Falls hike, Kailua Beach, afternoon flight home

If you have more time, add a day for the windward coast (Lanikai Pillboxes hike) and another for Kailua town. And if you’re combining islands, Oahu pairs beautifully with a few nights on Kauai — see our complete Kauai guide or one-week Maui itinerary to build out a full Hawaii trip.


Final Thoughts on Oahu

Oahu is the most layered island in Hawaii — easy to underestimate, impossible to fully exhaust. The first trip usually follows the obvious path (Waikiki, Pearl Harbor, maybe North Shore). The second trip goes deeper: windward side hikes, Chinatown dinners, local beaches where you’re one of five people. Both versions are worthwhile.

Give yourself at least five days if you can — four is workable but rushed. And book Pearl Harbor, Hanauma Bay, and Diamond Head well in advance. On Oahu, the best experiences all have reservation systems for good reason.

Cancun Travel Guide: Beyond the Hotel Zone (What to Know Before You Go)

ultimate guide to Cancun

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places and things we’ve personally used or vetted.

Cancun has a reputation problem. Mention it to a seasoned traveler and they’ll wrinkle their nose a little — Spring Break memories, the strip of identical all-inclusive resorts, party boats with foam cannons. We get it. We had the same instinct.

Then we actually went, and here’s what we found: the Hotel Zone is exactly what you’d expect, but it’s surrounded by — and acts as a gateway to — some of the most spectacular natural and archaeological wonders in the Western Hemisphere. The Great Mayan Reef is right there. Cenotes are everywhere. Chichen Itza is two hours away. Tulum is 90 minutes south. The Caribbean water is that impossible blue that exists almost nowhere else on earth.

Cancun done right is an excellent trip. Here’s how to do it right.

Is Cancun Actually Worth It?

Yes, if you know what you’re getting into. Cancun itself — specifically the Hotel Zone, or Zona Hotelera — is a 14-mile strip of beaches, resorts, clubs, and tourist infrastructure. It’s designed for convenience and beach access, and it delivers on both.

What Cancun is not is the authentic Mexico experience. For that, you go to downtown Cancun (El Centro), or — better — you use Cancun as a base and explore the surrounding region: the Yucatan Peninsula, the Riviera Maya, the archaeological sites, and the cenote network that makes this part of Mexico one of the most unique places on earth.

When to Visit Cancun

Best months: December through April. The dry season brings low humidity, consistent sunshine, and calm Caribbean seas. This is also peak season — prices are higher, and certain weeks (Christmas, spring break in March) get absolutely packed.

Shoulder season: May and early June are excellent — prices drop, crowds thin, and the weather is still warm and mostly sunny before the rainy season kicks in.

Hurricane season (June–November): The Yucatan Peninsula can be affected by tropical storms and hurricanes, most commonly August through October. Weather is more unpredictable, rain is possible, and you should always purchase travel insurance if visiting this time of year. The upside: hotel rates can be significantly lower.

If you’re booking during hurricane season, do not skip travel insurance. We recommend World Nomads for Mexico trips — see our full best travel insurance comparison.

Getting to Cancun

By air: Cancun International Airport (CUN) is one of the most well-connected resort airports in the Americas. Direct flights operate from dozens of US and Canadian cities — including budget carriers that make Cancun genuinely affordable to reach. Set price alerts on Google Flights; we’ve seen round-trip fares from major US cities under $200.

From the airport: The official taxi stands in the arrivals hall charge fixed rates by zone ($30–55 USD to the Hotel Zone). You can also book a shared shuttle through your hotel or via Viator’s Cancun airport transfer options. Private transfers are worth it if you’re arriving late or with a family.

Where to Stay in Cancun

The choice between the Hotel Zone and downtown defines your entire Cancun experience.

Hotel Zone (Zona Hotelera)

If you want beach access, resort amenities, and the full all-inclusive experience, you’re staying here. The Hotel Zone runs north to south, with the north end (near the airport) being more party-oriented and the south end being quieter and more upscale.

North Hotel Zone: Spring break central. Energetic, young, loud on weekends. Good if that’s your scene.

South Hotel Zone (Punta Cancun & beyond): Higher-end resorts, calmer vibe, still great beach access.

For families and couples who want a well-run all-inclusive, see our guide to the best all-inclusive resorts in Mexico — we break down the best options by budget and vibe.

Top picks for independent travelers: Hyatt Ziva Cancun (excellent service, multiple pools, great reef snorkeling right off property), Le Blanc Spa Resort (adults-only, genuinely luxurious), Moon Palace (massive, great for families with entertainment options for every age).

