Bucket List Journey | Travel + Lifestyle Blog

Travel Bucket List: 100 Best Places to Visit & Destination Ideas

If you’re anything like me, then there is nothing better than waking up in a new place and enjoying the best adventures that are a world away from your normal routine. These ultimate experiences around the globe are what I have found to be the best of the best, and I hope these ideas inspire you to add a destination or two to your travel bucket list (and to start checking them off!).

If you need even more motivation than just these traveling bucket list ideas, check out my 200 travel quotes for inspiration.

Top Travel Bucket List: Best Places to Visit & Destination Ideas for Your Next Adventure

Travel Bucket List Ideas: Ultimate Trip Destinations & Places to Visit

1. hike to the top of piaynemo in raja ampat.

Indonesia is filled with beautiful scenery, but for me none was more picturesque than the view from the top of Piaynemo Island in Raja Ampat. Pulling up to the small dock on the island, there was a set of stairs heading straight up into the forest.

These 318 steps (I counted!) were strenuous in the humid heat, but the view from the top was worth every single one. From the peak you can see an iconic karst island seascape, small islands surrounded by a dozen shades of brilliant turquoise. This million dollar view wasn’t my only reward, so was the fresh coconut juice waiting for me at the bottom.

Read More:   Raja Ampat Bucket List: 7 Things to Do

Annette at Raja Ampat

2. Pull an All-Nighter in Ibiza

Ibiza, an island off the coast of Spain, is notorious for its parties but also boasts crystal clear water and lux beaches. So experience the best of both worlds by staying up all night in the club and then drifting to the beach to see one of the islands infamous sunrises. Big-name DJs, and festivals are frequent on the island, and there are a wide variety of accommodation and food options, from high to low end. Your time will fly in this incredible destination.

  • From Ibiza: Full-Day Sailing Tour to Formentera
  • Ibiza: Town Highlights Tour by Bike
  • Ibiza: All-Inclusive Sunset Boat Trip

3. Spend the Night in Jordan’s Wadi Rum Desert

Wadi Rum is 720 square kilometers of heart stopping desert landscape, where a maze of sheer-sided sandstone and granite monoliths rise up from the valley floor. Touring Petra Archaeological Site and floating in the Dead Sea were absolutely unforgettable experiences in Jordan , but spending the night in the vast Wadi Rum Desert was an adventure.

In this UNESCO desert you can ride camels along the same path as Lawrence of Arabia, run down the soft sand dunes and sleep inside of a tent in a small Bedouin-run camp surrounded by sandstone rocks. It is the ultimate adventure!

Get booking information for these top rated camps: Luxury: Wadi Rum Night Luxury Camp , Moderate: Obeid’s Bedouin Life Camp , Budget Wadi Rum Camp > Bedouin Lifestyle Camp

Desert Camp Fire at Wadi Rum

4. Take the Walk of Faith at Tianmen Mountain in China

In the Zhangjiajie National Forest Park you will find a 196-foot long see-through glass path that stands over 4,000 feet above sea level. This adrenaline-producing walkway clings to the side of the Tianmen Mountain. A stroll along this path is only for the most adventurous, who will marvel at the crystal-clear view below their trembling feet.

5. Feed the Swimming Pigs of Exuma

Somewhere out there in the Outer Exuma Islands is Big Major Cay, a small island ruled by pigs—that’s right, actual pigs! It is in fact one of the biggest attractions on this island. The pigs will swim out to your boat as you approach the island and depending on how friendly they are on the day they will hang around, swim with you guys and have some of your lunch as well.

If you are pressed for time, there is a closer piggy island called White Bay. I booked the half-day tour there with Exuma Water Sports and it was GREAT! For the full day tour that includes a nurse shark swim check out this tour: Swimming Pigs & Tour – Morning Excursion with Transportation

The swimming pigs tend to come out to play when the midday sun cools down a bit. There are myths and stories of how the swimming pigs of the Bahamas got there. Some people believe that they survived a shipwreck while others think that they were left there by pirates who intended them to be a future meal but never came back. Whatever the case, they are interesting swimming companions and one of the most unique ideas on this list.

Read More: Pig Beach: The Bahama’s Swimming Pigs of Exuma Island and the Best Bahamas

Swimming Pigs in Exuma

6. See the Great Pyramids at Giza

The Great Pyramids at Giza have had a firm hold on the western imagination for generations… and with good reason. They are a true marvel to behold! The Pyramids were created as tombs for various pharaohs, and their consorts, to ensure transcendence into the afterlife. And thanks to the many artifacts the ancient Egyptians left within their tombs, we now have an incredible insight into their epic history. Still, there is nothing quite like seeing them up close… especially on camel back.

Read More: UNESCO Bucket List: 100 Top World Heritage Sites to See

7. Swim in Jellyfish Lake in Palau

Jellyfish Lake in the Micronesian country of Palau is home to millions of jellyfish that are deemed relatively harmless since their sting is so light. It was still frightening for the first five minutes to be surrounded by jellyfish, some brushing up against my body. But, after the panic dissipated, this was one of my all-time favorite bucket list travel adventures.

Read More: Swim in Jellyfish Lake in Palau

Jellyfish Lake in Palau

8. Sleep in an Overwater Bungalow in Bora Bora

You’ve seen the photos of a string of bungalows perched atop the azure waters below. A memorable trip to Tahiti’s Bora Bora must include a night in one of these overwater hideaways where you can wake by diving into the warm water and go to sleep to the sound of the swish of the water beneath you. One of the most luxurious ones you will find is at the Four Seasons .

9. Marvel at Guyana’s Kaieteur Falls

Venture into the Amazon rainforest to see Kaieteur Falls in Guyana, the world’s widest single-drop waterfall. Kaieteur Falls is one of the world’s most powerful waterfalls with an immense volume of water from the Potaro river plummeting down a cliff at a height of more than 700 feet in the Kaieteur National Park. Located in Guyana’s Potaro-Siparuni region, the waterfall nestled in the Amazon rainforest is the closest you can get to pure nature when compared with other well-known waterfalls. As you watch the more than 350-foot-wide waterfall plunge from the edge of the steep rock face, you will be in awe of the beauty and power of nature.

Read More: Guyana’s Kaieteur Falls: One of South America’s Best Waterfalls

Annette at Kaieteur Falls in Guyana

10. Walk Through Indonesia’s Tegalalang Rice Terraces

If you’ve seen pictures from Bali, you’ve probably seen a few of these stunning green rice paddies. They are some of the island’s most popular destinations for travelers, and they don’t disappoint!

The traditional Tegalalang Rice Terraces are just about half an hour north of Ubud, in the Tegalalang Village. The whole community pitches in to maintain the paddies’ complex irrigation system, which is centuries old. They also let tourists in to wander much of the terraces for free.

Read More: Bali Points of Interest: 1-Day Itinerary in Indonesia’s Popular Cruise Port

Tegalalang Rice Terraces

11. Go Gorilla Trekking in Uganda

Take your life list to another level and trek through the dense rain forest of Uganda to get a close encounter with the mountain gorillas of the jungle. The fact that these species are on the brink of extinction and you need to travel to faraway lands to see them adds to the experience. A great place to see them is at Bwindi Forest National Park .

12. Drive Colorado’s Million Dollar Highway

The Million Dollar Highway is a 25 mile section of U.S Route 550, from Silverton to Ouray in Coloraado. It was initially built in the 1880s, and offers one of the most thrilling road experiences. The highway is part of the San Juan Skyway that snakes its way through the San Juan mountains passing through Dolores, Telluride and Durango.

You will go up and down three mountain passes – the Coal Bank Pass, the Molas Pass and the Red Mountain Pass during a ride on this route. All three have an elevation of more than 10,000 feet (3000 m) each. In certain areas, watch out for steep drops, hairpin bends and absence of guardrails. Keep your eyes on the road during the tricky sections, and admire the stunning vistas during the easy portions of the drive.

Of course you can drive your own car along this adventurous route, or a more unique idea is to do as I did and make the ride even more thrilling in a sporty Polaris Slingshot !

Million Dollar Highway

13. Tour a Monastery at Meteora in Greece

Greece is not all about white buildings with blue rooftops and delicious Greek food . There is so much more to explore. Like, the Meteora monasteries. Meteora, meaning “suspended in the air” in Greek, is a magical complex of six active monasteries that are strategically built on natural sandstone pillars, some that rise up to thirteen hundred feet in the air.

Perched on the pinnacles of the Thessaly region, worshippers came to this world heritage site to discover peace and absolute isolation. Many years ago, access to these monasteries was strenuous, using handmade ladders and baskets with a pulley system to hoist the monks and their goods up — this was a system that had long been abandoned by the time I had arrived!

You can admire the Meteora Monasteries from afar, but also take the opportunity to tour the interiors and get a glimpse into a monk’s lifestyle one thousand years ago.

You can attempt to navigate to Meteora on your own or for an easier option book a tour: 2-Day Trip to Delphi and Meteora from Athens .

Monastery at Meteora in Greece

14. Cruise through Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay

Just three-and-a-half-hour drive from the bustle of the city of Hanoi lays a peaceful set of 1,600 islands and islets, Halong Bay. This UNESCO World Heritage site has been the backdrop to many movies, including the Oscar-winning Indochine. Spend a day or a week cruising through the green-topped limestone islands and emerald waters on an ancient-style junk boat.

Read More: Halong Bay Day Trip: The Best Vietnam Junk Boat Cruise Book a Tour: Halong Bay Islands and Caves: Full-Day Tour from Hanoi or Halong Bay 2-Day Cruise with V’Spirit Cruises

Ha Long Bay, Vietnam

15. Sleep in an Ice Hotel in Sweden

Each year in the village of Jukkasjärvi, in northern Sweden, the IceHotel is built from natural ice and snow. It is an art exhibition as much as a hotel, where the canvases span from floor to ceiling. Spend the night in one of their negative-five-degree rooms, where you will be surrounded by artistically chiseled ice. It’s a bonus that there is also a chance of seeing the Northern Lights from their location on the bank of the Torne River.

16. Marvel at the Taj Mahal

This incredible towering structure is a tribute to one of the greatest love stories of all time. Emperor Shan Jahan built it as the burial tomb for his favorite wife after her death in the 17 th century. It is perfectly symmetrical, built of white marble from around the world, and detailed with semi-precious stones. Due to his obsession with symmetry two identical mosques flank each side of the Taj Mahal itself and it is surrounded by lush green gardens. It is not hard to see why it is one of the seven wonders of the world.

I got to see it while on a luxury train ride through India aboard the Palace on Wheels !

Annette inside the Taj Mahal, Uttar Pradesh, India

17. Go Tidal Bore Rafting in Nova Scotia

The Nova Scotia tides cause 160 billion tons of water flow through the Bay of Fundy twice a day, which feeds into the Shubenacadie River. This surge of seawater creates a once-in-a-lifetime adventure like no other, tidal bore rafting . It’s a wild ride where you will zip through up to 10 foot waves, they will crash over your motorized raft drenching you from head to toe or submerging you completely. If you have only one adventurous thing you do in Nova Scotia, this is it!!

There are many companies that have Tidal Bore Rafting. River Runners , Shubenacadie River Adventures and Fundy Tidal Bore Adventures are amongst the most popular, plus have great reviews.

Read more: A Nova Scotia Adventure: Tidal Bore Rafting the Bay of Fundy Tides

YouTube video

18. Take a Gondola in Venice

At one time this truly iconic activity was the only way to get around Venice. Although today there are more than one way to see the city, taking a gondola in Venice remains the most magical. As you drift along waterways with a lover, friend, or group you will pass under stone bridges and by gorgeous ancient buildings, palazzos and churches to discover corners of Venice only accessible by water. This is one of the more common ideas that is still a once in a lifetime experience in one of the world’s most picturesque city’s.

19. See the Sunrise at Borobudur Temple in Indonesia

You will need to begin your day in the wee hours of the morning (we woke up at 3:30am!) to catch the sunrise over Borobudur Temple , but it will be worth it. The historical UNESCO World Heritage site is set on a mountaintop in the central Java area of Indonesia , amidst volcanoes and lush forest. It is the world’s largest Buddhist temple, with over 500 Buddha statues scattered around the site.

Climbing to the top of 95-foot high pyramid is like a pilgrimage in itself, providing an inner peace and enlightenment. Beware that the ascent of this monument can be difficult, but there are several terraces to explore along the way, each one giving a different perspective.

Read More: 3 Sacred Indonesian Places to Visit in Yogyakarta

Borobudur Temple Compounds, Indonesia

20. Climb Half-dome in Yosemite

This challenging hike is well-worth the effort to one of the world’s most iconic precipitates. The summit raises nearly 6000 feet above the Yosemite Valley, with the last 400 feet of the summit being assisted by metal cables. Needless to say this not for the faint of heart but it always exceeds expectations!

21. Explore the Ancient Ruins of Petra in Jordan

The ancient city of Petra was carved into the rose colored sandstone cliffs by the Nabataeans as early as 312BC. There are over 30 incredible sites spread over 60 square kilometers, from temples to tombs to elaborate buildings. No Trip to Jordan would be complete without a stop here.

Three days a week visitors can attend Petra at Night , where over 1,500 candles light the mile trek from the Siq to the Treasury, an elaborate two-story tomb. A group of roughly two hundred people will walk through the narrow rock fissures that are lit by candlelight. Walking through the Siq at night is a very mysterious experience. But, don’t miss Petra by day too.

During the day, you can wander way beyond the iconic Treasury building and explore trails that will pass by the Street of Facades, the Theater, countless tombs and through the Arch.

Read More: Explore Petra Archaeological Site in Jordan Book a Tour: Private Tour: Petra Day Trip including Little Petra from Amman

Colonnaded Street in Petra

22. Hike the Cinque Terre in Italy

Savor every moment of the Cinque Terre region by hiking from each charming village to the next and if you have time, staying at lovely guesthouses along the way. The path is well-maintained, well-marked, and affords truly astounding views of one of Italy’s most picturesque landscapes. You will discover various sections of the trail wind through fog covered mountains to only moments later reveal the sparkling Mediterranean coastline below! It’s a must-see and here’s everything you need to know about hiking Cinque Terre .

23. Explore the Silent City of Mdina in Malta

Mdina is the old capital of Malta and referred to as the “Silent City”. It’s not to hard to understand why. There are limited cars that can enter to immaculate town, mostly owned by the approximately 300 residents. This contributes to the peaceful atmosphere as you stroll through the narrow cobbled streets admiring the shuttered windows and a handful of quaint shops.

For a special evening, dine at The Mdina Restaurant , which specializes in Mediterranean and local cuisine, like the Stuffat Tal-Qarnit , a traditional stew consisting of octopus cooked in red wine, raisins, apples and roasted walnuts.

It’s easy to get around on your own or book one of these two tours: Mdina: Full-Day Tour with Lunch or Mosta, Crafts Village, Mdina & Valletta Full-day Tour .

Explore the Silent City of Mdina

24. Climb Africa’s Mount Kilimanjaro

Standing at over 19,000 feet, Mount Kilimanjaro is Africa’s highest peak. The once-in-a-lifetime trek to the summit will have you hiking through lush rainforests, over glaciers, and across the Tanzanian landscape, plus traveling through four different climatic zones. It takes roughly six days to reach what has been called “the roof of Africa,” where the stunning view will be worth the challenge. This is one of the most popular ideas on people’s  Things to do Before You Die  lists!

25. Climb to the Peak of Sigiriya Rock in Sri Lanka

Sigiriya is an ancient palace built in 480 AD, located in the central Matale District of Sri Lanka. This  UNESCO World Heritage site  is known for its beautifully landscaped gardens, well-preserved frescos, and twelve hundred different anxiety-producing levels of stairs to reach the summit. These steps will bring you to the sky palace that sits atop the rock, a royal residence built sixteen hundred years ago.

Read More: Climb to the Peak of Sigiriya Rock in Sri Lanka

Annette at Ancient City of Sigiriya, Central Province, Sri Lanka

26. Dive the Great Barrier Reef

Australia’s iconic Great Barrier Reef stretches for more than 1,200 miles, running parallel to the Queensland coastline. It is the world’s largest coral reef system with over 2,900 reefs, 1,500 fish species, 400 types of coral, and 900 remote islands. Scuba divers flock here to glide with hundreds of manta rays, marvel at the colorful sea fans, and swim with schools of blackfin barracudas.

27. Kayak with Beluga Whales in Manitoba

Between mid-June to September one of Canada’s most incredible wildlife display happens — the beluga whales come to town. More than 50,000 of these sociable creatures patrol the Arctic in Northern Manitoba, and the Hudson Bay coastline sees the world’s largest population.

Nicknamed ‘melon heads’ these majestic, fluorescent white creatures will mesmerize as much as baffle you as they swim right up to your kayak. I glided along while whales swam underneath and next to me, a couple babies even came right up to the boat to inspect my GoPro .

Read More: Kayaking with Beluga Whales in Manitoba

Manitoba

28. Walk the Spanish El Camino de Santiago de Compostela

El Camino de Santiago  was originally a pilgrimage leading to Santiago de Compostela, to the tomb of the apostle St. James. Now, scores of people on a personal journey walk this five-hundred- mile network of routes across Spain and Europe. Whether the motivation is spiritual or adventurous, many choose to take this month long challenge.

29. Experience Istanbul’s Call to Prayer at the Blue Mosque

Five times a day throughout the streets of Istanbul you can hear the trilling call to prayer, also known as ezan. During this time the voice of the bellowing muezzin, the man who calls the Muslims to prayer from a minaret, can be heard over the loud- speakers at different mosques in the city. One of the best locations to witness this is while sitting on the benches between the  Blue Mosque  and Hagia Sophia as a quavering musical battle begins.

Read More:   Experience Istanbul’s Call to Prayer at the Blue Mosque

30. Hike the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu

Machu Picchu is an Incan citadel that stands 2,430 meters above sea level in the mountain forest of Peru. Getting to this ancient city can be done by train, bus, or a four-day Inca trail trek along the same paths that the Incans did years ago. People choose the challenging hike not only to see other ruins along the way, but for the sense of pride when reaching this UNESCO World Heritage Site by foot.

31. Swim with Whale Sharks in Cancun

Don’t let the name “whale shark” scare you, these enormous fish are gentle giants. During the warm season, hundreds migrate to the waters of the Caribbean Sea. A boat ride from Cancun will take you to a place where you can swim with several of the largest fish in the world that grow up to sixty feet long and can weigh over forty thousand pounds. It is a thrill to be face to face with their gigantic mouths that can extend five feet when open. You can get up close and personal with a Cancun Whale Shark Tour .

Read More: Swim with Whale Sharks in Cancun

Whale Sharks in Cancun

32. Trek to Mount Everest Base Camp in Nepal

At over twenty-nine thousand feet, Mount Everest soars above Khumbu in northeastern Nepal. Though a rare few attempt to reach the summit, the trek to Everest Base Camp at 17,590 feet is still a challenging adventure and an achievable goal for the rest of us. Along the way the stunning Himalaya views, hospitability of the village people, and spectacular glimpse of its peak will take you aback.

33. Go on an African Safari

There are plenty of places in Africa to go on safari, but mine was done in Tanzania with the Shadows of Africa tour team. For four days we explored the surreal Ngorongoro, Tarangire and Serengeti National Parks. Though we missed out on spotting the big five, because of the elusive rhino, it was still one of the most memorable travel bucket list adventures on my list of things to do before you die.

Read More: African Safari in Tanzania: The Ultimate Itinerary and Tour

African Safari

34. Walk the Great Wall of China

Even if you’re not up for tackling the entire 1800-mile length of the Great Wall, taking the opportunity to walk even a section will give you a boundless appreciation for one of mankind’s greatest engineering feats. The beauty of the surrounding landscape is astounding as you meander along the ancient border of China and Mongolia. You will pass over steep mountain ranges, thick vegetation, and see dots of villages in the distance. As you walk along remember that it was built as early as the 7 th century- a truly impressive achievement!