El Centro (Downtown Cancun)

The actual city of Cancun — where Mexicans live and work — is a 10–20 minute drive inland from the Hotel Zone. If you want local tacos and tortas, authentic markets, lower prices, and a more genuine Mexico experience, you stay here.

Hotels are significantly cheaper downtown. The tradeoff is you’ll need a cab or the R1/R2 bus to reach the beach. For budget travelers or those who plan to spend more time exploring the region than sitting at a pool, downtown makes sense.

Search all Cancun hotels on Booking.com

Cancun’s Best Beaches

The Hotel Zone has beachfront throughout, but quality varies significantly.

Playa Delfines — The best public beach in Cancun. At the southern end of the Hotel Zone, it’s wide, uncrowded relative to other Hotel Zone beaches, has no resort blocking access, and has the classic Cancun photo-op sign everyone knows. Stunning turquoise water.

Playa Gaviota Azul — Mid-Hotel Zone, adjacent to the Forum mall. Nice beach, good access, one of the calmer stretches.

Playa Norte (Isla Mujeres) — Not technically Cancun — it’s on a small island 20 minutes by ferry from the port — but Playa Norte is arguably the single most beautiful beach in the Cancun region. Shallow, impossibly calm turquoise water, powdery white sand. Day trip or stay overnight on the island.

What to Do in and Around Cancun

Snorkeling & Diving

Cancun sits on the edge of the Mesoamerican Barrier Reef, the second-largest coral reef system in the world. The snorkeling and diving here is world-class — diverse coral formations, sea turtles, colorful fish, and exceptional water clarity.

The MUSA Underwater Museum (Museo Subacuatico de Arte) is one of the most unique dive experiences on the planet: over 500 life-sized sculptures submerged in the Caribbean, now encrusted with coral. Available for both snorkeling and scuba. Book a MUSA snorkeling or diving tour through Viator — skip the glass-bottom boat and go in the water.

Cenotes

This is the thing that makes the Yucatan Peninsula unlike anywhere else. Cenotes are natural sinkholes or caves filled with freshwater, formed when ancient limestone collapsed to reveal the underground river system below. They’re scattered throughout the jungle surrounding Cancun — crystal clear, turquoise, and stunning.

Ik Kil — Near Chichen Itza; the most photographed, with vines hanging down into the blue water. Touristy but genuinely beautiful.

Gran Cenote — Near Tulum; possibly the most gorgeous we’ve visited. Clear enough to see the bottom, with stalactites in the cave sections.

Dos Ojos — Two connected cenotes near Tulum, famous for cave snorkeling and diving. One of the best cenote experiences available. Book a cenote tour from Cancun through GetYourGuide.

Chichen Itza

One of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World, Chichen Itza is a 2-hour drive from Cancun and absolutely worth a full-day excursion. The scale of El Castillo pyramid is humbling in person — photos don’t prepare you for it. Go early to beat the worst heat and crowds.

Book a guided Chichen Itza tour from Cancun on Viator — guided tours add significant historical context and typically include Ik Kil cenote and a buffet lunch.

Isla Mujeres

This small island 20 minutes by ferry from Cancun’s Puerto Juarez is one of the most charming places in Mexico. Golf cart rentals, beautiful beaches, excellent seafood, and a laid-back vibe completely different from the Hotel Zone. Playa Norte is the standout. Spend a day or stay overnight — it genuinely recharges you.

Book an Isla Mujeres day trip from Cancun on GetYourGuide.

Tulum Day Trip

Tulum is 90 minutes south of Cancun and home to one of the most dramatically situated archaeological sites in Mexico: Mayan ruins perched directly on the Caribbean cliffs. The beaches below the ruins are stunning. And the town of Tulum has its own distinct travel scene — more on that in our Tulum Travel Guide. It’s an easy and very worthwhile day trip from Cancun.

Where to Eat in Cancun

Hotel Zone

Most all-inclusives are self-contained, but if you’re eating outside your resort:

La Habichuela Sunset — One of Cancun’s best traditional Yucatecan restaurants, beautifully decorated garden setting. Try the cochinita pibil.

Kinich — Authentic Yucatecan cuisine in a relaxed, locally-loved setting. Papadzules (egg tacos in pumpkin sauce) and poc chuc (marinated pork) are not to be missed.

Harry’s — Upscale steakhouse and sushi hybrid in the Hotel Zone; excellent for a special dinner out.

Downtown El Centro

Mercado 23 and Mercado 28 — Local markets with food stalls serving tacos, antojitos, and fresh juice. Authentic and cheap.

La Parilla — A downtown institution for traditional Mexican food. Everything is good; the fajitas are excellent.

Cancun Travel Budget

Cancun’s cost depends enormously on where and how you stay.

Budget Level Accommodation Food Activities Daily Total
Budget Downtown hotel ($40–70/night) Market tacos + local restaurants ($20–35) Free beach + public cenotes $80–130/day
Mid-range Hotel Zone (non-all-inclusive) ($150–250) Mix of resort + restaurants ($50–80) Tours, snorkeling, Chichen Itza $250–400/day
All-inclusive Hotel Zone AI resort ($200–400/person) Included Add-on tours separately $250–450+/day (per person)

Note: All-inclusive pricing varies wildly by property, season, and how far in advance you book. The best rates are typically found 3–6 months out.

Where to Book Your Cancun Trip

Hotels & Resorts: Booking.com has the largest selection for Cancun, including all-inclusives that can be booked without a package.

Tours: Viator is our go-to for Cancun’s big excursions — Chichen Itza, MUSA diving, cenote tours. GetYourGuide is great for Isla Mujeres and water sports.

Travel Insurance: Required if traveling during hurricane season; highly recommended year-round. See our best travel insurance guide for Mexico-specific recommendations.

Practical Tips for Cancun First-Timers

The public bus is great. The R1 and R2 buses run the length of the Hotel Zone and downtown for about $0.80 USD. If you’re a budget traveler or just want to get around cheaply, use it.

Tap water is not safe. Stick to bottled water and be cautious with ice outside of established tourist restaurants.

Don’t drink the tap water — even to brush your teeth. Use the bottled water your hotel provides or buy your own.

USD is widely accepted in the Hotel Zone, but you’ll often get slightly worse rates than paying in pesos. Withdraw pesos from an airport ATM or your hotel for day-to-day use.

Book cenote and archaeological tours in advance. Popular cenotes and Chichen Itza have capacity limits, especially in peak season. Book a few days ahead at minimum.

Watch your belongings on public beaches. The Hotel Zone public beaches see pickpocketing. Don’t leave valuables unattended.

Final Thoughts: The Real Cancun

Cancun isn’t trying to be Mexico City or Oaxaca. It’s not pretending to be undiscovered or “authentic” in the way some destinations trade on. What it is, done well, is a beautiful stretch of Caribbean coastline with extremely convenient access to some of the most remarkable natural and historical sites in the Americas.

The Hotel Zone is a tool — use it for the beach and the comfortable base, then get out and explore. Swim in cenotes. Hire a guide for Chichen Itza. Take the ferry to Isla Mujeres. Make the drive to Tulum (our full Tulum guide has everything you need). The Caribbean will be waiting when you get back.

That’s the Cancun most visitors never see, and it’s genuinely, surprisingly wonderful.

San Diego Travel Guide: Beaches, Tacos & What to Actually Do

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you book through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend places and things we’ve personally used or vetted.

San Diego is the kind of city that makes people say “I could live here.” Not in the abstract way people say it about cities they’ve read about — but immediately, on the first sunny afternoon when you’re eating a fish taco on a patio in North Park while a warm breeze comes off the ocean, watching people in t-shirts in the middle of January. It’s that immediate.

We’ve been to San Diego more times than we can count, and it keeps rewarding us. Whether you’re there for a long weekend or a full week, this guide covers where to stay, what to eat, which beaches are worth it, and how to do the city in a way that actually makes sense.

Why San Diego Works for Almost Everyone

San Diego is rare in that it genuinely has something for every kind of traveler. Beach people get 70 miles of Pacific coastline. Food people get one of the best taco cultures in the country plus a James Beard-worthy restaurant scene. Families get LEGOLAND, the San Diego Zoo, and calm bay beaches. Beer people get the birthplace of American craft brewing. History people get Old Town and the Maritime Museum. Outdoor people get Torrey Pines, Cabrillo, and Anza-Borrego a couple hours away.

It’s also one of the most consistently pleasant weather cities in the country — average highs hover around 70°F year-round with almost no rain between April and November.

When to Visit San Diego

Honestly? San Diego is good year-round, which is part of what makes it so appealing.

Best months: September and October are arguably peak San Diego — summer crowds have thinned, marine layer has cleared (more on that below), and the weather is perfection. April through June is also excellent.