35. Ride in a Vintage Car in Havana

For more than 50 years Cuba has lived in seclusion from the western world, so entering Havana feels like you are being truly transported back in time. Riding around in one of the beautiful vintage cars still on the road is a quintessential Cuban experience. You will fly by turquoise waters, and grand, ethereal buildings in various states of repair. But hurry before the hordes of tourists get there, and for good measure pop in a classic Cuban Cigar for the ride.

Read more: Havana Bucket List: 40 Things to Do In Cuba’s Capital

Vintage Car in Havana

36. Attend the Kentucky Derby

It isn’t just the world-class horses that set the Kentucky Derby apart from other horse races, it’s the spectacular hats. Let your inner Southern Belle emerge, and don your most dramatic bonnet while watching what has been called the “greatest two minutes in sports.”

37. Watch the Florence Sunset over the Arno River

There is a rumor that when the Germans were retreating, they were under strict orders from the Führer himself NOT to destroy the Ponte Vecchio Bridge. That is how beautiful this structure is, even today.

Lined with souvenir shops and high-end jewelers, this medieval work of art is something you have to cross at least once when in Florence. Be warned, it gets a little hectic because of the amount of human traffic it sees! After the chaos and shopping, simply walk to the next bridge over to watch the sun set over the Arno River as it illuminates the Ponte Vecchio Bridge in all its splendor.

Don’t forget to make a quick stop at Gusta Pizza beforehand to get a take out pie to bring to the river!

38. Shop the Souks in Morocco

The Souks in Morocco are nothing if not lively. The colorful stalls are filled with a myriad of patterns, details and countless aromas. You can buy anything from tapestries, to leather, and spices. And even if shopping isn’t your thing, the souks in Morocco are a must-see cultural experience. You will be graced with glimpses of the daily lives of the Moroccan locals. Just remember, if you are shopping don’t be afraid to haggle! It is all a part of the experience.

39. Visit Dracula’s Castle in Transylvania

High above the valley of Romania, in the principality of Transylvania, there lies an unusual castle that is said to have once been occupied by Count Dracula himself. You will find the gothic Bran Castle near the town of Brasov, which has long been linked to this ancient vampire, though Dracula probably won’t be there when you arrive. There is a mystical atmosphere surrounding  Bran Castle ; it looks like the perfect setting for a vampire novel, perched on top of a hill and filled with dozens of tunneled stairs, dark wood paneling, and stark white walls.

Read More:   Visit Dracula at Bran Castle in Transylvania, Romania

Dracula’s Castle in Transylvania

40. Climb the Eiffel Tower in Paris

If you think the city of Paris is beautiful from street level, you will be astonished to see it from the heart of the Eiffel Tower. There are three levels of the tower but the views from the top are truly breathtaking. The top level can be reached by lift, or steps depending on your preference. Did you know that every 7 years the tower is painted three different colors? Lighter at the top and darker at the bottom to give the tower the illusion of extra height. See for yourself if it is as tall as your imagined with this bucket list experience.

41. Bicycle (or Walk) Across the Golden Gate

Even though it happens often for me, driving over the Golden Gate bridge still is impressive. But, what is even more thrilling is taking a bicycle ride or a walk across San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge . You can bring your own bike or easily rent one nearby. Blazing Saddles is a reputable company that will take you on an 8-mile guided bike tour that includes a ride across the bridge or choose to do a self-guided trip ( booking information here ). Just be sure to abide by the laws of the bridge for bikes and pedestrians.

Book a Tour: Cycle The Golden Gate Bridge and Alcatraz Ticket

Golden Gate

42. Go to Mardi Gras in Louisiana

Mardi Gras is often dubbed the “Great Show on Earth”, and with good reason. It is truly madness… but of the best kind! Several parades are held leading up to the main event, Fat Tuesday, which typically falls from early February to early March. On the day of, the French Quarter comes alive with people from around the globe for the parades, ceremonies and parties. Locals even liken the event to their version of Christmas, and spend the year leading up to it painstakingly preparing their costumes or floats. So don’t be afraid to don your own costume for this incredible experience. The locals love it when you do!

43. Float in the Dead Sea

The Dead Sea is a salt lake over thirteen hundred feet below sea level, making it the lowest elevation on Earth. Nestled between the  country of Jordan  to the east and Israel to the west, the unusually high salt concentration (8.6 times saltier than the ocean) causes a natural buoyancy that makes people float. Many people use this oasis as a chance to aimlessly drift while reading a newspaper.

Read More:   Float in the Dead Sea

A great view of Dead Sea in Jordan

44. See the Northern Lights

The Northern Lights (Aurora Borealis) are mysterious twists of multicolored lights that can only be seen in a handful of locations in the world, mostly in the Arctic Circle. To witness them is a once-in-a-lifetime experience whether you do it while relaxing in a thermal spa in Iceland, cruising on a yacht through Alaska, or night dogsled-ding in Norway. Check out the  Aurora Zone  for help.

45. STAY IN A TUSCAN VILLA IN ITALY

This travel bucket list goal was definitely inspired by the movie Under the Tuscan Sun. There are plenty to choose from, but just a few kilometers South of Siena you will find  Villa Pippistrelli , a luxury Tuscan farmhouse located on the  Monstegliano  estate. This charming house is everything you’d expect from a Tuscan villa. It may be old in years, but the villa has been restored with present-day conveniences and elegant interiors while still keeping its rustic 17th century Tuscan feel.

Read More:  Stay in a Tuscan Villa in Italy  and if you are in the city check out the  Florence Bucket List: 40 of the Best Things to Do

ultimate travel destination meaning

46. CROSS THE SALARDE UYUNI IN BOLIVIA

Blanketing more than forty-five hundred square miles, the Salar de Uyuni is a flat salt dessert that seems to go on infinitely. It is the remains of a lake that once covered the southwestern corner of Bolivia, but is now a vastness of white that plays an optical illusion on you. During the wet season, the shallow water that collects acts as a mirror of the sky, showing reflections of the sky and clouds, making the world seem endless. In the dry season, you can walk or drive across it, taking goofy photos that play with the lack of perspective created by the continuous sheets of hexagonal tiles.

ultimate travel destination meaning

47. Volunteer at a Elephant Rescue in Thailand

In Northern Thaila n d , an hour from Chiang Mai ‘s city center, I spent a memorable day volunteering at the Elephant Nature Park . This is a special place where there was an eclectic bunch of Asian Elephants; some old, some young, some blind, some injured from working in the logging industry, some abused and some rescued from the circus. Not only will you be able to feed these majestic creatures, but you can also take them down to the river for a bath.

Want to know more about visiting an elephant rescue? Read about my experience: Bathe Elephants at a Rescue in Thailand and if your elephant volunteer travels take you to Chiang Mai, check out my Bucket List of 18 Things to Do in Chiang Mai, Thailand

Annette as a Volunteer at a Elephant Rescue in Thailand

48. Hot Air Balloon over Cappadocia

See the surreal landscape of Cappadocia from high above in a sky dotted with colorful balloons. Cappadocia is the land in central Turkey known for its fairy chimneys (rock formations), rolling vineyards, and troglodyte dwellings that are best seen from three thousand feet in the air. Butterfly Balloons can take you up up and away.

49. Hike the Active Pacaya Volcano in Guatemala

Just like skiing and mountaineering is a part of the culture of the Swiss Alps, volcano hiking is huge chunk of the culture in Guatemala. The country has 37 officially named volcanoes, three of which that are still active. And you can hike up one.

The Volcano of Pacaya is one of the most accessible volcanoes in Guatemala, which makes it very popular. You will be sharing the trail with many others. This, along with the food stands that you will find on different segments of the trail and the marshmallows you will get to toast on the heat of the volcanic rock, make the experience much more fun. Bring some graham crackers and chocolate if you want to make your marshmallow a s’more!

Read More:   Guatemala’s Pacaya Volcano Hike: What to Expect

Annette at Pacaya Volcano in Guatemala

50. Go to the City Where Your Family Comes From

This is always a truly incredible experience whether it is near or far. Maybe you will finally be able to put your eyes some elements of a story your family members have talked about for years or perhaps you will have an opportunity to meet family you didn’t even know you had. You never truly know what you will find on a genealogical trip because no two trips are ever the same! One thing is for sure though you will feel a sense of connection with your roots. Bonus points if you bring another family member to share the experience with.

51. See Mount Rushmore

Located in South Dakota, Mount Rushmore is famous for the sculpted heads carved into its granite, featuring former iconic presidents of the United States: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln. It is so impressive that most people have it included in their travel bucket list – and you should have it on yours, too!

Mount Rushmore

52. Admire the Blue Flames at Ijen Volcano

Of all the thrilling volcanoes in the world, Ijen Volcano in Indonesia’s East Java is among the most gorgeous to view from up close. It is particularly loved for its acidic volcanic crater lake, the largest of its kind in the world, which is piercingly turquoise in its coloring.

Blue Flames at Ijen Volcano

53. Step Inside the Forbidden City

Do what the ordinary people during Ming Dynasty sadly could not do, and step inside the Forbidden City to discover the rich history one of the most significant palaces in the world holds within its premises.

the Forbidden City

54. Ogle the Golden Temple

The Golden Temple is one of the most sacred locations for Sikhs. It is also among the numerous bucket list places to visit in India, visitors frolicking to the site to admire the fully golden dome.

Golden Temple

55. Take in the View from Burj Khalifa

As the tallest building in the world, Burj Khalifa is quite the spectacle to view on the ground level. However, to enjoy even more spectacular views, you ought to head to the top of the building where one of the highest outdoor observation decks in the world exists. On a great day you may even see Iran in the distance.

Burj Khalifa

56. Take an Alaskan Cruise

Something that may still not come across often as epic traveling bucket list ideas is to embark on an Alaskan Cruise. Why do it when you can tour the Caribbean Sea or Antarctica instead? I’d say because it’s an incredible mix of wild animals and blue glaciers for you to discover from up close, and the cruises come packed with amazing excursions to take part in on the shore.

There are so many great things to do in Alaska , and by taking a cruise you will get to see a lot of them!

Alaskan Cruise

57. Attend La Tomatina Festival in Spain

If you’re in Spain in late August of any year, then La Tomatina Festival must get on your bucket list! It’s a really fun festival where you simply need to throw others with tomatoes – and expect to be covered in tomatoes yourself. Don’t wear your best clothes for the event, but definitely bring your fun loving attitude with you.

58. Be Intrigued by Stonehenge

Believed to be constructed sometime between 3000BC and 2000BC, this English marvel is another must for any travel bucket list. Stonehenge is seen as a cultural icon of sorts and is one of the most significant sites to set foot on in all of the United Kingdom. Although there is no one confirmed theory of why it was built, although it’s mostly seen to have been a burial site, it’s so important – and fun to see – as it is the most architecturally sophisticated stone circle in the world that dates back to prehistoric times.

Stonehenge

59. Attend Cherry Blossom Season in Japan

Although you can also see some gorgeous cherry blossoms in Washington DC, around South Korea, and some places in Europe, there’s really no beating being in Japan during the cherry blossom season. Tokyo is dubbed the best place in the world for viewing cherry blossoms, and not without reason, with Kyoto being another top spot in particular. However, you can see cherry blossoms just about anywhere in mainland Japan.

Cherry Blossom Season in Japan

60. Climb the Leaning Tower of Pisa

Yes, while you can get a quirky shot posing with the Leaning Tower of Pisa on the ground, you might actually have a more fun experience by climbing up its nearly 300 steps to get to the top.

For more information check out our article: Leaning Tower of Pisa: Insider Facts for Your Visit

Leaning Tower of Pisa

61. Climb the Mount Fuji

For the Japanese, climbing to the top of Mount Fuji is one of their most sacred traditions. It’s an incredibly strenuous hike up, but of course comes with amazing views from high up. Although just getting a picturesque shot of Mount Fuji from a distance is on many travel bucket lists, Mount Fuji itself is also one of the greatest bucket list places to visit in Japan.

Mount Fuji

62. Discover Al-Masjid an-Nabawi

Not only is Al-Masjid an-Nabawi , Mosque of the Prophet, the second largest mosque in the world, it is also the second holiest Islam mosque to set foot on. Prophet Muhammad himself built this mosque, and it is absolutely among the biggest bucket list destinations for anyone with interest in touring different religious sites in the world.

Al-Masjid an-Nabawi

63. Marvel at Iguazu Falls

Bordering Brazil on one side and Argentina on the other, the Iguazu Falls have Niagara Falls paling in comparison. It is the world’s largest waterfall system, consisting of 275 falls altogether. Quite impressive to see indeed!

Iguazu Falls

64. Explore the Jeita Grotto

Located in Beirut, these two interconnected limestone caves referred to as Jeita Grotto are the longest caves you’ll find in the Middle East. Although it ultimately did not get chosen as one of the New 7 Wonders of Nature (which the above mentioned Iguazu Falls has an honor of being!) it is still a wondrous creation of nature.

65. Discover the Magnificent Angkor Wat

Angkor Wat is a temple of significance within the city of Angkor, the former capital of Khmer Empire. It was built at the start of the 12th century, and is essentially seen as the peak of Khmer architecture. Although the city was abandoned in the 16th century, Angkor Wat has remained a majorly significant religious site to date.

Angkor Wat

66. Discover the Remains of the Berlin Wall

Although it may not be the most aesthetically pleasing place to visit, the Berlin Wall – or what’s left of it – is one of the most significant sites detailing the times of the Cold War. For that reason alone, it deserves to be placed on any travel bucket list, and Berlin is such a cool place to visit in general that you’ll want to go there one day anyway, so why not have the Berlin Wall included in that itinerary?

Berlin Wall

67. Witness the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem

Also known as Western Wall, this is the holiest place for the Jewish people after Temple Mount, to which they only have restricted access these days. It was built before AD by Herod the Great, and just like Al-Masjid an-Nabawi in Saudi Arabia, is a must visit for anyone interested in discovering important religious sites, and especially to those with a direct religious connection to the Wailing Wall.

Wailing Wall in Jerusalem

68. See the Pamukkale Hot Springs

Not only are these hot springs in Turkey believed to contain numerous healing properties, they are absolutely stunning to see in person. Not to mention, the tale goes that even Cleopatra herself has bathed here once upon a time!

Pamukkale Hot Springs

69. Walk the Las Vegas Strip

Even if gambling isn’t your thing in the slightest bit, walking at least a portion of this 4.2 mile strip is a sight to see as many of the world’s largest – and flashiest – hotel and casino complexes reside on both sides of the Strip. It is a significant piece of street in one of the most iconic tourist areas in the world.

70. See a Show at the Sydney Opera House

While the Sydney Opera House is primarily famous for its external architectural qualities, it’s totally worth catching a show if you’re in the area. It is so large it can house half a dozen venues and theaters, largest of which is the Concert Hall that can seat up to 2,679 people at once. Besides opera, you can also see symphony concerts, popular music shows, dance performances here, and even film screenings in the smaller theaters.

Sydney Opera House

71. See the Wildlife on the Galapagos Islands

Although at first thought you might not consider the wildlife on Galapagos Islands anything special due to only a few certain species living there, where the secluded island wins is in how pristine its environment is. More than that, its specialness lies in how clearly the islands can showcase how natural selection operates. Thus, while the amount of species may be limited, visiting the wildlife here is bound to be more unique than embarking on a safari.

Read More About the Galapagos Islands:

  • See the Blue-Footed Booby Mating Dance in the Galápagos Islands
  • See Galapagos Penguins in the Wild

Wildlife on the Galapagos Islands

72. Explore Sensoji Temple

Located in Tokyo’s Asakusa District, this Buddhist Temple is among the most colorful you can find in Tokyo. Beyond its gorgeous architecture, it is one of the most important temples in Tokyo as well as its oldest one.

Sensoji Temple

73. Explore the Waitomo Glowworm Caves

With thousands of glow worms lighting up the grotto ceilings, hopping on a boat to explore the Waitomo Glowworm Caves is perhaps even more magical than seeing the starriest of night skies. As this experience is unique to New Zealand, you really have no choice but to add this on to your bucket list destinations.

74. Explore Brazil’s Lençóis Maranhenses National Park

Lençóis Maranhenses National Park  is an incredible site to visit especially during the rainy season when the rain fills up the rolling sand dunes with small lagoons. The national park is especially popular among the ecotourists, and is home to four different endangered species.

Lençóis Maranhenses National Park

75. Get Splashed at Niagara Falls

Now, while I may have said above that Niagara Falls pales in comparison to Iguazu Falls, they’re not a world famous waterfall for no merit. This ancient waterfall may not be the largest but it is the fastest-moving one, and witnessing its water flows can be quite the spectacle.

Niagara Falls

76. Hike on the Rainbow Mountain

Peru’s Vinicunca , aka Rainbow Mountain, is one of the most distinctive hikes you’ll ever embark on, thanks to the mountain’s unique coloring. It’s especially interesting as its unique striped features were actually hidden under thick layers of snow until just a few years ago, although even today the stripes are caught in their full beauty only outside of the rainy season.

The Rainbow Mountain is on our  Cusco Peru Bucket List that has the best things to do in Machu Picchu’s gateway city.

Rainbow Mountain

77. Hike to Christ the Redeemer of Brazil

Even if you’re not the least bit religious, this Art Deco statue placed on a mountain above Rio de Janeiro is a must see. It’s pretty glorious to see from numerous angles, including from the ground below. It should only take an hour or two at most of your time to hike up and find yourself standing right at the roots of the statue.

Christ the Redeemer of Brazil

78. Relax at Blue Lagoon

One of the many reasons people flock to Iceland, this geothermal spa is beautifully blue and an incredibly relaxing place to spend a couple of hours in. The Blue Lagoon itself is manmade, using a nearby geothermal power station’s waters, which have been proven to help with psoriasis symptoms especially.

79. Sail to the Statue of Liberty

Undoubtedly among New York City’s most iconic attractions, seeing the Statue of Liberty on a boat ride may be the most fun way to get close to it. By joining a cruise to the statue, you’ll get to enjoy seeing how NYC looks from a boat.

Statue of Liberty

80. Visit Santorini in Greece

Although there’s numerous gorgeous places to visit in Greece, Santorini in particular seems to top many bucket lists. It offers a display of authentic and charming architecture, plus a whole lot of stunning views, and even with the magnetic pull it has on travelers, it’s managed to stay quite true to traditions.

If you do decide to visit read this first: Santorini Bucket List: 30 Best Things to Do on the Greek Island

Santorini in Greece

81. See the Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace

Once you’ve made your way to London, don’t just run past Buckingham Palace after snagging a quick photo of it, stay to watch the changing of the guards – in fact, time your visit to Buckingham Palace so that you don’t miss it! It’s one of the most iconic and popular ceremonies in the world, and worth seeing at least once.

To learn more, read  A Guide to Changing of the Guard at London’s Buckingham Palace

Changing of the Guard at Buckingham Palace

82. See your reflection at Salar de Uyuni

If you want to see the biggest and most magical salt flat on the planet, you’ve got to go visit Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia. It’s intriguing to see any day of the year, but especially just after it’s rained, as the thin layer of rainwater stuck on the salt flats turns the whole site into a huge mirror.

83. See the Dragons on Komodo Island

Sadly, they may not look like the dragons in fairy tales and fantasy movies, nor do they hold the same powers, but they’re a rare and intriguing animal to witness in the wild. They do also have the title of the world’s largest lizard going for them! And you can visit them on Komodo Island .