Summer (June–August): Peak season and crowded, but the beach scene is fully alive. One caveat: San Diego experiences what locals call “June Gloom” — a persistent marine layer that can keep skies overcast most mornings through early July, sometimes all day. It burns off most afternoons but can feel gloomy if you were expecting pure sunshine.

Winter (November–February): Mild by any national standard (lows around 55°F), very little rain outside of January, and hotel prices drop. Downtown and the restaurant scene carry right on through winter. A great option if you want to escape a harsh winter elsewhere.

Getting to San Diego

By air: San Diego International Airport (SAN) is remarkably convenient — it’s literally 3 miles from downtown, with no freeway traffic to fight. Most major US carriers fly direct from most hubs. For tips on finding the best fares, see our cheap flights guide.

By car: If you’re in LA or anywhere along the Southern California coast, San Diego is a 2-hour drive south on the I-5. It’s a natural pairing — many people do a LA + San Diego trip together.

By train: Amtrak’s Pacific Surfliner runs between LA’s Union Station and San Diego’s Santa Fe Depot in about 2.5–3 hours and is genuinely scenic. Worth it for the coastal views alone.

Getting Around San Diego

Car: For the full San Diego experience — accessing multiple beaches, exploring neighborhoods, doing day trips — you’ll want a car. Parking exists, though downtown and La Jolla can be annoying.

Trolley: San Diego’s Green, Blue, and Orange trolley lines connect downtown, Old Town, Mission Valley, and the border. Useful for specific trips, not comprehensive enough to replace a car.

Rideshare: Uber and Lyft work fine everywhere in the city. If you’re staying in one area (say, just the Gaslamp or just La Jolla), you can absolutely get by without a rental.

Where to Stay in San Diego

San Diego’s neighborhoods are spread out enough that your base makes a real difference.

Gaslamp Quarter / Downtown

The most central and convenient location — close to Petco Park, the convention center, Seaport Village, and the trolley. The neighborhood itself is bar-heavy and can be loud on weekends, but the access to everything else is unbeatable. Good mid-range and luxury hotel options throughout.

Best picks: Hotel del Coronado (iconic resort, technically on Coronado Island but worth the splurge for a special trip), Pendry San Diego (boutique luxury, great rooftop), Kimpton Solamar (comfortable mid-luxury, great location).

La Jolla

San Diego’s most upscale village, perched on seaside cliffs with gorgeous ocean views, excellent restaurants, boutique shops, and some of the best scenery in Southern California. A 20-minute drive north of downtown. If you want a quieter, more relaxed base with stunning surroundings, La Jolla is hard to beat.

Great picks: Lodge at Torrey Pines (stunning craftsman property, adjacent to Torrey Pines Golf Course), La Valencia Hotel (historic pink landmark overlooking the cove).

Pacific Beach / Mission Beach

The beach town experience — casual, lively, great for people in their 20s and 30s who want to be steps from the sand, surrounded by bars and boardwalk energy.

Coronado

Connected to downtown by bridge or ferry, Coronado is a quiet, beautifully maintained island community with one of California’s best beaches. Family-friendly and a great choice for a calmer trip.

Browse all San Diego hotels on Booking.com

San Diego’s Best Beaches

Not all San Diego beaches are equal. Here’s how they break down:

Coronado Beach — Wide, clean, and breathtakingly beautiful, with the Hotel del Coronado as the backdrop. One of the best beaches in California, full stop. Calm water, gentle waves, feels like stepping into a postcard.

La Jolla Cove — Not a swimming beach — it’s a snorkeling and sea life destination. The cove is filled with leopard sharks (harmless), sea lions, and brilliant blue water. Book a La Jolla snorkeling tour through Viator to go out with a guide.

Pacific Beach — The central boardwalk beach, energetic and social, best for people-watching and beach bar culture.

Ocean Beach — More laid-back and local than PB, with a classic California beach town feel and a great pier.

Torrey Pines State Beach — Wide, uncrowded, backed by stunning sandstone cliffs and the Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve. One of the most beautiful and peaceful beaches in San Diego.

What to Do in San Diego

San Diego Zoo

One of the world’s truly great zoos — 4,000 animals across 650 species in beautifully designed habitats. Set aside a full day. Book San Diego Zoo tickets through Viator to skip the ticket line.

Balboa Park

San Diego’s cultural crown jewel: 1,200 acres of gardens, museums (16 of them, including the Natural History Museum, Museum of Art, and Air & Space Museum), theaters, and Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. Free to walk through; individual museum admission varies. Budget a half-day at minimum.