Dragons on Komodo Island

84. Tahiti in French Polynesia

Besides offering those dreamy overwater bungalows and fun snorkeling opportunities, Tahiti is a great destination also for its dramatic mountains and gorgeous waterfalls. You’ll also find yourself falling in love with the local cuisine and culture, I bet.

Tahiti in French Polynesia

85. Visit The Maldives

Similarly to Tahiti, The Maldives are another hot spot for those longing to go on a once-in-a-lifetime romantic holiday by the turquoise waters. The overwater bungalows of The Maldives are possibly the most famous ones in the world, and besides an incredible marine life to discover underwater, it’s not only romantic but a truly tranquil travel destination.

Maldives

86. Stand in Times Square in New York City

Times Square is the most famous spot in all of New York City to stand in. It’s pumped up with billboards and neon lights, and you’ll absolutely find yourself marveling at all that after dark.

Times Square in New York City

87. Visit Meiji Jingu Shrine

Although the original Meiji Jingu Shrine was unfortunately destroyed during World War 2, another one was quickly built in its place. It is dedicated to Emperor Meiji, modern Japan’s first emperor, although you won’t find his grave here. The Meiji Period is notable for its modernization of Japan. As an additional plus, this shrine is located in the middle of a forest, for that extra layer of serenity and beauty.

Meiji Jingu Shrine

88. Visit Pompeii

Only ruins remain of Pompeii , which was destroyed in 79 AD during Mount Vesuvius’ eruption. Even so, it remains a spectacular display of Ancient Roman times, and thanks to all that ash, the remains of Pompeii have actually remained exceptionally preserved to date.

Pompeii

89. Visit St. Peter’s Basilica

One of the most significant monuments and religious sites for Christians, especially Catholics, this magnificent St. Peter’s Basilica  is also the largest church in the world. It’s also a burial site for previous popes, and unless you’ve got a ticket in advance, you may end up waiting hours to get in.

St. Peter’s Basilica

90. Visit the Acropolis of Athens

The most iconic mainland Greece item to add onto your travel bucket list is the ancient Acropolis. It is an incredibly popular destination to visit and is an amazing representation of the Ancient Greek times.

Acropolis Athens

91. Visit the British Museum

Among the oldest museums in the world is the massive British Museum , where you can find awesome collections from many different cultures including Egyptian, Etruscan, and European. And the best bit? It’s free to enter!

92. Visit the city of Lhasa and the Potala Palace

Located in Tibet, Lhasa is famous for its numerous historical attractions with roots in Buddhism, including the Potala Palace , which used to be the winter palace for Dalai Lamas for over three centuries. This palace is also one of the most famous spiritual sanctuaries you can find on the globe.

Lhasa and the Potala Palace

93. Tour the Colosseum in Rome

The impressive Colosseum is Italy’s most visited attraction, and while it’s quite extraordinary to view from the outside alone, to get the most out of it, you’ll of course want to walk through it and discover bits of Ancient Roman times.

Colosseum in Rome

94. Visit the Grand Canyon in Northern Arizona

This magnificent canyon is one of the biggest natural wonders in the world. Although it is actually not the deepest or widest canyon you could come across, it is indisputably significant in displaying natural history. Plus it’s simply gorgeous to visit. For an extra bucket list worthy experience, take a helicopter ride into the grand canyon !

Grand Canyon in Northern Arizona

95. Visit the Grand Palace

At the heart of Bangkok you can find a complex of buildings forming the famed Grand Palace . Since the late 18th century, it has been the residence of kings of Siam, and kings of Thailand today. It’s considered special for its style of architecture, and one of its main attractions is the 14th century Emerald Buddha.

Grand Palace

96. Visit the Great Mosque of Cordoba

Formerly a mosque and currently operating as a cathedral, this Andalusian site , built as early as the 8th century, is most famous for its influential and ambitious style of Islamic religious architecture. Stepping inside of its doors feels as if you’ve been transferred way back in time.

Great Mosque of Cordoba

97. Visit the Louvre Museum

Besides just having the famous Mona Lisa in its collection, Louvre in general has one of the most diverse art collections in the world, dating back as far as 11,000 years ago. Formerly a royal palace, its interiors are quite spectacular to walk through.

Louvre Museum

98. Visit Barcelona’s Sagrada Familia

This magnificent and ambitious Roman Catholic minor basilica is not only absolutely stunning, also unique for the fact that it has actually still not finished building. Despite that, it was consecrated just a little over a decade ago, and is popular to visit for its truly iconic display of Gaudi’s distinctive architecture style.

While you are there, make sure to work on your Barcelona Bucket List !

Sagrada Familia

99. Visit the Sistine Chapel

Once you’ve finished ogling at the majestic St. Peter’s Basilica, make your way to the Vatican Palace, particularly into its Sistine Chapel . The palace in general is intriguing to explore through, but the Sistine Chapel is something else. It is famous for its frescoes painted by Michelangelo, including the absolutely amazing The Last Judgment piece. Here is also where the process of selecting a new pope takes place.

Sistine Chapel

100. Visit the Summer Palace in China

Also often called the Imperial Garden Museum, the Summer Palace is significant for the preservation of Chinese national heritage. It is a stunning and iconic site to visit in Beijing, even if not quite as famous as some other ones.

Summer Palace in China

101. See the White House

The White House is of course the most iconic presidential office and residence in the world, not to mention a rare opportunity to view a head of state’s private residence. Although you’ll get the best out of the visit by knowing historical key points in advance, it’s worthwhile to tour the White House and learn more of its rich history.

White House

102. Visit Versailles

The glamorous Versailles is possibly the best example of French Baroque style of architecture – it most certainly is the most lavish one. It’s beautiful throughout, but one of its most unique points is the Hall of Mirrors, complete with 357 mirrors.

103. Explore the Canals of Amsterdam

Amsterdam is known for its many canals, which offer a gorgeous backdrop to its already beautiful historic city center. The city center is easily walkable, making its canals accessible to you; alternatively, hopping onto a boat and touring through the canals on water can be quite a fun experience as well.

Canals of Amsterdam

104. Walk around on Mont Saint-Michel

Located in front of Normandy, Mont Saint-Michel is a tidal island famous for its abbey, which remains a significant pilgrimage site for Christians in the West since the middle ages, until today. It’s a beautiful abbey structure, with plenty of historical and cultural heritage to go around.

Mont Saint-Michel

105. Walk on Giant’s Causeway in Ireland

Formed through a volcanic fissure eruption in ancient times, the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland’s north coast is famous for its 40,000 or so basalt columns interlocked with each other. It’s a distinctive and picturesque slice of nature to walk on.

Annette at Giant’s Causeway in Ireland

106. Tour Chichen Itza of Mexico

This archaeological site is a must add to any travel bucket list, especially among those with interest in discovering Mayan ruins or similar sites. There are 26 different Mayan ruins to discover between Old Chichen and Chichen Itza, each with a story to tell.

Annette at Chichen Itza of Mexico

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46 thoughts on “Travel Bucket List: 100 Best Places to Visit & Destination Ideas”

Regarding gorillas in Uganda – it’s much easier to climb up to the same mountains on Rwanda side!

Thanks for the tip!

Wow, that’s one heck of a bucket list! I’ve been to many of these places, but so many more than I want/need to go! As soon as I knock one off, I end up adding several more. So many places, so little time.

Same for me! There are just too many amazing places in the world.

Nice post! Thanks for sharing!

Amazing Guide! Best places to visit around the world in a single blog!

There are many beautiful destinations await for us. I planned to travel aboard and I bought a new camera and can’t wait to hangout with great views!

What a great list! Thanks for this post!

It’s as if you were in my mind when you wrote this. I feel like you wrote down my actual bucket list. I didn’t know about that pig island though, definitely adding that one!

Hi Annette, again I’m so amaze with the choices of your travel list. Your one of the best!

Wow! It looks like the ultimate bucket list for any traveler. I would prefer visiting Wadi desert (Jordan) as my first one in this list.

thank you for some great ideas and inspiration.

Thank you for this post!! There is so much travel inspo contained here and I’m so excited to revise my list of potential 2020 travel destinations!

Mdina ❤️❤️❤️

This list is amazing! I hope I get the chance to visit even half of these places. The Dead Sea has been on the list since forever!

The Ultimate Travel Bucket List is very interesting! No wonder that trek to Mount Everest Base Camp in Nepal is on the list. Obviously, mountain regions of Nepal offer great hikes and climbs. Travelling through the mighty Himalayas, you can feel like visiting the ultimate kingdom of the world. After all, the Himalayas lodge Mount Everest, the highest elevation on our planet.

Would love to do Raja Ampat and Jordan, as soon as travel opens up again ;) thanks for the inspo, it’s a great list with hidden spots!

Nice post, Thanks for sharing

thank you for sharing this useful information, this really helps. this is like reading an entire book and I can utilise this entire knowledge into my personal growth.

So many great things on this list! I’ve done quite a few on the list but still have a long way to go. My #1 bucket list item right now would probably be seeing the Pyramids in Egypt!

I love a good bucket list – and there are so many great ideas on your list! Visiting Sigiriya and hiking along Cinque Terre in Italy were fabulous experiences and I hope to dive the Great Barrier Reef before climate change impacts it forever.

Pamukkale Hot Springs are so high on my bucket list. I would love to visit Jordan too. This is a great list, thank you for sharing :)

Hot air ballooning in Turkey is one of my most favorite things I have done in all 78 countries I’ve visited. It’s a must experience for sure. So many more to add to my list. Thanks!

Checked 19 out of this list. Still plenty left to explore :) The world keeps flooding my never-ending to-do list

19 is still a good number. And I bet all those adventure are fun

Thanks, Annette, for such a great list. I loved that your list includes so many new places for me that are unfamiliar. Often, these lists are pretty typical. I added so many places to my personal list. The jellyfish in Palau sounds particularly intriguing. I find them to be beautifully scary creatures.

How do you determine where you are going to go next? Do you plan years in advance or one year to months to days in advance?

I actually don’t plan it a year in advance. Sometimes I go on a spontaneous trip or a month in advance planning.

I’ve done a large amount of these, but there are still so many more that I want to do! I’m doing most of the eastern/southern Africa ones next year as I’m spending a few months exploring 10 different countries.

Great list! Thanks for sharing. I’m copying some items from this list to my bucket list especially Camino de Santiago.

I’ve done sixteen on this list, but mine is a very different list of things that I want to see and do. The three places we have in common are Angkor Wat, St Peter’s and the Sistine Chapel. I don’t think great white sharks and whale sharks are on many people’s lists?

16? Wow, that’s amazing

Amazing list. Am glad to have done a few of these things and ticked them off but there are many more that need to be followed through. Wadi Rum for instance as well as EBC might get crossed off soon

Hi really nice article is given by you explained very well and proper explanation with image. i got a lot of idea from this post thanks for sharing the post and keep tough with us

thanks for such an amazing and informative blog

I read multiple articles and this is certainly one of the best and productive content I found. Thanks for sharing the useful article.

It’s really amazing places and destinations for travel

Thanks for the list we have been to some of these places such as Ha Long Bay and the Taj Mahal but so many more to visit. Enjoyed the article.

Wonderful article! Highly appreciate for putting in so much effort. This place will surely be on my upcoming bucket list. Waiting to have the best experience!

Thanks for such an amazing Bucket list! Many more places to visit have been added now by going through this!

Glad to hear that. Would be lovely to hear about your travel stories too.

Thank you very much for sharing those information. I got important information from here. Those are helpful information.

This extensive list of 100 best places to visit and destination ideas is an absolute treasure trove for avid travelers and dreamers alike. It covers a wide range of breathtaking locations, from iconic landmarks to hidden gems around the globe. Whether you’re seeking natural wonders, cultural experiences, or adventurous escapades, this list has it all. It’s filled with wanderlust-inducing descriptions and stunning visuals that transport you to far-off lands. From the magnificent temples of Angkor Wat to the vibrant streets of Tokyo, each destination is unique and promises unforgettable memories. Get ready to embark on an extraordinary journey of exploration and make your travel dreams a reality!

Thank you so much.

Great Bucket List

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The Planet D: Adventure Travel Blog

Bucket List Travels – 52 Places to Visit in Your Lifetime

Written By: The Planet D

Travel Bucket Lists

Updated On: February 14, 2024

ultimate travel destination meaning

We have put together the ultimate travel bucket list to spark your imagination. Dave and I made a dream list of our travel bucket list travels way back in 2006. And we fulfilled every travel adventure we ever dreamed of. Now we want to help your dreams come true and share the best bucket list travels that we’ve ever done.

These are 52 destinations that you need to do at least once in your lifetime. We’ve got one idea for every week of the year! You may also like The Best Adventure Destinations For The Ultimate Vacations

Table of Contents

Travel Bucket List Ideas

So, let’s look at the most mind-blowing beautiful places in the world. Oh, by the way, these are bucket list travels that we’ve done ourselves. It’s not a Google search like so many things on the internet these days.

1. Iguazu Falls

bucket list travels iguazu falls

There was something magical about staying right in the heart of Iguazú National Park at the Belmont Hotel Das Cataratas. Having this natural wonder all to ourselves in the early morning was like a fairytale. We walked from our hotel to the long platform leading to the center of the massive cascade surrounded by thundering waters.

travel bucket list iguazu falls

For a bucket list experience, this was spectacular. Be sure to take a helicopter tour over the falls and hop on a jet boat to get soaked. They seriously put the boat right underneath the waterfall. If there is one item on your travel bucket list. This should be it!

  • Getting Soaked – The Ultimate Iguazu Falls Tour
  • 11 Fun and Unexpected Things to do in Iguassu Falls

2. Amalfi Coast

amalfi coast italy bucket list vacations

We thought we had seen the beauty of Italy when visiting the Cinque Terre, but the Amalfi Coast is the Cinque Terre on steroids. The beautiful coastal towns along the Gulf of Salerno took our breath away at every turn. Rent a car and drive this famous highway that clings to the side of sea cliffs. There is nothing more romantic than driving the towns of Positano , Ravello, Amalfi, and Sorrento. Make sure to splurge on a room overlooking the terraced buildings of Positano and its beach.

  • The Best Things to Do in Amalfi Coast, Italy
  • 10 Most Romantic Italian Coastal Towns for Couples
  • Watch our Amalfi Coast Video
  • Hiking Cinque Terre – The Beautiful Five Villages in Italy

3. Maldives

maldives over the water bungalows vacation bucket list travels

Staying in an over-the-water bungalow in Bora Bora or Tahiti is on everyone’s travel bucket list. But we did this in The Maldives and I cannot think of a place that is more beautiful in the world. The turquoise waters surrounded our bungalow complete with a glass floor so we could watch the fish swim by was superb. I don’t think I have seen such white sand beaches anywhere on earth.

  • 15 of The Best Things to do in the Maldives
  • Scuba Diving in Maldives – A Beginner’s Journey
  • Best of the Maldives Video – On YouTube
  • Snorkeling in the Maldives

4. Petra Jordan

petra jordan - petra monastery bucket list travelers dream

By the time we made it to Petra Jordan, we had seen a lot of famous ancient cities with our own eyes. We expected to like it, but we didn’t expect to be wowed by it. Boy were we wrong! Petra is in a league unto itself. The hidden city of Petra is located within a 1.2 km rock passage reaching 80 meters into the air. Once you arrive at The Petra Treasury you are treated to an awe-inspiring scene. A massive building complete with columns is carved into the stone.

  • Watch our visit to Petra on YouTube

5. African Safari

male lion chasing female lion serengeti tanzania on everyone's travel bucket lists

There is nothing more magical than an African Safari. We’ve been lucky to go on Safari in Tanzania, Kenya, South Africa , and Botswana. And trust me, it never gets old. Seeing the majestic lion stalk its prey and watching a herd of elephants walking through the African savanna is a scene that is forever etched into our brains. There is something special about visiting Africa. As the saying goes “I left my heart in Africa” and every time we leave the continent we feel the same way.

  • African Safari Animals: 34 Photos to make you want to visit Tanzania
  • What to Wear on Safari – Africa Travel Inside and Out
  • Kenya Safari – The Masai Mara Experience

6. Churchill Polar Bears

polar bears in manitoba canada travel bucket list

Speaking of safaris, have you ever thought of a safari in Canada? I don’t think there was anything more awe-inspiring than seeing polar bears in the wild. It is even more of a bucket list ticket to be able to walk with polar bears. Going up to the arctic tundra in summer is not only unique, but it is also a chance to see polar bears in a different environment than in snow. We visited the Polar Bears twice with Churchill Wild . Once in the winter and once in the summer.

  • Walking with Polar Bears – The Greatest Arctic Safari
  • Kayaking with Beluga Whales – A Paddlers Dream
  • The Ultimate Arctic Safari on YouTube

7. Santorini Greece

bucket list ideas santorini greece

We had seen Santorini in the yogurt ads for years and dreamed of one day visiting. Once we arrived, we understood why it has been featured in so many commercials. When we looked over the cliffs of the caldera, the views didn’t seem real. Whitewashed buildings with blue domes lined the high cliffs of the caldera. Staying in a cave hotel overlooking the Aegean Sea was the ultimate dream.

  • 25 of The Very Best Things to do in Santorini
  • Where to Stay in Santorini
  • Places to Visit in Santorini, Greece
  • A Photography Guide to Santorini – Getting that Postcard Shot
  • Iconic Santorini: A Cave Hotel Experience

8. Kayak and Camp in Antarctica

bucket list vacations antarctica iceberg with kayakers

If you haven’t noticed on our blog, a lot of our bucket list adventures have been in cold regions. And Antarctica truly tops the list. We were lucky enough to visit Antarctica with Quark Expeditions where we fulfilled every travel dream. From camping on Antarctica to kayaking around icebergs, Antarctica was an adventure lover’s travel dream.

  • 11 of the Best Things to do in Antarctica
  • Sea Kayak Antarctica – The Adventure of a Lifetime
  • Camping on Antarctica
  • See our complete Antarctica Expedition on YouTube

9. Trek to Mount Everest Base Camp

bucket list ideas for travel dave and deb at mount everest base camp

Staying in the cold weather for a moment, the ultimate bucket list adventure is to trek to Everest Base Camp. When we can all travel again, this is something anyone can do regardless of climbing skills Follow the footsteps of Sir Edmond Hillary and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa to see the Khumbu Ice Fall, Everest Base Camp, The Tengboche Monastery, and Mighty Mount Everest herself. Secure the ultimate bragging rights among your friends and trek to Everest. Our friend Dipendra at SimRik Real Nepal Treks is waiting for you.

  • Everest Base Camp Trek – All You Need to Know from Start to Finish
  • Remarkable Everest Base Camp Trek in Photos
  • Flight to Lukla – A Scary Thrill Ride to Everest
  • See our Full Everest Playlist on YouTube

10. Cappadocia, Turkey

travel bucket list ideas cappadocia turkey hot air baloons over fairy chimneys

Nearly everyone is familiar with the famous scene of balloons soaring through the air above fairy chimneys. Turkey’s Cappadocia really does feel like a fairytale. This had been our bucket list since seeing dozens of balloons in the air on Instagram nearly a decade ago. A morning hot air balloon ride fulfills the ultimate travel dream list.

  • Cappadocia Hot Air Balloon: How to Choose the Right Company
  • A Tour of a Cave Hotel on YouTube
  • The Incredible Landscape of Cappadocia on YouTube

11. Himalayas of Bhutan

bucket list ideas tiger's nest monastery bhutan

Bhutan is the happiest country in the world and you can’t help but fall in love with the people and landscape when you visit this bucket list destination. Trekking through the Himalayas is an incredible journey but hiking to Tiger’s Nest Monastery in the Paro Valley is what draws people to the country. This iconic scene doesn’t disappoint.

  • 18 Things to do in Bhutan – A Comprehensive Guide of What Not to Miss
  • Bhutan Trek to Laya – A Himalayan Adventure to the Remarkable and Remote
  • Watch our trek to Tiger’s Nest Monastery on YouTube
  • And see what happened when we met the King of Bhutan

12. Great Wall of China

bucket list ideas great wall of china

We have visited the Great Wall of China twice. And it lives up to everything we ever expected. Looking at this marvel of engineering truly did inspire wonder and awe. No wonder it is listed as one of the New 7 Wonders of the World. We loved visiting both the Mutianyu and Badaling Great Wall, they were equally beautiful yet very different experiences.

  • The Great Wall of China – Mutianyu vs. Badaling

13. Machu Picchu

bucket list ideas llama at machu pichhu peru

Speaking of the New Seven Wonders of the World, Machu Picchu is another beautiful destination to add to your bucket lists. Hiking the Inca Trail is on many people’s adventure bucket list, but even seeing this extraordinary Inca City will take your breath away. Literally. Located in the Andes Mountains at 2,430 meters/7,972 feet in elevations, it is a wonder to see.

  • Machu Picchu Hike: All You Need To Know To Be Perfectly Prepared
  • How to Plan a Trip to Machu Picchu

14. Great Barrier Reef

bucket list ideas helmet dive great barrier reef

The UNESCO World Heritage Site off the coast of Australia is the largest coral reef in the world. It tops many a traveler’s bucket list. Even if scuba diving or snorkeling isn’t your thing, it is a must-visit. There are many ways to see the Great Barrier Reef. You can take a helicopter ride over the reef or even take a boat out to a platform in the middle of the sea to let you swim, snorkel, and sunbathe in the middle of this beautiful piece of ocean.

  • Diving the Great Barrier Reef – Australia’s Ultimate Adventure

15. Pyramids of Giza

bucket list ideas visit the pyramids of giza egypt

We had always wanted to see the Great Pyramids of Giza with our own eyes. We didn’t know what to expect, but when we first spotted them they seemed surreal. They cut through the haze of Cairo standing the desert looking like a mirage. We have had the privilege of visiting them twice and can say that for a fun way to explore them, hire a camel to take you through the pyramid complex to feel like a true Bedouin.

  • The Red Pyramid of Egypt – Experience it Inside and Out
  • 10 Amazing Temples of Egypt – That We’ve Seen

16. Gobi Desert of Mongolia

bucket list ideas ghers at sunset in mongolia gobi desert

We are always fascinated by deserts, but there was something truly unique and spectacular about Mongolia’s Gobi Desert. It is filled with life. From the herds of Bactrian camels (two-humped camels) to the nomadic people of Mongolia moving their Ghers from camp to camp that was always something to see. It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

  • Read more at Mongolia Pictures from the Russian Border to the Gobi Desert

17. Galapagos Islands

bucket list ideas giant galapagos tortoise

The Galapagos Islands are a group of islands off the coast of Ecuador that have their very own ecosystem. This UNESCO World Heritage Site is the most biodiverse of destinations on earth. AND 97% of the Galapagos is a national park. The top draw to the Galapagos is to see its endemic species that are unique to the islands. From the Galapagos giant tortoise, marine iguanas, and the Galapagos penguin, the wildlife experiences.

  • 27 photos that will transport you to the Galápagos Islands
  • Playing With Sea Lions on San Isabella in the Galapagos

18. Mount Kilimanjaro

bucket list ideas climb mount kilimanjaro summit sign dave and deb

If there is one mountain to climb in your lifetime it is Mount Kilimanjaro, The Roof of Africa. Kilimanjaro National park is a UNESCO World Heritage Site housing the highest point in Africa. The six to seven-day climb is part of the seven summits and is a spectacular bucket list vacation. So don’t wait to start planning your climb up the highest freestanding mountain on earth.

  • Read more: Complete Guide to Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro

19. Bagan, Myanmar

bucket list ideas bagan myanmar

A visit to Myanmar is a trip we’ll never forget. Bagan was the highlight of our travels through the country. Taking an early morning ferry along the Irrawaddy River from Mandalay, we emerged at the most extraordinary complex of temples we had ever seen. Built in 1057 and covering 16 square miles Bagan houses 2200 pagodas. It looks like a massive forest of temples that you must see with your own eyes.

  • Read More – The Incredible Temples of Bagan, Myanmar

20. See the Northern Lights

bucket list ideas northern lights rocky mountains canada

Have you ever wanted to witness the dazzling display of the Aurora Borealis? Once you see the Northern Lights dancing in the night sky, it doesn’t seem real at first. Are your eyes playing tricks on you? Iceland is one of the best places in the world to see the Northern Lights. We didn’t have good luck there but have witnessed them several times in Canada and in Greenland.

  • Incredible Greenland – The Final Frontier for Adventure Travel

21. Mexico Cenotes

rio secreto cenote mexico

For scuba divers’ the Cenotes of Mexico are a top bucket list diving adventure. But you can tour many cenotes without diving. The Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico has several adventures where you can rappel, snorkel, and paddle through Cenotes. But it was the Rio Secreto Cenote that was truly extraordinary.

  • Rio Secreto Cenote – Mexico’s Magical Underground Caves
  • Cenotes in Photos – Discover Mexico’s Extraordinary Underground Caves

22. Rome’s Colosseum

bucket list ideas roman colosseum daytime

The city of Rome is like no other. It is packed with ancient ruins and none as famous as the Colosseum. We had the good fortune of staying directly across the street from the Colosseum with a view of the amphitheater from our room. You think that you know everything about the Colosseum, but nothing can prepare you for seeing it for the first time.

  • 22 of the Best Things to do in Rome
  • 20 of the Best Free Things to do in Rome
  • 3 Days in Rome – The Ultimate Rome Itinerary

23. Christ the Redeemer – Brazil

bucket list ideas christ the redeemer overlooking rio de janiero

Rio de Janeiro is one of the most beautiful cities on earth and Christ the Redeemer stands proudly over the city keeping watch. Seeing “Christo Redentor” standing with arms outstretched at the top of Corcovado Mountain is on many bucket list travelers list. You can see it by hiking up the mountain, taking the train, or a scenic bus ride but nothing compares to flying around it by helicopter.

  • The Top 18 Most Excellent Things to do in Rio de Janeiro

24. Ha Long Bay – Vietnam

ha long bay with junk boat vietnam

Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that needs to be seen to truly be appreciated. 1600 towering limestone islands reach up from the emerald waters of Halong Bay. What makes the bay even more picturesque are the junk boats that take tourists to explore the many islands and caves.

  • Halong Bay or Bai Tu Long Bay – How to Choose Your Cruise?
  • The Very Best Things to do in Vietnam from North to South

25. Have Champagne at the Eiffel Tower – France

bucket list ideas eiffel tower and champs elysees lights at night

Paris is the city of love and we never tire of seeing the Eiffel Tower . Seeing the Eiffel Tower sparkle in the city of lights is such a romantic scene, but you must go up the Eiffel Tower. And did you know you can have a glass of champagne? Celebrate a milestone, get engaged or just enjoy a toast as you take in the Parisian skyline.

  • Where To Stay In Paris – The Best Neighborhoods in Paris
  • 3 Days in Paris: The Best Paris Itinerary for Your First Visit

26. Helicopter Tour of Victoria Falls – Zambia

overhead view of Victoria Falls

We happen to live one hour away from Niagara Falls in Canada and we do love that city and the iconic Canadian cascade. So when we had the chance to visit Victoria Falls in Zambia we were very excited. The Falls That Thunder is located in the center of Mosi Oa Tunya National Park and is the largest waterfall in the world. The setting is completely different than Niagara Falls as it is surrounded by jungle. At a Whopping 1.7 km wide (1 mile) it is massive, and the way to take in the scope of Victoria Falls is to get up in the air.

  • Incredible Things to Do in Victoria Falls, Zambia

27. Soak in the Blue Lagoon – Iceland

bucket lists dave at blue lagoon in iceland

Sure, the Blue Lagoon of Iceland is overcrowded these days, but no trip to “The Land of Fire and Ice” would be complete without stopping to soak in its healing waters. It tops many a traveler’s bucket list, especially after National Geographic named it one of the top 25 Natural Wonders of the World.

  • How to Visit The Blue Lagoon in Iceland
  • Best Places To Visit In Iceland

28. Explore the Canals of Venice – Italy

bucket lists venice gondolas

We truly fell in love with Venice. Staying in the city for four days allowed us to get off the beaten path to explore more of the quiet corners of the floating city. Not bucket-list travels would be complete without adding Venice to your list. While a gondola tops many bucket lists, it was the private taxi tour that we found to be far more romantic. Riding through the Grand Canal in style viewing scenery made us feel like movie stars.

  • 3 Days in Venice – The Complete Venice Itinerary
  • Where to Stay in Venice – The Best Neighborhoods and Hotels for Every Budget

29. Spy the Sun Stream at Antelope Canyon – USA

bucket list experience antelope canyon light shining through

It is one of the most recognizable caves in the world. But where is it? Antelope Canyon in Page, Arizona is located in the United States. Once a day a gorgeous waterfall of light seeps through tiny openings lighting up the layers of sandstone in this famous slot canyon. Read: The 17 Best Hikes in Arizona

  • Antelope Canyon Photo Tours – How to Make the most of it

30. Hike Through Meteora – Greece

bucket list destination monasteries of meteora greece

Santorini may be the luxury escape of Greece, but the Monasteries of Meteora are the wonders of Greece. Sitting at the top of massive rock monoliths reaching up to 500 meters (1500 feet) from the valley floor, ancient monasteries dot the landscape. Dating back to the 9th century, the Meteora Monasteries can be visited today by hiking to the top, walking across bridges, or simply taking in the view from one of the many lookouts.

  • Meteora Monasteries of Greece – Magic Monoliths in Photos
  • The Best Places to Visit in Greece

31. Giant’s Causeway – Northern Ireland

bucket list destination giant's causeway at sunset in northern ireland

A visit to the Giant’s Causeway in Ireland will make you believe in giants. This UNESCO World Heritage Site is Northern Ireland’s most famous attraction and tops many a travel bucket list. To see the perfectly arranged basalt pillars leading out to sea makes you believe that a giant built a causeway to Scotland rather than a volcanic eruption some 60 million years ago.

  • The Legend of the Giant’s Causeway – Do You Believe?

32. Leaning Tower of Pisa – Italy

bucket list destination leaning tower of pisa

We didn’t know if we’d be in awe of the famous Leaning Tower of Pisa, but seeing it in person did indeed live up to the hype. Pisa alone is worth visiting. This picturesque city located on the Arno River is filled with history dating back to the 14th century.

  • The Leaning Tower of Pisa – Is It Worth The Visit?

33. Stand in the Center of Times Square – New York

bucket list destination new york city's times square

Standing in the center of Times Square in New York fills you with energy and excitement. New York is certainly one of the most exciting cities in the world, and while Times Square is filled with tourists, its with good reason. You feel as if you are in the center of the universe as massive LED screens surround the entire square.

  • Best Things to Do in New York City
  • Where to Stay in New York City – Top Places and Hotels For All Budgets
  • Fun Facts About New York

34. Go to the Top of the Burj Khalifa – Dubai

bucket list destination burj khalifa dubai

It’s the tallest building in the world sitting amongst several other massive skyscrapers. Dubai is out of this world. With each impressive structure built, there are four more in the works. Going to the top of the Burj Khalifa to see the most impressive skyline on earth is the definitive bucket list item.

  • 17 Fabulous and Fun Things to do in Dubai

35. Go Sandboarding in Huacachina – Peru

bucket list destination sandboarding in huacachina peru

I never expected sand dunes in Peru to be so massive. When we booked a bus ticket to Huacachina in Peru, we thought we’d be sitting in a tiny oasis, but instead, we were surrounded by the largest sand dunes we’ve ever seen. The way to explore them is to take a dune buggy tour or to hop on a sandboard and glide down them. You’ll be covered in sand, but what a hoot and it is something you must try at least once in your life.

  • 24 Best Things to do in Peru

36. Cross the Shibuya Scramble in Tokyo

bucket list destinations shibuya crossing tokyo japan

Until you’ve seen Shibuya Crossing in Tokyo with your own eyes, it’s difficult to comprehend the number of people that take this crossing every few minutes each day. A quarter-million people cross this intersection each day. The best way to see this bucket list item is to go to the top of Magnet’s Mag 7 from the glassed-in viewing area.

  • Awesome Things to do in Tokyo, Japan
  • Best Day Trips from Tokyo

37. Golden Temple – India

bucket list destinations golden temple amritsar

The Taj Mahal may top everyone’s bucket list, but we found the Golden Temple of Amritsar to be a more authentic experience. Don’t get me wrong, the Taj Mahal is a wonder to see, but the Golden Temple is a beautiful display that is still a working temple. Join one hundred thousand pilgrims each day as they pay their respects to Sikkhism’s most holy site.

  • Golden Temple of Amritsar – India’s Shining Star

38. Road trip to the Grand Canyon

bucket list destinations grand canyon

I must admit I wasn’t expecting much from the Grand Canyon, but during our road trip through California and Arizona we popped into the Grand Canyon and I was taken aback by its beauty and sheer size. The Grand Canyon is on everyone’s American travel bucket list and it is spectacular. The Colorado River cuts through the 466 km long (277 mile) Colorado Plateau canyon of the Colorado Plateau and let me tell you, a pop in won’t do it justice. you must get out and explore the beauty of America’s natural wonder.

  • 15 Fun Facts That You Need to Know About the Grand Canyon
  • The Absolute Best Things to do in The Grand Canyon
  • United States National Parks in Photos

39. Amazon River – Peru

bucket list destinations amazon river cruise peru

The mighty Amazon River is the largest river by water volume in the world and it is the land of legends. It still feels as if much of the Amazon River Basin has yet to be explored. When you set out on a river cruise through the Amazon, you can almost feel what it was like to be an early exploring cutting their way through the largest jungle on earth.

  • What to Expect on an Amazon River Cruise – Life on the River

40. Marvel at the Glaciers of Greenland

bucket list destinations iceberg at sunset greenland

Glaciers are melting fast on this planet and nowhere on earth is it more prevalent than in Greenland. Visit the world’s most active calving glacier in Ilulissat and sail through a sea of floating skyscrapers of ice. Icebergs dwarfed our ship as we explored the west coast of Greenland on this truly magnificent bucket list adventure.

  • Kayaking in Greenland – The Greatest Arctic Adventure in Photos

41.Swim with Whale Sharks

bucket list destinations swim with whale sharks mexico

There is something truly magical about swimming with whale sharks. While it might be a frenzy of tourists beaming with excitement below is calm and quiet. To see these gentle giants glide effortlessly through the sea is the ultimate bucket list travel experience. There are many places to swim with whale sharks around the world, most notably off the coast of Cancun Mexico, and in the Philippines.

  • Swimming with Whale Sharks Cancun – A Massive Adventure

42. Hornblower at Niagara Falls

bucket list destinations maid of the mist niagara falls canada

Okay, we cannot forget to include going into the center of Horseshoe Falls in Niagara, Ontario. We have always taken this bucket list adventure for granted because we live so close to Niagara Falls, but when you go on the Hornblower, it truly is a spectacular scene. Feel the power of one of the world’s largest waterfalls as you sit at the bottom of the plunging waters. It is so powerful that everyone gets a rain poncho to wear on the boat. If you make your way to Canada, don’t miss seeing Niagara Falls.

There are so many things to do in Niagara Falls, the Hornblower is just the tip of the iceberg. Check out our full round-up of Our Favourite Things to do in Niagara Falls – Plus Where to Eat & Where to Stay

ultimate bucket list travel guide

And these are our most amazing bucket list travels on earth. We’ve been lucky to be able to see and do all of these bucket list adventures in our lifetime. As I went through this list, I cannot believe that we have experienced each and every one of these. It all started by creating a dream list a decade ago, and now we have achieved travels beyond our wildest imagination. We can’t wait to add more when we can travel again.

  • 50 Most Beautiful Places in the World to Visit – That We’ve Been
  • Beautiful Isolated Places on Earth – In Photos
  • 31 Most Beautiful Cities in Europe
  • 16 of the Best Cities in Spain – Beautiful Places to Visit Right Now
  • How to Travel Around the World – The Ultimate Travel Resource

Travel Planning Resources

Looking to book your next trip? Why not use these resources that are tried and tested by yours truly.

Flights: Start planning your trip by finding the best flight deals on Skyscanner

Book your Hotel: Find the best prices on hotels with these two providers. If you are located in Europe use Booking.com and if you are anywhere else use TripAdvisor

Find Apartment Rentals: You will find the cheapest prices on apartment rentals with VRBO . 

Travel Insurance: Don't leave home without it. Here is what we recommend:

  • Allianz - Occasional Travelers.
  • Medjet - Global air medical transport and travel security.

Need more help planning your trip? Make sure to check out our Resources Page where we highlight all the great companies that we trust when we are traveling.

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About The Planet D

Dave Bouskill and Debra Corbeil are the owners and founders of The Planet D. After traveling to 115 countries, on all 7 continents over the past 13 years they have become one of the foremost experts in travel. Being recognized as top travel bloggers and influencers by the likes of Forbes Magazine , the Society of American Travel Writers and USA Today has allowed them to become leaders in their field.

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5 thoughts on “Bucket List Travels – 52 Places to Visit in Your Lifetime”

wow such a wonderful list for everyone. I am from India and I was surprised when I saw the golden temple on your list because everyone includes the Taj mahal in their top list when anyone visits India. waiting for your next blog. ok, take care of each other Dave and Deb.

Chopta Chandrashila Deoria Tal Trek is a prestigious package for visitors to Chopta, which has mesmerizing panoramic Views of beautiful Himalayan peaks.It’s 5km and takes about 3 hours. We can organize a trip for you to this amazing destination. The hike up to Deoria Tal, amidst dense forests and filled with Rhododendrons (in summer) is part of the Chopta-Chandrashila trek. There is a famous Hindu story about it. When the 5 Pandavas were on their way to heaven, they stopped at the place and tasted the water.

I love these bucket list places to travel to!! Some of my favorites from the list were going to see the Churchill polar bears, kayaking in Antarctica, the Great Wall of China, the Great Barrier Reef, and the Northern Lights. This blog post reminds me of all the beautiful places I have yet to see and cannot wait to go to!

What an amazing compilation of great places. Cant wait to travel after this pandemic.

The Harmiandir Sahib (Golden Temple) of Amritsar has a unique distinction of offering free food at Langar Seva — The world’s largest community kitchen. People visiting the Golden temple must not miss the Langar food.

Thanks for curating a great list.

The ultimate travel bucket list

By Condé Nast Traveller

Travel bucketlist ideas | Ultimate places to go before you die

The best bucket-list ideas for holidays of a lifetime in the USA, Indonesia, Japan, Argentina, Fiji, France, Iceland and the Caribbean.

Becky Lucas digital editor  'It would have to be getting the chance to witness the Northern Lights whirl across the sky...

Seeing the Northern Lights

Becky Lucas, digital editor

'It would have to be getting the chance to witness the Northern Lights whirl across the sky in Finnish Lapland once again, while lying under blankets in a sleigh pulled by reindeers across a frozen lake. On this occasion, I’d bring an actual camera that could deal with the -22°C temperatures – unlike my smartphone which promptly died every time I got it out of my pocket – because I’d know that the lights’ bright colours are only really visible in photos. Then we’d retreat to sit around a campfire and drink glasses of warm glögg before retiring to our igloo-style Aurora Dome at Harriniva. Come daylight, we’d keep our blood pumping with hair-raising (or freezing) activities such as speeding around on snowmobiles, Nordic cross-country skiing, ice fishing, husky sledding, fat biking and a ride in the world’s only sauna gondola at Ylläs ski resort, finished up with a wallow in the steaming outdoor tub, looking out at the surreally snow-stacked slopes while sporting a thick bobble hat.'