Old Town San Diego

The site of California’s first European settlement, now a state historic park with preserved adobe buildings, colorful Mexican restaurants, and decent shopping. It’s touristy but genuinely historic and easy to do in 2–3 hours.

Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve

Perched on dramatic cliffs above the Pacific, Torrey Pines is one of San Diego’s best-kept secrets. Trails wind through the rare Torrey pine forest to ocean overlooks that are genuinely stunning. Free to enter; $25 for parking on weekends.

Kayaking the La Jolla Sea Caves

La Jolla’s sandstone cliffs have carved sea caves that you can kayak through. A guided kayak tour through the caves is one of the most unique things you can do in San Diego. Book a La Jolla sea caves kayak tour on GetYourGuide.

Whale Watching

December through April, gray whales migrate along the San Diego coast — one of the best places in the US to see them. Book a whale watching cruise through Viator; most tours depart from Point Loma.

Where to Eat in San Diego

Tacos

San Diego is arguably the best city in the US for Mexican food outside of Mexico itself, owing to its position directly on the border. The taco scene alone is reason to visit.

Tacos El Gordo — Lines out the door, cash only, the best carne asada taco you’ll have in San Diego. Multiple locations; the Chula Vista original is worth the drive.

Las Cuatro Milpas — An institution in Barrio Logan since 1933. Handmade tortillas, simple perfection. Expect a wait.

Puesto — A more polished approach to Mexican street food, with creative tacos and excellent margaritas. Great for a nice dinner.

Craft Beer

San Diego is the birthplace of Stone Brewing and home to dozens of acclaimed craft breweries. AleSmith, Ballast Point, Societe, and Modern Times are all worth visiting. Little Italy and North Park have brewery clusters that are walkable.

Restaurants

Addison — San Diego’s only AAA Five Diamond restaurant, French-influenced fine dining in Del Mar. A special occasion dinner.

Juniper & Ivy — Rob Ruiz’s creative California cuisine in Little Italy; creative, fun, excellent cocktail program.

Ironside Fish & Oyster — Little Italy’s best seafood, in a stunning space. Great happy hour.

The Patio on Goldfinch — Mission Hills; beautiful garden patio, seasonal California menu, the kind of dinner you remember.

Day Trips from San Diego

Tijuana, Mexico — 30 minutes south at the border crossing. Day trippers cross for Avenida Revolucion street food, the Mercado Hidalgo, and surprisingly good restaurants. Take the trolley to the border, walk across, and Uber around Tijuana — no need for a car.

Anza-Borrego Desert State Park — 90 minutes east, California’s largest state park. Wild flowers in spring (February–March) are stunning. A completely different landscape from coastal San Diego.

Julian — A small mountain town 90 minutes northeast, famous for apple pies and old-gold-rush charm. Perfect fall day trip.

For more day trip ideas from our home base, see our best day trips from Denver for comparison — a very different region but equally good options.

San Diego Travel Budget

San Diego is a California city — prices reflect that, though it’s slightly more affordable than LA and significantly more than smaller US destinations.

Budget Level Hotel/Night Food/Day Activities Daily Total
Budget Hostel or motel ($60–90) Tacos + casual ($25–40) Free beaches + parks $100–150/day
Mid-range Mid-hotel ($150–230) Mix of casual + dinner ($50–80) Zoo, kayaking, tours $240–370/day
Luxury La Jolla / Coronado hotel ($350+) Fine dining + craft cocktails ($100–150) Private tours, boat charters $500+/day

Where to Book Your San Diego Trip

Flights: How to Find Cheap Flights — SAN is well-served by budget carriers; Frontier and Southwest frequently have sales from many US cities.

Hotels: Booking.com for the widest selection across all neighborhoods and budgets.

Tours & Activities: Viator for the zoo, whale watching, and La Jolla tours. GetYourGuide for kayaking and outdoor adventures.

Packing: San Diego is a layers destination — warm days, cool evenings, always a beach bag. Check our best carry-on luggage guide if you’re flying in light.

Final Thoughts: Is San Diego Worth It?

Every single time. San Diego is one of those rare cities that seems like it should be overshadowed by its neighbor Los Angeles — and yet it holds its own completely. The scale is more human, the pace is more relaxed, the beaches are arguably better, and the tacos are definitely better.

Whether you have a weekend or a week, whether you’re coming for the beach or the food or the Zoo or just to sit in the sun and decompress, San Diego delivers. Consistently, warmly, without asking too much of you.

It’ll make you say “I could live here.” That’s the highest compliment you can give a city.