Skydiving in Cape Town     Sophie Knight digital picture editor  ‘Cape Town remains my favourite place on earth  for the...

Skydiving in Cape Town

Sophie Knight, digital picture editor

‘ Cape Town remains my favourite place on earth – for the rugged coastline, hiking trails lined with stunning flora and fauna, vast white-sand beaches and striking views from Table Mountain overlooking the twinkling city lights at dusk. Not forgetting that it’s home to lots of urban wildlife – penguins, baboons and whales are all residents here. The last time I visited, I paraglided from Lion’s Head down to the bay where I was greeted by a humpback whale being circled by squawking gulls. On my next trip I’m hoping to see the city from a higher altitude on a skydive.’

Exploring NEW ZEALAND     Sarah James assistant digital editor  ‘To me this is the ultimate onceinalifetime trip  partly...

Exploring NEW ZEALAND

Sarah James, assistant digital editor

‘To me, this is the ultimate once-in-a-lifetime trip – partly because my dream itinerary would take three weeks minimum, and partly because I might have to pull a bank job to pay for it. My ideal route takes in low-key Auckland , adventurous Queenstown and artsy Wellington, as well as some of the country’s wonderful open spaces such as icy, volcanic Tongariro National Park and lush, coastal Abel Tasman National Park. A tour of the Central Otago wine region is pretty high up on the list, as is a nerdy jaunt to Hobbiton. And New Zealand is home to some of the world’s most incredible lodges, such as Scrubby Bay, set on a 4,000-acre farm near Christchurch.’

TOURING THE INDONESIAN ISLANDS     Paula Ellis Art director   'I've had this absolute burning desire to do a tour around...

TOURING THE INDONESIAN ISLANDS

Paula Ellis, Art director

'I've had this absolute burning desire to do a tour around the Indonesian islands for years. I want to see some of the obvious things like the Komodo dragons, but to be chilled, take it easy, and go and see the volcanic-y bits too. I had this perception that it would be really calm and peaceful. But beautiful. And I think the people would be really sweet and friendly. I'm obsessed with ikat silk - the woven fabrics. I know it's touristy, but I would love to go to Borobudur, the big Buddhist temple, too.'

Rick Jordan Senior editor   'As an antidote to my deskbound daily existence and before I'm just too creaky I'd take off...

Icelandic volcanoes and helicopter rides

Rick Jordan, Senior editor

'As an antidote to my desk-bound daily existence, and before I'm just too creaky, I'd take off to the alien landscapes of Iceland for a week of midlife-crisis intrepidness. There's an outfit called Momentum Adventure , which can drop you into the magma chamber of a dormant volcano with an unpronounceable name and land you by helicopter on top of a live one to fry hotdogs on the molten lava. You can also swim in geothermal rivers and go diving between tectonic plates in pure glacial waters. The next day they'll give you the keys to a Polaris buggy. I'm just relearning to drive after years of London-induced road-shyness, so bouncing around across black-sand deserts will put my skills to the test.'

Karin Mueller Senior picture editor   'I've always wanted to revisit an amazing journey through the United States as an...

The USA from coast to coast

Karin Mueller, Senior picture editor

'I've always wanted to re-visit an amazing journey through the United States as an adult, which my parents took me on when I was in my early teens and which left a huge impression on me. At the time, of course, I wasn't able to appreciate many aspects of it in a way I would now. My starting point would be some fun-filled days with friends and family in New York - in style, checking out all the trendiest bars and coolest restaurants, staying at an impossibly glamorous place like The Mercer in Soho or the Gramercy Park Hotel .

Afterwards I would want to soak up the atmosphere of San Francisco for a while, before embarking on an epic road trip: from the golden sands and sunshine of Los Angeles, past the Grand Canyon and the Native American communities of the desert, then to the gritty streets of St. Louis and Chicago . To finish it off, I'd hop over to the Turks and Caicos Islands , staying at Parrot Cay resort, unwinding in luxury.'

Matt Buck Photographic director   'Starting in La Paz Bolivia I would take an epic road trip in a monster truck driving...

Road tripping across South America

Matt Buck, Photographic director

'Starting in La Paz , Bolivia, I would take an epic road trip in a monster truck driving through the mountains on the road to Potosi, and stay at Hostal Colonial before heading to the Salar de Uyuni to drive across the salt flats heading across the border into Chile and the Atacama Desert . I would stay at the ESO Hotel on the Cerro Paranal as seen in Quantum of Solace to star gaze from the Very Large Telescope before heading down through the desert across the Andes and into Mendoza in Argentina for lunch at The Vines Resort & Spa where I will die peacefully from eating too much red meat and red wine.'

Fiona Kerr Features director   North to south through Japan. It's a country I've obsessed about from afar ever since I...

Going north to south through Japan

Fiona Kerr, Features director

North to south through Japan . It's a country I've obsessed about from afar ever since I was given my first origami kit as a kid. Those pretty, pretty papers led me on to the delicate watercolour-like landscapes, the another-worldly culture that veers from blindingly beautiful to brilliantly bonkers - and sushi.

Bullet trains make this epic journey do-ably nippy - if you didn't get off you could ride the whole 1,941 kilometres in just 12 hours. But I'd make it rather more leisurely, starting off skiing (poorly) the perfect powder of Niseko on Japan's most northerly island, Hokkaido, before wiggling down through the classics in Tokyo (for the new Aman hotel) and Kyoto. And to finish? Hop on a flight to the white-sand beaches of the Okinawa islands ('Japan's Hawaii') which reach out down towards the tropics - here, Hoshinoya Okinawa is just the spot to do absolutely nothing.

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Discovering Argentina

Tabitha Joyce, Deputy digital editor

'I've always wanted to go to Argentina . I'd hang out on the cobbled streets of buzzy Palermo Viejo in Buenos Aires before heading down to El Calafate – the glacial landscape named after the berry that, once eaten, guarantees your return. I'd walk in Bariloche at the foothills of the Andes and end up at Iguazu Falls where I'd cross over to Brazil and stay at the Hotel das Cataratas .'

Grainne McBride Chief subeditor   'I would fly to Japan  and jump straight into Tokyo's hectic neon jumble staying in...

See Tokyo in neon lights

Grainne McBride, Chief sub-editor

'I would fly to Japan (first class) and jump straight into Tokyo 's hectic neon jumble, staying in the sky-high Park Hyatt (of Lost in Translation fame). I would duck in and out of tiny back-street sushi bars such as Kyubey, trying the world's most delicate sashimi and fiery sake. Then I would head to the misty mountains and the traditional ryokan Miyamasou , which I imagine to be all cherry blossoms and hot-spring baths. Finally I would go to Ogimi, a small village in Okinawa that is one of the happiest places in the world, according to the feel-good documentary Happy . I'd hang out with the elderly folk and get their take on this crazy world of ours. A great way to kick the bucket to touch.'

Paula Maynard Director of operations   'If I could sail which I can't I would drift around Caribbean islands pulling...

Exploring the Caribbean by boat

Paula Maynard, Director of operations

'If I could sail, which I can't, I would drift around Caribbean islands pulling into small beautiful harbours for a drink or to buy fresh food, moving on again to drop anchor in a deserted cove with sparkling sea to watch the sunset. I'd insist my family came with me and of course in this scenario it would never rain.'

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Finding Alexx

| Bucket list adventures around the globe

Bucket list travel , Homepage popular · April 16, 2023

The ultimate travel bucket list: 50+ epic experiences around the world

Want some inspiration for your travel bucket list? I’ve compiled more than 50 epic things to see, do and experience around the globe that are worthy of being at the top of any travel bucket list.

ultimate travel destination meaning

I’ve always been a sucker for a good list, and a travel bucket list is no different. I find that getting your ideas onto paper (or computer haha) help to organise your thoughts, let you prioritise them, and then make decision-making way easier.

Orrrr on the other hand, having a list of 50 epic bucket list experiences around the world might send you into a state of constant analysis paralysis, not knowing where to go next 🙃

Regardless of which way you’re going to go, this incredible travel bucket list is sure to inspire you for your future travels. I’ve listed some of the iconic bucket list experiences, like seeing the Taj Mahal and diving on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, but I’ve also included slightly lnoesser-known experiences like the world’s fastest rollercoaster, seeing bioluminescence in the ocean, and seeing elephants on the beach in Sri Lanka.

So open up your bucket list journal or Google Doc and start taking notes of which of these epic experiences you want to add to your travel bucket list.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Experiences to add to your travel bucket list

Adventure bucket list ideas.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Bungy jump or skydive

I feel like there’s no other way to start an ‘ultimate travel bucket list’ post apart from throwing yourself either out of a plane of off a platform tied by the ankles. And even so, I can promise you that I will never do either.

The best place to bungy jump in the world is hands down New Zealand, the original home of the commercial bungy jump since the first one in 1988. These days New Zealand has six different bungy sites to choose from, so add a bungy jump to your New Zealand bucket list.

If jumping from thousands of feet in the sky is more up your alley then choose your preferred landscape and book your trip. Skydive over coral reefs in Australia, man-made islands in Dubai, mountains in Switzerland or tropical rainforests in Hawaii, to name a few.

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Go paragliding

For a similar thrill of flying without the feeling of falling, try paragliding instead, where you run off a mountain or similar platform and start gliding straight away without any freefall.

Paragliding can be as calm or as adrenaline-inducing as you want it (weather-dependent of course), you can enjoy a gentle float through the sky if you want a chilled experience, or ask your paragliding pilot for the ‘rollercoaster version’ as my pilot called it, where you can experience spins, spirals and strong G-forces as the chute is manoeuvered in certain ways.

I first paraglided in Interlaken, Switzerland, and have since done it twice in Queenstown, New Zealand.

Read more: The perfect five day Switzerland

ultimate travel destination meaning

Hike to Everest Base Camp, Nepal

This arduous but rewarding journey tops hiking bucket lists for adventure travellers all over the globe. and for good reason. Trek past Sherpa villages through unforgiving terrain en route to the foot of the world’s tallest mountain, reaching your final destination at an altitude of more than 5000m above sea level.

Soak up the views and enjoy feeling mind-numbingly insignificant while standing at Base Camp, surrounded by rugged peaks and dramatic valleys as far as the eye can see.

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Go hot air ballooning in Cappadocia, Turkey

Seeing Cappadocia’s otherworldly landscapes from the dizzying heights of a hot air balloon ride at sunrise is one of the most magical travel experiences in the world.

The balloons go up at sunrise each day throughout the year (weather dependent), but I’d recommend spending at least a couple of days in Cappadocia to give yourself a plan b or c in case your first day is cancelled.

If a hot air balloon is out of your budget or your comfort zone, then you can still enjoy the beautiful display of balloons from one of Cappadocia’s many rooftop terraces.

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Try a glacier heli-hike in New Zealand

New Zealand’s South Island is home to more than 2900 glaciers, and you can do a heli-hike on three of the main ones, Franz Josef Glacier and Fox Glacier on the West Coast and the Tasman Glacier in Aoraki/Mount Cook National Park.

The helicopter flight alone will have you feeling like you’re in a David Attenborough documentary, before landing on the ice and trekking through frozen crevasses and marvelling at bright blue ice formations.

Read more: The best things to do in Franz Josef Glacier, New Zealand

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Go diving at the Great Barrier Reef in Australia

One of the Natural Wonders of the World, Australia’s Great Barrier Reef is certainly up there with the best places to scuba dive in the world. While much of the reef has fallen victim to coral bleaching from warming ocean temperatures as well as damage from weather events, there’s a huge focus on sustainability along the Queensland coast to try and protect and restore the reef.

Head to the outer reef for the most colourful coral and marine diversity, you can spot turtles, manta rays and plenty of vibrant tropical fish.

Read more: Sleeping in an underwater hotel room on the Great Barrier Reef

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Ski in Whistler

Winter enthusiasts need to add the impressive Whistler ski resort to their travel bucket list, boasting more than 8000 acres of ski terrain just a few hours from Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada.

There’s a Whistler experience for everyone, from beginner slopes to expert off piste tours, as well as spa and wellness resorts, snowmobiling trips, snowshoeing trails, sightseeing gondolas and more.

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Ride a motorbike over the Hai Van Pass in Vietnam

Known as one of Southeast Asia’s most iconic roads, the scenic Hai Van Pass runs parallel to the Vietnamese coastline on a 21km stretch of road between Hue and Danang, offering breathtaking views of the South China Sea.

Experiencing the winding roads and hairpin turns by motorbike is a rite of passage for visitors to Vietnam, and it’s a must do for any Vietnam itinerary.

If you prefer four wheels over two, there are also army jeep tours or private luxury transfers available.

Read more: An epic three week Vietnam itinerary

ultimate travel destination meaning

Ride the world’s fastest rollercoaster at Ferrari World Abu Dhabi

The Formula Rossa is the rollercoaster version of an F1 car, reaching a top speed of 240km per hour (that’s 149mph) in just 4.9 seconds 🤯 riders have to wear protective goggles to shield their eyes from the sand while they race around the 2.2km track, all while trying to hold onto their stomach!

The rollercoaster can be found at Ferrari World Abu Dhabi which is home to some other record-breaking rides, including the world’s highest rollercoaster loop and an immersive coaster with the world’s first sideways rollercoaster drop.

I’m a bit of a theme park fiend myself, I’m trying to hit all the best theme parks in the world, and I could honestly spend days at Abu Dhabi doing those three epic rides over and over again.

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Camp at the top of a mountain and wake up to watch the sunrise

An overnight hike to a viewpoint with a sunrise wake up is something for every hiker’s bucket list, and it is sure to make you feel connected to nature like nothing else.

Some of the best sunrise viewpoint hikes are in New Zealand’s South Island , the Dolomites in Italy , or British Columbia in Canada.

An adventurer descends on the Flam Zipline, the longest in Scandinavia, with a panoramic view of waterfalls and the colourful autumn valley below

Soar like a bird on an epic zipline

I looove a good zipline, there’s nothing like feeling the wind in your hair while you marvel at panoramic views all around you! There are loads of bucket list ziplines around the world but some of my favourites are:

  • Flåm Zipline in Flåm, Norway (the longest one in Scandinavia)
  • The Ultimate Canopy Tour in Rotorua, New Zealand
  • The First Flyer in Grindelwald, Switzerland
  • Dubai’s XLine between skyscrapers
  • Treetops Adventure in Far North Queensland, Australia
  • Ziplining with a view in Queenstown, New Zealand
  • SuperFly Ziplines in Whistler, Canada

Bucket list events around the world

ultimate travel destination meaning

Visit Japan during the cherry blossom season

Japan’s ‘sakura’ season brings literally millions of tourists to see the beautiful pink and white flower displays during their peak, typically from late March through to early April. It’s one of the busiest times of the year to visit Japan but the crowds are worth it, just expect to get up early and venture beyond the main photo spots to be able to get shots without loads of people in the background.

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See the fireworks at the Eiffel Tower on Bastille Day

I’m a sucker for a good fireworks display, and the Bastille Day fireworks in Paris are one of the world’s best! There’s just something about seeing neon colours shoot into the sky, and they’re made even better when combined with a light show on one of the most famous landmarks on the globe, and an epic soundtrack that lines up with the bursts and booms of the pyrotechnics.

Bastille Day is France’s national holiday, held on July 14th every year with a variety of events like parades, concerts, military flyovers and more, but the fireworks alone make it worth visiting Paris at this time of the year. You can see the fireworks from river cruises, hotel terraces or viewpoints, but the best spot is from the Champs de Mar right in front of the Eiffel Tower. It’s totally free to enter but you’ll need to get there hours in advance to get a good spot, we got there at about 4pm and enjoyed a picnic afternoon tea/dinner before the fireworks started at 11pm.

Book your accommodation in advance to ensure you get a decent deal, places get booked up quickly and prices skyrocket closer to the date.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Do the Rickshaw Run

If you’re up for a once-in-a-lifetime adventure, the Rickshaw Run is an epic road trip not for the faint of heart.

The original Rickshaw Run is a 3500km journey across India in a three-wheeled rickshaw (or as the Rickshaw Run team calls it, a ‘glorified lawnmower’), with no set route, just a departure point and a finish line with a rough guideline of how to get between. Find two friends to join, submit your rickshaw design to have it painted before you arrive, and set off on a crazy adventure, with your fingers crossed for minimal breakdowns (both mechanical and emotional). The Rickshaw Run has recently expanded into Sri Lanka and the Himalayas too.

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Visit a Christmas market in Europe

Europe’s Christmas markets help make up for the short days and cold temperatures as the continent creeps closer to mid-winter, and for anyone who loves celebrating the festive season, they’re absolutely something that needs to be on your Europe bucket list.

There are Christmas markets all over Europe but some of the most authentic ones can be found in Strasbourg and Colmar in France, Cologne and Nuremberg in Germany, and Innsbruck and Salzburg in Austria. I spent a month last year seeing the European Christmas markets by train , highly recommend!

Read more: Europe Christmas market train itinerary

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Drink beer at Oktoberfest

The world’s largest beer festival is held annually in Munich, starting in mid-September (I know, false advertising) and ending in early October. Welcoming more than six million people each year, the festival is a celebration of Bavarian culture, with plenty of hearty meals, huge kegs of beer and traditional music on offer.

Read more: Oktoberfest on a budget with Stoke Travel

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Spend a weekend at Coachella

Topping party-goers bucket lists from all over the globe, Coachella is held in Indio, California over two weekends in April each year with a total attendance of about 750,000 over the six days. The line up is often one of the most awaited announcements each year, with tickets selling out in minutes at each release.

I ticked Coachella off my personal travel bucket list way back in 2012 when I was studying in the USA, and I can honestly say it still stands as one of the best weekends of my life!

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Go to India for Holi Festival

Holi Festival is a significant event on the Hindu calendar, marking the beginning of spring with a chaotic display of colourful powder being thrown amongst crowds of people, celebrating the victory of good over evil. It’s a bit of an assault on the senses, with vibrant paint sticking to your hair and skin, loud music pumping throughout the cities and towns, and deliciously sweet treats being offered from roadside stalls, but it’s an unforgettable experience nonetheless.

I visited India as a solo female traveller and had a fantastic time with no safety concerns whatsoever, however I have heard that Holi can be a hub for assaults and unwanted attention due to the sheer number of people roaming the streets. If you’re a woman travelling to Holi solo or travelling with other female friends and aren’t super confident about dealing with the risks of crowds, I’d highly recommend going with a group tour like G Adventures or Contiki to feel a bit safer.

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Experience Mardi Gras in New Orleans

New Orleans’ French Quarter is a vibrant hub of culture and entertainment at any time of the year, but during Mardi Gras it’s truly taken to the absolute next level. Weeks of parades, shows and street festivals turn this part of the city into a party paradise, where revellers can dress up in colourful costumes, dance the night away under street lights and catch beads and other ‘throws’ being chucked into the crowd from parade floats.

Mardi Gras’ date changes each year as it’s based on the Christian dates of Ash Wednesday, Lent and Easter, but it’s always in either February or March.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Go to Rio for Carnival

For a similar celebration with a South American twist, head down to Rio de Janeiro for Carnival, a massive street festival which boasts the title of biggest carnival in the world. With two million people partying on the streets per day , you can see why this buzzing event is worthy for travel bucket lists.

Attendants can soak up the incredible atmosphere, search for the most elaborate costumes, groove to samba music and join one of the blocos (block parties).

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Go to Burning Man

Another desert festival to add to your wanderlist is Burning Man, an event dedicated to rejecting capitalism and instead encouraging self-reliance, inclusion and self-expression. Burning Man is a little bit like the ‘Fight Club’ of festivals, never talk about Burning Man, so what happens in the desert kind of stays in the desert!

The mysterious must-do hosts about 80,000 people each year at a temporary city built by its participants each year, with the entire thing packed up at the end leaving no trace behind.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Go to Mexico for Dia de los Muertos

The Mexican holiday ‘Dia de los Muertos’, or ‘Day of the Dead’, celebrates the lives of loved ones that have passed away with colourful parades and elaborate ‘ofrendas’ (tributes) welcoming the spirits of the dead back to the world of the living for a quick visit.

While the name sounds morbid, the festival is anything but, with bright flowers, intricate face painting, joyful music and delicious traditional meals all available to enjoy.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Spend St Patrick’s Day in Dublin, Ireland

Experiencing Dublin’s pub culture should be on your bucket list anyway, but visiting the city for St Patrick’s Day (March 17th) is truly something else. The day honours St Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, and celebrates Irish culture and heritage with street parades, Irish music, traditional dances and, of course, a lot of pints of Guinness.

Nature & wildlife bucket list experiences

Tourists in bright yellow jackets enjoy a fjord safari in Flåm, Norway, with steep cliffs rising on either side of the calm waters, a memorable excursion in a 4 day Norway itinerary

See a fjord from the water

A fjord is a narrow inlet of water that runs from the sea to far inland, with steep cliffs on each side. They’re different to rivers because they were carved by glaciers (a gazillion years ago), rather than being formed by the movement of water.

As landscapes go, fjords are one of the most dramatic scenes you can find around the world. The inland portion of a fjord is typically calm and still as it’s so far from the open ocean, which results in brilliant boating conditions and mind-blowing reflections.

You can find fjords in Norway, Chile, Canada, Greenland, Alaska and New Zealand (we spell it ‘fiords’ here, due to a historic typo haha) and the best way to see them by farrrr is from a boat trip. Some bucket list fjord experiences to add to your future travel plans:

  • A thrilling Fjordsafari RIB tour through Nærøyfjord in Norway (pictured above)
  • A silent cruise through Nærøyfjord (honestly do both, totally different experiences!)
  • A day trip to see Hardangerfjord from Bergen, Norway
  • A road trip through the Arctic fjords in Tromsø, Norway
  • A cruise on Milford Sound or Doubtful Sound in New Zealand
  • A kayak trip around Milford Sound

ultimate travel destination meaning

Swim with wild dolphins

Experience the ocean’s most playful residents with an up close and personal dolphin swim, where curious wild dolphins will zip and zoom all around you in the water. I’ve had two incredible wild dolphin swims in New Zealand, one in Picton (calmer ocean conditions as it’s in a sheltered area) and one in Kaikoura (rougher conditions but more dolphins), and you can also find ethical wild dolphin encounters in Australia, Hawaii and in some countries in Central America.

Read more: Swimming with dolphins in Kaikoura

ultimate travel destination meaning

See the Northern or Southern Lights

With bright rays of green, pink and purple dancing in the sky, the ethereal phenomenon of the aurora is absolutely mind-blowing to see with your own eyes. It’s actually caused by electrically charged particles from the sun colliding with Earth’s magnetic field, and is easiest to see closest to the magnetic poles.

The Northern Lights (a.k.a. Aurora Borealis ) can typically be seen from places like Finland, Norway and Iceland in Europe as well as northern Canada, whereas the Southern Lights ( Aurora Australis ) are most likely to be seen from southern New Zealand and Australia, although they are rarer to see than their northern counterparts as there’s less land close to the south pole.

I’d highly recommend doing a Northern Lights tour (sometimes called an ‘aurora chase’ or ‘aurora hunt’) with a local guide, they’ll know how to read the forecast, how to navigate cloud cover and will also have all the gear needed to take magical photos.

My recommended Northern Lights tour operators are:

  • Wonderlapland in Rovaniemi, Finland
  • Lofoten Lights in Lofoten Islands, Norway
  • Chasing Lights in Tromso, Norway

You can also book some incredible accommodation for aurora viewing, like a glass igloo in Rovaniemi where you can see the Northern Lights from your bed or your private hot tub 💚 how dreamy!

Read more: The perfect three week Scandinavia itinerary

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Do a safari in Africa

Easily the most sought after animal experience in the world, an African safari is something all wildlife lovers should have on their bucket list. Search for the Big Five – lions, elephants, buffalos, leopards and rhinos – in their natural habitats, as well as spotting other majestic creatures like giraffes, zebras, cheetahs, monkeys and hippos.

There are plenty of safari options in Africa depending on what you’re looking for, from budget-friendly camping trips through to ultra-luxe lodge-hopping with scenic flights or hot air balloon trips.

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See elephants on the beach in Sri Lanka

While I haven’t been fortunate enough to experience Africa’s wildlife yet, I was able to spend my 31st birthday at a stunning eco-friendly safari lodge in Sri Lanka’s Yala National Park , where wild elephants roam the beach right in front of the bar and restaurant.

Uga Chena Escapes is one of the most incredible places I’ve ever stayed (and I’ve stayed at lots of incredible places!) and it was an unforgettable trip, with luxurious cabins complete with free-standing bath tub and private pool, world-class all-inclusive food and drinks, and expert rangers taking you on daily safari drives to spot elephants, crocodiles, monkeys and the elusive leopard.

Read more: A detailed review of the stunning Uga Chena Huts in Sri Lanka

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Set foot on Antarctica

One of the most remote destinations on the planet, visiting Antarctica is a top-of-the-bucket-list contender for travellers all over the globe. Antarctica obviously isn’t your classic tourist destination, with harsh weather conditions and vast expanses of nothingness, but the giant icebergs, thriving penguin colonies and unique ecosystem make it worth the trouble to get there.

The most common way to reach the southernmost continent on Earth is by cruise from the South American port of Ushuaia, Argentina, though there are also a limited number of cruises from New Zealand each season as well as a handful of flights from Chile or South Africa.

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Visit the Gatorade Blue glacial lakes in Canada

The Canadian Rockies offer some of the most mesmerising landscapes of anywhere in the world, where unbelievably blue glacial lakes are bordered by jagged snow-capped peaks and thick pine forests.

I’d recommend getting a campervan and road tripping through Jasper National Park and Banff National Park to make the most of your time in this part of the world. Having your own transport, accommodation and self-catering facilities not only saves money but gives you much more flexibility to get to the main lakes like Louise, Moraine and Peyto outside of peak tour hours, which means smaller crowds and a better experience.

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Watch stars in an International Dark Sky Reserve

For a truly humbling travel bucket list experience, head into an International Dark Sky Reserve to learn about astronomy, connect with nature, and see the night sky at its absolute best.

While there are many places around the globe where you can enjoy a fantastic display of twinkling stars, there are 21 certified International Dark Sky Reserves which have specific policies in place to minimise light pollution and preserve dark sky tourism.

Some of the most renowned IDSRs are Aoraki Mackenzie in New Zealand which includes stunning Lake Tekapo, Snowdonia National Park in Wales, Big Bend in the USA and Alpes Azur Mercantour in France.

Read more: The best things to do in Lake Tekapo, New Zealand

ultimate travel destination meaning

Float in the Dead Sea

Located between Jordan and Israel, the Dead Sea is almost ten times saltier than the average ocean salt content, making it impossible to sink which is a very strange sensation! The water and mud is packed with minerals, providing therapeutic properties for tourists looking to rest their muscles and rehydrate their skin.

Before you go, make sure you don’t shave any part of your body within the two or three days prior, because if the salt gets into any micro-cuts you’ll be in serious pain.

Read more: The ideal 7 day Jordan itinerary

ultimate travel destination meaning

See bioluminescence in the ocean

Bioluminescence is a natural phenomenon where living organisms emit light, and one of the most common ways to witness it is bioluminescent micro-plankton which lights up when disturbed, like when waves crash on the beach. You can witness in many places around the world including Puerto Rico, the Maldives , Thailand, Mexico and Japan.

Read more: A Maldives solo travel guide

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Relax in the Blue Lagoon in Iceland

This geothermal pool complex in southwest Iceland is just a short drive from Reykjavik’s airport, making it an easy first stop or final destination of any Iceland road trip. The water is mineral-rich, with high concentrations of silica, algae and sulfur, great for a relaxing and rejuvenating break from Iceland’s typically harsh weather conditions.

There’s no denying that the Blue Lagoon is heavily commercialised, with expensive tickets and thousands of visitors each day, so for somewhere a bit lower key you could try the new Sky Lagoon which boasts an infinity-edge pool with ocean views. Dreamy!

Read more: Four day South Iceland road trip itinerary

Food & drink bucket list experiences

ultimate travel destination meaning

Eat croissants in a Parisian park or square

Paris has a bit of a reputation for not meeting travellers’ expectations, but after five visits to the City of Lights and Love, I stand by the fact that it’s in my list of all-time favourite cities. I adore French cuisine (and by that I mean pastries, bread and cheese), I know a little bit of the language, and I feel like everyone’s life would be happier if they had beautiful squares and parks to spend their lunch break at.

Search the local boulangeries (bakeries) to find the ultimate croissant or pain au chocolat, then head to Place des Vosges, Jardin du Luxembourg or Jardin des Tuileries to enjoy the flaky, buttery goodness.

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Learn local recipes at a Vietnamese cooking class

There’s no better way to immerse yourself in local cuisine than by taking part in a cooking class, and Vietnam’s fresh ingredients, flavoursome herbs and spices, and budget-friendly prices, make it the perfect place to try your hand at cooking up local dishes.

Most cooking tours will take you through a bustling market before heading to the kitchen to make things like rice paper rolls, bánh mi and phở from scratch.

Read more: How to spend three weeks in Vietnam

ultimate travel destination meaning

Go winery-hopping in Napa Valley

Whether you’re a vino aficionado or a newbie to the wine world, a winery tour is always a brilliant way to get an understanding of a region’s culture. The Napa Valley in northern California is a wine country boasting more than 400 wineries, ranging from small, family-owned boutique suppliers through to commercial giants bottling some of the most popular wines in the USA.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Do a food tour in Bologna, Italy

As the gastronomic hub of Italy, and one of the stand-out culinary capitals in the world, Bologna is a must-visit destination for any foodie traveller. Easily visited with a day trip from Florence , Bologna is best explored by food tour with a passionate local guiding you around the city’s best eateries.

On my recent visit I did a food tour with local legend Mattia from Delicious Bologna , and it was genuinely one of the best food days of my life. We tried cheese, cured meats, aged balsamic vinegar, local wine, multiple varieties of pasta, fresh gelato and more! The Emilia-Romagna region, where Bologna is located, is famous for its top-notch ingredients and local artisans, so you’re eating the best food, in the best food region, in one of the best food countries. Divine!

Read more: 50+ epic things to see and do in Italy

ultimate travel destination meaning

Eat at a Michelin-starred restaurant

Dining at a Michelin-starred restaurant is the ultimate gastronomic experience, and it’s something you can tick off your bucket list in cities all over the world. To get a coveted star a restaurant has to be the crème de la crème in terms of food quality, service, presentation and atmosphere, and many are booked out weeks or months in advance by connoisseurs wanting to get a taste (literally) of their award-winning dishes.

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Dress up for a fancy high tea in London

A trip to the UK wouldn’t be complete without partaking in the quintessential British of an afternoon tea of club sandwiches, scones and, of course, tea, in a fancy tea room.

London has plenty of iconic tea rooms to choose from, including the luxurious Ritz London, Claridges or Savoy, or go for a more modern and Instagrammable experience at Sketch London or Prêt-à-Portea at the Berkeley.

Landmarks to add to your travel bucket list

ultimate travel destination meaning

See the view from the Burj Khalifa

Standing at a staggering height of 828 metres, the tallest building in the world is Dubai’s Burh Khalifa. Head up to the observation deck on the 124th floor for panoramic views of the city’s iconic skyline and the desert beyond.

The structure is equally, if not more impressive from ground level, and you’ll probably feel a little dizzy when looking up towards the building from right below. Don’t miss the free fountain shows that run in front of the Burj Khalifa each evening.

Read more: What to do with three days in Dubai

ultimate travel destination meaning

Visit the Taj Mahal at sunrise

Widely regarded as one of the most beautiful buildings on Earth, Agra’s Taj Mahal is an Indian icon and somewhere you have to have on your travel bucket list. Sunrise is the best time to visit, when the fog lifts and soft sunlight illuminates the white marble mausoleum.

As you can imagine, the Taj is packed with visitors every second of the day, so your only chance of getting the main photo spots with no one in the background is to line up super early and boost to them as soon as you get through security.

I was travelling solo in India and you can’t take tripods into the Taj Mahal complex, so I decided to book a local photographer who was an expert at snapping the best photos. The Taj opens 30 minutes before sunrise and we got there 30 minutes before that to be close to the front of the line. Because I was with a local guide we got to go through the ‘locals’ line which is faster and we were the first ones through the security gates! We headed straight to the famous Diana’s Bench to get a few good shots with literally no one in the background before moving on quickly to other spots, and we were always finished before the next people caught up.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Wander around the Ancient City of Petra

Jordan’s ancient city of Petra is a UNESCO-listed World Heritage Site that was once the capital of the Nabatean Kingdom, between the 4th century BC and 2nd century AD. It’s home to an incredible network of ancient tombs, temples and houses, carved into orange sandstone cliffs, and is one of the top bucket list experiences for those travelling to the Middle East.

Walk 2km through the winding gorge known as the Siq to reach Petra’s main monument, the Treasury (locally known as Al-Khazneh ), a towering temple at 39 metres high. But the treasures don’t stop there, I’d recommend venturing further into the city and climbing the 850 steps to the Monastery, equally as impressive with less crowds. Just maybe don’t do it in the middle of the day in August like I did, or you might die from exhaustion!

Read more: Solo female travel in Jordan

ultimate travel destination meaning

Spend a day exploring Angkor Wat

Angkor Wat is a giant temple complex in Siem Reap, Cambodia, with more than 70 temples and other religious buildings set amongst 400 square kilometres of Angkor Archaeological Park.

It was built in the 12th century by a Khmer as a tribute to the Hindu god Vishnu, before being converted to a Buddhist temple in the 14th century. It was abandoned in the 15th century and unused until it was rediscovered in the late 19th century, these days hosting millions of visitors from all over the world each year.

Book a local guide to take you on a proper tour and teach you all about Khmer history and culture while you admire the temple ruins.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Hike up to Machu Picchu

The ancient Incan city of Machu Picchu is one of South America’s most important archaeological sites, built into the steep mountains of Peru’s Andes in the 15th century. With sacred temples, stone houses and agricultural terraces still standing at 2430m above sea level, the UNESCO-listed site is an incredible example of the Inca civilisation’s impressive engineering skills that were well before their time.

Travellers can make the pilgrimage to Machu Picchu along the famous 42km Inca Trail hike, or there are taxi/bus/train combos available for those not so keen on the walk.

Other epic experiences for your travel bucket list

bernina express train in switzerland

Explore Europe by train

Sure, flights between European hubs might be crazy cheap, but if you’re travelling for an extended period with lots of stops along the way, chances are a train journey will be more comfortable, scenic and probably cheaper overall, and it’s way better for the environment.

I recently spent two months in Europe visiting 23 cities in 11 different countries using a Eurail Pass , which saved me more than €1400 compared to point-to-point tickets and significantly more compared to buying last minute flights in the lead up to Christmas.

Some noteworthy trains in Europe are:

  • The Glacier Express and Bernina Express in Switzerland (they’re both part of the country’s Grand Train Tour )
  • The Flåmsbana and Bergen Railway in Norway
  • The West Highland Line in Scotland
  • The Cinque Terre train in Italy
  • The Santa Claus Express in Finland

Read more: The most beautiful train journeys in Europe

ultimate travel destination meaning

Road trip around New Zealand and Australia

I might be biased because this is my corner of the world, but you’d be hard-pressed to find better road trip destinations than New Zealand and Australia.

New Zealand boasts a superb range of scenery within easy driving distance, from paradise beaches to magical fjords to glacial lakes flanked by snowy mountains. You could easily spend months here and never get bored, but a few weeks per island is enough to give you a taste of what Aotearoa has to offer.

Australia on the other hand is much, much bigger and would require the better part of a year to see all the main spots, but a shorter trip could still have you ticking off bucket list destinations like the tropical coast of Queensland, Tasmania’s unspoiled national parks, Western Australia’s dreamy beaches and the buzzing cities of Sydney or Melbourne.

  • The ultimate New Zealand South Island road trip
  • A detailed guide to travelling Australia
  • Bucket list experiences in New Zealand
  • Bucket list experiences in Australia

ultimate travel destination meaning

Go on a working holiday

Leisure trips are loads of fun, but nothing compares to actually moving abroad to work and live. Your options for working holidays will depend on your passport and visa requirements, but some popular options are Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the USA, UK, France and Argentina.

Living abroad can be daunting, but it’s one of the best ways to meet new people, open your eyes to other ways of living, and hone your independence and problem solving skills.

The grand promenade inside the Silja Symphony ferry, lined with rows of cabin windows overlooking a bustling walkway with shops and passengers, exemplifying a unique maritime shopping experience

Sing karaoke on an overnight ferry between Helsinki and Stockholm

This weird and wonderful bucket list journey is one that I didn’t even know about until I was planning my own no-fly three week Scandinavia itinerary !

The Silja ferry runs between Helsinki and Stockholm with a 17 hour overnight journey, but this is no normal ferry… it’s an actual cruise ship 😱

The ship can hold more than 2500 passengers and boasts comfy cabins (ranging from simple through to luxury), a casino, duty-free shopping, plenty of restaurants, a cocktail bar and entertainment lounge with shows throughout the night, a gorgeous viewing lounge and open top deck for archipelago views, and even a wellness area with hot tubs and sauna.

It’s a brilliant way to get between the two capitals and it’s a great example of ‘it’s about the journey, not the destination’. Make sure to get involved in karaoke at the cocktail lounge!

ultimate travel destination meaning

Watch a show on NYC’s Broadway or London’s West End

Witnessing a live performance of award-winning musicals like Wicked, Hamilton or the Book of Mormon is a must-do for any theatre geeks, and there’s a seemingly endless selection to choose from in entertainment hubs like Broadway, the West End or Las Vegas.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Sail a yacht around the Mediterranean

If spending your days swimming in crystal clear bays and your evenings sipping happy hour cocktails at beachfront bars sounds like an absolute dream for you, book your next trip to the Mediterranean for a spot of island hopping around Greece or Croatia.

I sailed through Croatia’s islands with the legends at Medsailors a few years back and loved it so much that I’m heading to Greece in a few months to do their tour there next!

Read more: Why you should sail Croatia with Medsailors

ultimate travel destination meaning

Visit the place where your parents/grandparents were born

If your parents or grandparents were born elsewhere to where you grew up, you should definitely have their home country on your travel bucket list for a future trip.

If they’re still around then consider taking them with you for an unforgettable family experience, if they can’t travel then be sure to bring home a memento of your trip, and if they’re no longer with us then consider doing some family research to find a particularly special place to visit or distant friends or relatives to meet when you’re there.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Drive Route 66 from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California

The road trip of all road trips, driving Route 66 is an 3940km (2448 mile) drive from the Windy City (Chicago) through to the famous ocean pier of Santa Monica in coastal California. This historic highway passes through eight states, via vintage diners, iconic roadside motels and a number of National Parks you could stop at on the way.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Stay in an overwater bungalow

As far as bucket list accommodation goes, an overwater bungalow probably tops the list for millions of travellers around the world. Everyone wants to know what it’s like to get out of bed and jump straight into the ocean direct from your private bungalow’s deck.

The Maldives and French Polynesia are probably the most famous destinations for overwater bungalows, but you can find some more affordable options in Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippines and Fiji.

I stayed in a basic but beautiful overwater bungalow in Vietnam for less than $65USD per night, including breakfast! I think it’s probably the cheapest overwater bungalow in the world, and it’s called Naomi Resort in Phu Quoc.

Read more: The best things to do in Phu Quoc, Vietnam

ultimate travel destination meaning

Fly first class

See how the 1% travel by booking yourself a seat in first class for an extra special treat. First class tickets are unsurprisingly super expensive, but if you’re smart with your loyalty points and travel plans, you might be able to get a crazy cheap first class experience.

I recently flew first class on Emirates (!!!) from Sri Lanka to the Maldives, spending less than $115USD on the flight. I paid for the rest with Emirates Skywards miles which I had accumulated from a few years of travel, but I was never super loyal to the airline and didn’t have a points credit card. This particular flight is just a very cost-effective way of flying first class, it’s only 1h 50m (in my case even shorter due to a pesky tailwind) but you get all the epic Emirates first class benefits of fancy champagne or port, Arabic coffee, a three course meal, lie flat seat, a privacy door and top-notch service.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Learn a new language through immersion

There’s no better way to learn a new language than to throw yourself in the deep end and just move to a non-English-speaking country, where you’re forced to communicate in a foreign tongue.

If you studied French or Spanish at high school, why not move to Europe or South America for six months and see how quickly you can pick it back up? Or if you’re brand new, I’d recommend booking in to some beginner classes in your new destination to help you hit the ground running with things like introductions, directions and basic conversation.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Backpack through Southeast Asia

It’s a backpacker rite of passage to head to the budget-friendly region of Southeast Asia and spend a few months exploring in elephant pants, eating banana pancakes, and considering never returning to an actual desk ever again.

Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam are an easy trifecta if you have at least a few weeks, and if you’re staying for longer you could add on unspoiled landscapes in Laos, hectic cities in Malaysia and the cultural melting pot of Singapore, or venture slightly further to the dreamy islands in Indonesia or paradise beaches in the Philippines.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Volunteer to support local community and environment

Give back while you’re out seeing the world with a trip that involves volunteering your time and skills. There are loads of volunteering options around the globe, as well as small group tours like Intrepid and G Adventures that often include an element of volunteering or some kind of community service in their trip itineraries.

Just be aware of the ethics around how to volunteer in the right way, like not doing anything you’re unqualified for (e.g. building houses when you have no idea what you’re doing), avoiding any multi-day volunteering programmes involving children unless you’re a trained educator or medical professional, and not participating in anything where wild animals are held captive or used for entertainment purposes.

Some good examples of ethical volunteering opportunities are marine conservation programmes, turtle hatching and protection, beach clean ups, shelters for dogs and cats, teaching English if you’re qualified, or helping NGOs with things like social media, marketing and admin if you’ve got the correct permits to work and are providing additional support rather than taking away a job that a local should be paid for.

Wowza, if you’ve made it to the end of this insanely long travel bucket list then I’m impressed! With all that in mind, what is at the top of your bucket list? Let me know in the comments!

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The Ultimate Travel Bucket List

BY Jess Leak

We’ve all heard the saying ‘it’s a small world’ - well, actually, I beg to differ. The world is HUGE. And there is so much to see! With so many different countries, each with its own culture, climate and landmarks, we really are spoilt for choice when it comes to choosing a travel destination. 

Plus, now that we can pretty much book a ticket instantly and fly to almost anywhere in the world, it can be really difficult to choose where you should go first. I’ve put together this ‘Ultimate Travel Bucket List’ to give you some ideas on where to go and what to do, so you can start ticking some of them (once COVID-19 is all over, obviously)!

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1. spend the night in jordan’s wadi rum desert.

The desert is a pretty uninhabitable place, so it’s pretty amazing that humans have managed to survive out there! Jordan’s Wadi Rum desert is a spectacle to behold, comprising 720 square km of stunning desert landscape. Ride a camel through the hot dry desert and meet the Bedouin people who still live in the area. 

And if you’re worried about roughing it - don’t be. There are now luxury campsites meaning you can stay in the middle of the desert with all the creature comforts - amazing!

Recommendation: Wadi Rum Night Luxury Camp  

2. Walk along the Great Wall of China

One of the great wonders of the world, this should definitely be on any traveller’s bucket list. The wall is over 13,000 miles long, so you definitely won’t be able to see it all! But even visiting a section of the wall is extremely impressive. 

There are five main sections most people visit as they are the most well-preserved and close to Beijing. Either walk or cycle along the wall by yourself or jump on a private tour if you want to learn more.

Recommendation:  Get Your Guide Mutianyu Great Wall Day Trip

3. Swim with the swimming pigs of Exuma

You definitely will have seen photos of these awesome swimming pigs floating around on social media. If you needed another reason to visit the Bahamas - this it it! No one actually knows how the pigs first ended up on an island in Exuma but they are thriving there and will happily have a play and pose for some photos with you. A one-of-a-kind experience and so cute!

Recommendation: Swimming Pigs Adventure Tour 

4. Visit the Pyramids of Giza

Another one of the ‘wonders’ - the Pyramids of Giza are a must-see! Egypt is fascinating with such a rich history and the pyramids have been traced all the way back to 2613-2498 BC. It’s unimaginable to think how humans built such massive yet precise monuments. Definitely one to tick off the bucket list!

Recommendation: Get Your Guide Giza Pyramids & Sphinx Half-day Private Tour 

5. Stay in an over-water hut in Bora Bora

I find the French Polynesian islands absolutely fascinating - there is so much to learn about the history and culture there! With pure white sand, crystal blue waters and palm trees galore, it looks like paradise. Staying in an over-water hut in Bora Bora is definitely not one to miss out - imagine waking up to that view!

Recommendation: Four Seasons Overwater Bungalow Suites 

6. Explore the white maze of Santorini

A popular holiday destination in Greece, you definitely will have seen photos of Santorini’s many stunning white and blue buildings. Wander around this beautiful maze, soaking in the culture and eating amazing food! It’s known to be one of the more expensive places to stay in Greece, but it will be well worth it!

Recommendation: Perivolas Hotel  

7. Go on an overnight boat cruise along Ha Long Bay

Ha Long Bay is easily one of the most beautiful places in the world. Situated in Northeast Vietnam it is known for it’s emerald waters and 1,600 limestone islands each topped with its own rainforest. Enjoy a gentle cruise and explore the area by canoe! You won't be disappointed. 

Recommendation: Stellar of the Seas Overnight Cruise 

8. Stay in an ice hotel in Sweden

The first ever ice hotel was created in Sweden in 1989 and it has since become a popular attraction for tourists from all over the world. It might sound a bit strange but it will be a surprisingly comfortable and luxurious experience - and you definitely will never forget it! This would be one to tell the grandkids. 

Recommendation: IceHotel 

9. See the Taj Mahal

I think India should be on everyone’s bucket list anyway, as it truly is like nowhere else in the world and it has so much to offer. But the Taj Mahal in particular, is something everyone should try and see! The ivory white mausoleum on the south bank of the Yamuna River was built by Shah Jahan in 1632 to house the body of his favorite wife. 

It is famous for its accentuated symmetry that is unlike any other building in the world. 

Recommendation: Day Trip to the Taj Mahal with Driver India Private Tours 

10. Ride a gondola in Venice

Gondolas are one of the most iconic symbols of Venice in Italy. The entire world can recognize these elegant boats rowed by the renowned gondoliers. A truly romantic experience that will transport you back in time, it’s one you’ll never forget. 

Recommendation:  Venice Walking Tour and Gondola Ride with Viator 

11. Watch the sunrise from the top of Mount Batur

There are many beautiful mountains in Indonesia, but the sunrise hike to the top of Mount Batur in Bali is the most popular and iconic. If you want to make it for sunrise, it means a 2.30am wake up call and a 2 hour trek to the top of the active volcano. 

But you’ll be rewarded with one of the most beautiful sunrises you’ve ever seen! 

Recommendation: Bali Sunrise Trekking and Tours 

12. Witness Yosemite

Yosemite National Park is in California’s Sierra Nevada mountains. Famous for its giant, ancient sequoia trees, and huge granite cliffs, it really is an awesome landscape well worth travelling to the US for. It was recently made even more famous by Alex Honnold who free climbed the southwest face of El Capitan. 

He climbed the 3,000-foot granite wall in less than 4 hours! Check out the documentary Free Solo about him to get inspired.

Recommendation: Wildland Trekking  

13. Salsa dance in Cuba

The birthplace of salsa, visiting this lively country and getting a real salsa dance class should 100% be on your bucket list! Expect tasty food, energetic people, beautiful beaches and amazing architecture. 

Recommendation: Salsa Bora Dance School 

14. Snorkel the Great Barrier Reef

Off the coast of Queensland, Australia, the Great Barrier Reef is the world’s largest coral reef system. Get yourself on one of the many boat tours and snorkel to your heart’s content. You’ll feel like you’ve jumped into a scene from ‘Finding Nemo’, it’s magical!

Recommendation: Calypso Reef Cruises

15. Whale watch in Manitoba

Witnessing whales in the wild should be something everyone should do at least once in their lives! These amazing creatures are so intelligent and majestic. Head to Manitoba in Canada during the summer to see thousands of beluga whales migrating southwards to Churchill. 

Recommendation: Sea North Tours 

16. Eat real Mexican food

Head to Mexico City for your fill of authentic Mexican culture. You may think you’ve had Mexican food before, but trust me, there is nothing like REAL Mexican food. Hand-made tortillas and fresh guacamole will make a taco the best taco of your life. And be sure to follow it up with a hot and sugary churro dipped in dulce de leche of course! 

Recommendation: Tasty Bites Food Tours 

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17. Visit the Eiffel Tower

The Eiffel Tower is one of the most iconic landmarks, not just in Paris, but in the world. The iron tower is both an amazing feat of engineering and an inspiring symbol of the City of Lights. It’s a must see for all visitors to Paris. As it is such an iconic destination, it will usually be pretty packed with tourists, but it will be an experience you remember forever!

Recommendation: Get Your Guide Eiffel Tower Day Tour  

18. See the Golden Gate Bridge

The Golden Gate Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Golden Gate, the one-mile-wide strait connecting San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Although it can be tempting to drive, its well-worth taking the extra time to bike or walk across it. This way you get to really take in the views, plus, you can stop for as many pictures as you like along the way! 

Recommendation: Free Tours By Foot 

19. Witness the Northern Lights in Iceland

The elusive Northern Lights should be on everyone’s bucket list in my opinion. The hugely popular Icelandic capital is still one of the cheapest and most accessible places to see the lights perform, but if they don’t there are plenty of other natural wonders to discover - geysers, volcanoes and its famous Blue Lagoon. 

You’ll need to venture out of the city for darker skies, and there are countless Northern Light tours from Reykjavik. Admire the sweeping colors in all their glory from the water with a boat cruise or join a super jeep tour for an adrenaline-fueled aurora chase.

Recommendation: Northern Lights Hunt Super Jeep Tour 

20. Get up close and personal with elephants in Chiang Mai

Northern Thailand is an absolute gem and should be on every traveler's list of places to see anyway, but one of things that makes it so special is the opportunity to get up close and personal with the gentle giant that is the elephant! 

There are many elephant sanctuaries to choose from in Chiang Mai (make sure you pick an ethical one where the elephants are not ridden) and most will pick you up directly from your hotel or hostel. A magical experience not to be missed! 

Recommendation: Chiang Mai Elephant Sanctuary

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The Ultimate Travel Destination: Home

I’ve been transcribing two boxes of travel journals I keep stashed under my desk.   I’m far from finished (deciphering bus-bounced scrawl on coffee-stained pages takes time), but a clear pattern has emerged. Wherever I was making my entry – geographically or mentally – one key part of the journey consistently escaped record: the return trip.

This gap kind of surprised me. Travel writers often get asked about their dream choice for a one-way ticket anywhere . Many of us tend to tout the exotic first, but my answer is something you won’t see in 1000 Places to See Before You Die : home.

Home, I think, is the ultimate travel destination – and sort of the point of it all.   “Home,” of course, can mean different things to different people.

First-generation immigrants or army brats may grow up less rooted to a specific place. Pico Iyer, whose stab at   “Why We Travel”   remains one of the most readily cited justifications for this crazy thing we do, notes how even though he was born to Indian parents, in England, and then moved to America at age seven, he doesn’t feel he can really call himself an Indian, an American, or an Englishman.

Perhaps I have a stronger sense of “home,” even if that definition has blurred for me in the 20 years since I left Oklahoma.

I spent my entire childhood in Tulsa, in one house (with a double-decker fort in the back), and have vivid memories of playing sprinkler Wiffle ball with my friends as the swell of cicadas buzzed in the summer heat. And so I still say “I’m from Oklahoma,” even if my home address – i.e. where I hang the hat, keep my stuff, watch the telly – has shifted from San Francisco to London to New York City and now to Portland, Oregon.

That sense of “home” that I carry around with me has played a huge role in my life as a traveler for two reasons. One is obvious.

We can’t really appreciate home until we leave it; travel is the thing that gives us perspective on where we’re from.

In The Future of Nostalgia , Svetlana Boym writes that “the vantage point of a stranger informs the native idyll.” (This is part of the reason why I remain skeptical of the “travel like a local” craze.)

With travel, we all have the opportunity to return home as strangers – just as nobody recognized Diggory Venn in Thomas Hardy’s The Return of the Native , or writer Ted Conover, who spent many months riding trains with hoboes, came back to Denver so ragged his sister didn’t know who he was. (I know the feeling: my mom didn’t recognize me when I returned from Guatemala with a shaved head and a long beard.)

Confounding friends and family is fun, sure, but the real point is not that we may look different, but that we may begin to see and feel differently.

Conover noted at the end of his book   Rolling Nowhere   how,   once he had settled back into his Denver routine,   he “would hear train whistles across town…that companions could not hear even if they stopped to listen.” His Denver had grown and changed.

Our curiosity and engagement are piqued when we travel, and that doesn’t just turn off when we return. At least it shouldn’t. I’ve found that if I hear someone swirling ice cubes around in their Big Gulp at a Tulsa 7-Eleven, I think of the rickshaw driver hauling a huge dust-coated chunk of ice in Saigon, and how I’ve noticed that we don’t have tangles of power lines tangled atop street corner posts the way they do in Quito.

The second reason: Though my travels have given me multiple points of reference that continue to change me and how I relate to the familiar, home lends perspective to the places I visit as a traveler, too. I think of it as a game I like to call “finding home abroad.”

I never wanted to be nomadic. (To me, experiencing only the different would be like a comedy without the straight man.) My plan, 20 years ago or so, had been simply to travel a lot and live abroad a few times. Now, while I travel, I imagine how my life would be in places I never seriously plan to live in. I check real estate listings in Montpelier, France, or Beijing, and love traveling with commuters however they travel wherever I am — on a combi-bus in Tuxtla Gutierrez, on a tram on the outskirts of Moscow.

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Jorge Luis Borges wrote that James Joyce’s Ulysses returned home only so he could look back on his journey. Like a Polaroid picture, the meaning of our travel experiences often takes shape after the fact, once we’ve settled back into the familiar to reflect.

I find that this holds true even when I’m road tripping in the U.S. The Great Plains aren’t everyone’s favorite landscape; most see the flat, subtly rolling fields as justification for their reputation as America’s “fly-over zone.” But once I get past them, climbing up the Rockies or navigating the dense forests of Pennsylvania, I start to appreciate the – don’t laugh – majesty of those big skies and distant horizons.

This reminds me of a cheeky little writer, Xavier de Maistre , who took to his sleeping quarters during the French Revolution   as a home-bound Magellan. His resulting “travelogue,” Voyage Around My Room ,   is only partly serious. As Alain de Botton put it in The Art of Travel , de Maistre is simply trying to “shake us from our passivity” – to get us to engage with the places we think we know so well.

In the same work, De Botton goes on to note that “The pleasure we derive from journey is perhaps dependent more on the mindset with which we travel than on the destination we travel to.”

That’s a mindset that can only form abroad – like a muscle built from exercise — and that finds its greatest purpose once back home.

Robert Reid   has written a couple dozen guidebooks for Lonely Planet and regularly appears to discuss travel trends on national television. Follow him on Twitter   @ReidOnTravel .

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Introducing Lonely Planet's Ultimate Travel List

We've all got a list of places that we want to see for ourselves: places friends have enthused about, places we've read about, dreamed about. This is our list. It's the 500 most thrilling, memorable, downright interesting places on this planet ranked in order of their brilliance. COVID-19 has resulted in travel restrictions that may have clipped your wings through 2020, but now is the perfect time to plan ahead so you're ready for your next adventure when it's safe to hit the road again. These are the places we think you should experience; there are sights that will humble you, amaze you and surprise you. They'll provoke thoughts, emotions or just an urgent need to tell someone about them.

Here are the top 10 travel experiences from Lonely Planet's Ultimate Travel List . We hope this will inspire many more travel wish lists of your own. 

Order your copy of the book to see all 500 incredible destinations.

1. Explore the enigmatic ‘lost city’ of Petra

The treasured Unesco Heritage Site of Petra is the must-see ultimate experience on our list. Once nearly lost to the outside world, the sandstone city is now one of the most loved places on the planet, voted in as one of the New Seven Wonders of the World by popular ballot in 2007. Spread over some 102 sq miles (264 sq km), Petra was constructed by the ancient Nabataeans, a civilisation of crafters and merchants, and made for a grand trade route stop-off between Arabian oases. But generations later, after the city was abandoned, it was known only to the Bedouin who made the caves their home. The iconic Treasury, looming 128ft (39m) high is most visitors' first sight of the city, reached after a winding journey through a narrow water-etched slot canyon. Rediscover the city's eternal air of mystery in the early morning or the hours before closing when it's at its most atmospheric.

ultimate travel destination meaning

2. See the islands that changed the course of science - the Galápagos

A thousand kilometres from mainland South America, life on the Galápagos follows different rules. Cormorants can't fly. Iguanas can swim. Tortoises live nearly 200 years. The islands are famed, of course, as the place where Charles Darwin developed his ideas on evolution by natural selection. The process is more obvious here than elsewhere on Earth, since animals that otherwise look alike diverge subtly from island to island, depending on their environment. You'll find blue-footed boobies performing cartoonish mating dances, creeping colonies of iguanas, penguins zooming underwater, and fur seals lounging on volcanic rocks. Even 200 years after Darwin's journey on the HMS Beagle, visitors continue to be astonished by the archipelago's stunning diversity. Ecotourism is central to everything on the 17 islands of the Galápagos National Park - the airport is made from mostly recycled materials and runs on wind and solar power, and each municipality has a strict sustainability plan.

ultimate travel destination meaning

3. Take some life lessons from the Aṉangu at Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park

At sunset, when its wavy walls blaze gold, Uluru looks like a ship on fire in a desert sea. Rising to 1142ft (348m), the sandstone monolith seizes your eyes from miles away. It's easy to see why it's a sacred site. The Aṉangu people, the area's original inhabitants, believe it's still home to spirit ancestors like the python woman Kuniya and the hare-wallaby people, the Mala. But it's become an icon to all Australians, a symbolic heart beating in the country's Red Centre. Until 2017, visitors were allowed to summit Uluru, which went against the wishes of the Aṉangu, who worried about degradation and climber injuries. There are dozens of far more rewarding things to do - join a ranger-guided walk past sacred waterholes; spot kangaroos hopping through the spinifex; and learn about the Aṉangu at the cultural center, where there is a fantastic display on tjukurpa, the creation period.

ultimate travel destination meaning

4. Experience life in the slow lane on the Okavango Delta

AThis beautiful wilderness is one of Africa's most compelling safari destinations. Each year, the floodwaters of the Okavango River arrive from the Angolan highlands and expand this unique ecosystem to almost 7722 sq miles (20,000 sq km), sustaining vast quantities of wildlife. Along with 4WD safaris, visitors can explore by powerboat and traditional mokoro (dugout canoe). As the mokoro is poled silently through the shallow reed-lined channels you are immersed in the environment, hearing every bird and animal call, witnessing the mightiest of elephants crossing your path and the smallest of frogs clinging to the grass. With development and visitor numbers in the delta strictly regulated to protect the environment, the Okavango is one of the most exclusive destinations on the planet. But for adventurous souls who can handle a 4WD and don't mind camping, there are affordable options within the delta's Moremi Game Reserve.

ultimate travel destination meaning

5. Sniff out geysers and grizzlies at Yellowstone National Park

Yellowstone stinks. And it has no manners at all. The rotten-egg whiff taunts your nostrils; your ears are assaulted by a vulgarity of belches, burps and farts. But then, what do you expect when you're exploring the largest geothermal area in the world? More than 500 active geysers spout in Yellowstone's enormous, steaming landscape - Old Faithful being the most famous. And there are hot springs to visit - from the bloodshot eyeball of Grand Prismatic to the travertine shelves at Mammoth. The wildlife is perhaps an even bigger draw. This is like North America's answer to an African safari, although here the Big Five creatures are bison, bighorn sheep, elk, bear and wolf. Watching shaggy bison warming up by a thermal pool, catching sight of a grizzly bear across a meadow, or visiting in winter to glimpse wolf prints in the snow - all are quintessential Yellowstone experiences.

ultimate travel destination meaning

6. Emulate a pilgrim's journey to astonishing Lake Bled

It started with the pilgrims from afar who came to worship at the photogenic island church, it continued with the lakeside sojourns of 19th-century royalty and then of former Yugoslav President Tito who had a villa on the shores - and today, tourism to Slovenia's Lake Bled shows no signs of slowing. This blue-green body of water with a white church on a green island, abutted by a terracotta-roofed castle and backed by snow-daubed Julian Alps, is Slovenia's premier crowd-puller. The lake measures just 1.2 by 0.9 miles (2km by 1.4km), so walking or cycling around it is an easy 4 miles (6km). Hire a pletna (gondola), dive beneath the glass-like surface and stay over in one of many beautiful shoreside properties. Slovenia has won praise for eco-initiatives like ecologically designed Garden Village Bled, where a stream snakes through a collection of tree houses and glamping tents.

ultimate travel destination meaning

7. Marvel at the astounding power of Iguazú Falls

Marking the boundary between Argentina and Brazil, the Río Iguazú flows languidly through the jungle before plunging over a basalt ledge with such sudden, furious force that the planet's most awe-inspiring waterfalls are the result. On the Argentinian side, a boardwalk leads through jungle vegetation replete with butterflies and squawking parrots, passing a series of increasingly impressive falls until finally the Garganta del Diablo (Devil's Throat) comes into view. A visit is a jaw-dropping, visceral experience, and the power and noise of the cascades - a chain of hundreds of waterfalls nearly 2 miles (3km) in extension - live forever in the memory. Sunlight shines through the spray, creating multiple rainbows as the falling water ricochets up off the river below. The exhilarating cool mist, the high decibel roar and the thundering vibrations of crashing water remind you in no uncertain terms of the power and splendor of nature.

ultimate travel destination meaning

8. Find Hindu heaven at the temples of Angkor

A monument to human ingenuity and devotion, the temples of Angkor have an ability to inspire awe that rivals many of nature's contributions to this list's top 10. And so they should - Angkor Wat, the most famous of Angkor's sites, is a representation of Mt Meru, center of the universe and abode of Hindu gods. Imagine the wonderment of the ancient Khmer as they entered Angkor Wat for the first time: crossing the vast moat, peering up at the 180ft (55m) central tower, gazing at intricately carved bas-reliefs. Beyond Angkor Wat are more than 1000 temples and shrines, including Ta Prohm, its towers gripped by the jungle, and Bayon with its giant stone faces. The temples are the perfect fusion of creative ambition and spiritual devotion, and a point of pilgrimage for all Cambodians. Avoid the crowds with a visit in the wet season for (hopefully) that perfect Angkor sunrise.

ultimate travel destination meaning

9. Strike out on the salt of the earth at Salar de Uyuni

Imagine this: you're standing in the middle of the sky. Clouds above. Clouds below. Blue all around. That's what it's like at Salar de Uyuni, the world's biggest salt lake, after rain. The thin layer of water turns the utterly flat salt surface into a vast mirror. The horizon disappears and you seem to float. That's only one of the brain-bending experiences you'll have visiting these 4085 sq miles (10,582 sq km) of salt, high in the Bolivian altiplano. When the lake's dry, the white cracked immensity feels like a desolate, sun-scorched post-apocalyptic landscape. In the dry season you can visit the lake's two islands - Isla Incahuasi and Isla del Pescado - craggy husks of land sprouting with cacti. See too the geyser fields with boiling mud and sulfur steam. Several of the eerie high-altitude lakes, turned aquamarine from high mineral content, are home to flocks of flamingos.

ultimate travel destination meaning

10. Take a classic teahouse trek around Nepal's Annapurna Circuit

Nepal offers golden temples, charming hill villages, jungle wildlife watching, and the incredible walk around Nepal's Annapurna massif, which has long been considered one of the world's great treks. The scenery is mesmerising and the sense of journey is psychologically satisfying, starting in rice paddies and climbing through yak pastures before crossing the mighty snow-bound Thorung La pass. It's everything a good trek should be - challenging, majestic and inspirational. And at the end of the day some of Nepal's best lodges offer hot meals, apple pie and pots of milky tea. However, it's the side trips that make this a truly great trek, notably up to high-altitude Tilicho Lake or to the village of Ngawal, where terraces offer views of snowcapped peaks just across the valley. Build in a couple of extra days, shake off the crowds, and take your time - this is not scenery to rush through.

ultimate travel destination meaning

Discover 490 more ultimate travel experiences

The second edition of Lonely Planet's bestseller presents an all-new ranking of the greatest places to visit on Earth, reflecting the travel tastes and trends of today's world. Decided by our global family of writers, editors and industry experts, and packed with insightful commentary, awe-inspiring photos and over 200 new entries, this is a must-have coffee table book for explorers and armchair travelers.

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Glossary of tourism terms

Tourism is a social, cultural and economic phenomenon which entails the movement of people to countries or places outside their usual environment for personal or business/professional purposes. These people are called visitors (which may be either tourists or excursionists; residents or non-residents) and tourism has to do with their activities, some of which involve tourism expenditure.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W Y Z

Activity/activities : In tourism statistics, the term activities represent the actions and behaviors of people in preparation for and during a trip in their capacity as consumers ( IRTS 2008, 1.2 ).

Activity (principal): The principal activity of a producer unit is the activity whose value added exceeds that of any other activity carried out within the same unit ( SNA 2008, 5.8 ).

Activity (productive): The (productive) activity carried out by a statistical unit is the type of production in which it engages. It has to be understood as a process, i.e. the combination of actions that result in a certain set of products. The classification of productive activities is determined by their principal output.

Administrative data : Administrative data is the set of units and data derived from an administrative source. This is a data holding information collected and maintained for the purpose of implementing one or more administrative regulations.

Adventure tourism : Adventure tourism is a type of tourism which usually takes place in destinations with specific geographic features and landscape and tends to be associated with a physical activity, cultural exchange, interaction and engagement with nature. This experience may involve some kind of real or perceived risk and may require significant physical and/or mental effort. Adventure tourism generally includes outdoor activities such as mountaineering, trekking, bungee jumping, rock climbing, rafting, canoeing, kayaking, canyoning, mountain biking, bush walking, scuba diving. Likewise, some indoor adventure tourism activities may also be practiced.

Aggregated data : The result of transforming unit level data into quantitative measures for a set of characteristics of a population.

Aggregation : A process that transforms microdata into aggregate-level information by using an aggregation function such as count, sum average, standard deviation, etc.

Analytical unit : Entity created by statisticians, by splitting or combining observation units with the help of estimations and imputations.

Balance of payments : The balance of payments is a statistical statement that summarizes transactions between residents and non-residents during a period. It consists of the goods and services account, the primary income account, the secondary income account, the capital account, and the financial account ( BPM6, 2.12 ).

Bias : An effect which deprives a statistical result of representativeness by systematically distorting it, as distinct from a random error which may distort on any one occasion but balances out on the average.

Business and professional purpose (of a tourism trip): The business and professional purpose of a tourism trip includes the activities of the self-employed and employees, as long as they do not correspond to an implicit or explicit employer-employee relationship with a resident producer in the country or place visited, those of investors, businessmen, etc. ( IRTS 2008, 3.17.2 ).

Business tourism : Business tourism is a type of tourism activity in which visitors travel for a specific professional and/or business purpose to a place outside their workplace and residence with the aim of attending a meeting, an activity or an event. The key components of business tourism are meetings, incentives, conventions and exhibitions. The term "meetings industry" within the context of business tourism recognizes the industrial nature of such activities. Business tourism can be combined with any other tourism type during the same trip.

Business visitor : A business visitor is a visitor whose main purpose for a tourism trip corresponds to the business and professional category of purpose ( IRTS 2008, 3.17.2 ).

Central Product Classification : The Central Product Classification (CPC) constitutes a complete product classification covering goods and services. It is intended to serve as an international standard for assembling and tabulating all kinds of data requiring product detail, including industrial production, national accounts, service industries, domestic and foreign commodity trade, international trade in services, balance of payments, consumption and price statistics. Other basic aims are to provide a framework for international comparison and promote harmonization of various types of statistics dealing with goods and services.

Census : A census is the complete enumeration of a population or groups at a point in time with respect to well defined characteristics: for example, Population, Production, Traffic on particular roads.

Coastal, maritime and inland water tourism : Coastal tourism refers to land-based tourism activities such as swimming, surfing, sunbathing and other coastal leisure, recreation and sports activities which take place on the shore of a sea, lake or river. Proximity to the coast is also a condition for services and facilities that support coastal tourism. Maritime tourism refers to sea-based activities such as cruising, yachting, boating and nautical sports and includes their respective land-based services and infrastructure. Inland water tourism refers to tourism activities such as cruising, yachting, boating and nautical sports which take place in aquatic- influenced environments located within land boundaries and include lakes, rivers, ponds, streams, groundwater, springs, cave waters and others traditionally grouped as inland wetlands.

Coherence : Adequacy of statistics to be combined in different ways and for various uses.

Competitiveness of a tourism destination : The competitiveness of a tourism destination is the ability of the destination to use its natural, cultural, human, man-made and capital resources efficiently to develop and deliver quality, innovative, ethical and attractive tourism products and services in order to achieve a sustainable growth within its overall vision and strategic goals, increase the added value of the tourism sector, improve and diversify its market components and optimize its attractiveness and benefits both for visitors and the local community in a sustainable perspective.

Consistency : Logical and numerical coherence.

Country of reference : The country of reference refers to the country for which the measurement is done. ( IRTS 2008, 2.15 ).

Country of residence : The country of residence of a household is determined according to the centre of predominant economic interest of its members. If a person resides (or intends to reside) for more than one year in a given country and has there his/her centre of economic interest (for example, where the predominant amount of time is spent), he/she is considered as a resident of this country.

Country-specific tourism characteristic products and activities : To be determined by each country by applying the criteria of IRTS 2008, 5.10 in their own context; for these products, the activities producing them will be considered as tourism characteristic, and the industries in which the principal activity is tourism-characteristic will be called tourism industries ( IRTS 2008, 5.16 ).

Cultural tourism : Cultural tourism is a type of tourism activity in which the visitor's essential motivation is to learn, discover, experience and consume the tangible and intangible cultural attractions/products in a tourism destination. These attractions/products relate to a set of distinctive material, intellectual, spiritual and emotional features of a society that encompasses arts and architecture, historical and cultural heritage, culinary heritage, literature, music, creative industries and the living cultures with their lifestyles, value systems, beliefs and traditions.

Data checking : Activity whereby the correctness conditions of the data are verified. It also includes the specification of the type of error or of the condition not met, and the qualification of the data and their division into "error-free data" and "erroneous data".

Data collection : Systematic process of gathering data for official statistics.

Data compilation : Operations performed on data to derive new information according to a given set of rules.

Data confrontation : The process of comparing data that has generally been derived from different surveys or other sources, especially those of different frequencies, in order to assess and possibly improve their coherency, and identify the reasons for any differences.

Data processing : Data processing is the operation performed on data by the organization, institute, agency, etc., responsible for undertaking the collection, tabulation, manipulation and preparation of data and metadata output.

Data reconciliation : The process of adjusting data derived from two different sources to remove, or at least reduce, the impact of differences identified.

Destination (main destination of a trip): The main destination of a tourism trip is defined as the place visited that is central to the decision to take the trip. See also purpose of a tourism trip ( IRTS 2008, 2.31 ).

Destination management / marketing organization (DMO) : A destination management/marketing organization (DMO) is the leading organizational entity which may encompass the various authorities, stakeholders and professionals and facilitates tourism sector partnerships towards a collective destination vision. The governance structures of DMOs vary from a single public authority to a public/ private partnership model with the key role of initiating, coordinating and managing certain activities such as implementation of tourism policies, strategic planning, product development, promotion and marketing and convention bureau activities. The functions of the DMOs may vary from national to regional and local levels depending on the current and potential needs as well as on the decentralization level of public administration. Not every tourism destination has a DMO.

Documentation: Processes and procedures for imputation,  weighting,  confidentiality  and suppression rules, outlier treatment and data capture should be fully documented by the  survey provider.  Such documentation should be made available to at least  the body financing the survey.

Domestic tourism : Domestic tourism comprises the activities of a resident visitor within the country of reference, either as part of a domestic tourism trip or part of an outbound tourism trip ( IRTS 2008, 2.39 ).

Domestic tourism consumption : Domestic tourism consumption is the tourism consumption of a resident visitor within the economy of reference ( TSA:RMF 2008, figure 2.1 ).

Domestic tourism expenditure : Domestic tourism expenditure is the tourism expenditure of a resident visitor within the economy of reference, (IRTS 2008, 4.15(a)).

Domestic tourism trip : A domestic tourism trip is one with a main destination within the country of residence of the visitor (IRTS 2008, 2.32).

Domestic visitor : As a visitor travels within his/her country of residence, he/she is a domestic visitor and his/her activities are part of domestic tourism.

Durable consumer goods : Durable consumer goods are goods that may be used repeatedly or continuously over a period of a year or more, assuming a normal or average rate of physical usage. When acquired by producers, these are considered to be capital goods used for production processes, as is the case of vehicles, computers, etc. When acquired by households, they are considered to be consumer durable goods ( TSA:RMF 2008, 2.39 ). This definition is identical to the definition of SNA 2008, 9.42 : A consumer durable is a goodthat may be used for purposes of consumption repeatedly or continuously over a period of a year or more.

Dwellings : Each household has a principal dwelling (sometimes also designated as main or primary home), usually defined with reference to time spent there, whose location defines the country of residence and place of usual residence of this household and of all its members. All other dwellings (owned or leased by the household) are considered secondary dwellings ( IRTS 2008, 2.26 ).

Ecotourism : Ecotourism is a type of nature-based tourism activity in which the visitor's essential motivation is to observe, learn, discover, experience and appreciate biological and cultural diversity with a responsible attitude to protect the integrity of the ecosystem and enhance the well-being of the local community. Ecotourism increases awareness towards the conservation of biodiversity, natural environment and cultural assets both among locals and the visitors and requires special management processes to minimize the negative impact on the ecosystem.

Economic analysis : Tourism generates directly and indirectly an increase in economic activity in the places visited (and beyond), mainly due to demand for goods and services thatneed to be produced and provided. In the economic analysis of tourism, one may distinguish between tourism's 'economic contribution' which refers to the direct effect of tourism and is measurable by means of the TSA, and tourism's 'economic impact' which is a much broader concept encapsulating the direct, indirect and induced effects of tourism and which must be estimated by applying models. Economic impact studies aim to quantify economic benefits, that is, the net increase in the wealth of residents resulting from tourism, measured in monetary terms, over and above the levels that would prevail in its absence.

Economic territory : The term "economic territory" is a geographical reference and points to the country for which the measurement is done (country of reference) ( IRTS 2008, 2.15 ).

Economically active population : The economically active population or labour force comprises all persons of either sex who furnish the supply of labour for the production of goods and services as defined by the system of national accounts during a specified time-reference period (ILO, Thirteenth ICLS, 6.18).

Economy (of reference): "Economy" (or "economy of reference") is an economic reference defined in the same way as in the balance of payments and in the system of national accounts: it refers to the economic agents that are resident in the country of reference ( IRTS 2008, 2.15 ).

Education tourism : Education tourism covers those types of tourism which have as a primary motivation the tourist's engagement and experience in learning, self-improvement, intellectual growth and skills development. Education Tourism represents a broad range of products and services related to academic studies, skill enhancement holidays, school trips, sports training, career development courses and language courses, among others.

Employees : Employees are all those workers who hold the type of job defined as "paid employment" (ILO, Fifteenth ICLS, pp. 20-22).

Employer-employee relationship : An employer-employee relationship exists when there is an agreement, which may be formal or informal, between an entity and an individual, normally entered into voluntarily by both parties, whereby the individual works for the entity in return for remuneration in cash or in kind ( BPM6, 11.11 ).

Employers : Employers are those workers who, working on their own account with one or more partners, hold the type of job defined as a "self-employment job" and, in this capacity, on a continuous basis (including the reference period) have engaged one or more persons to work for them in their business as "employee(s)" (ILO, Fifteenth ICLS, pp. 20-22).

Employment : Persons in employment are all persons above a specified age who, during a specified brief period, either one week or one day, were in paid employment or self-employment (OECD GST, p. 170).

Employment in tourism industries : Employment in tourism industries may be measured as a count of the persons employed in tourism industries in any of their jobs, as a count of the persons employed in tourism industries in their main job, or as a count of the jobs in tourism industries ( IRTS 2008, 7.9 ).

Enterprise : An enterprise is an institutional unit engaged in production of goods and/or services. It may be a corporation, a non-profit institution, or an unincorporated enterprise. Corporate enterprises and non-profit institutions are complete institutional units. An unincorporated enterprise, however, refers to an institutional unit —a household or government unit —only in its capacity as a producer of goods and services (OECD BD4, p. 232)

Establishment : An establishment is an enterprise, or part of an enterprise, that is situated in a single location and in which only a single productive activity is carried out or in which the principal productive activity accounts for most of the value added ( SNA 2008, 5.14 ).

Estimation : Estimation is concerned with inference about the numerical value of unknown population values from incomplete data such as a sample. If a single figure is calculated for each unknown parameter the process is called "point estimation". If an interval is calculated within which the parameter is likely, in some sense, to lie, the process is called "interval estimation".

Exports of goods and services : Exports of goods and services consist of sales, barter, or gifts or grants, of goods and services from residents to non-residents (OECD GST, p. 194)

Frame : A list, map or other specification of the units which define a population to be completely enumerated or sampled.

Forms of tourism : There are three basic forms of tourism: domestic tourism, inbound tourism, and outbound tourism. These can be combined in various ways to derive the following additional forms of tourism: internal tourism, national tourism and international tourism.

Gastronomy tourism :  Gastronomy tourism is a type of tourism activity which is characterized by the visitor's experience linked with food and related products and activities while travelling. Along with authentic, traditional, and/or innovative culinary experiences, Gastronomy Tourism may also involve other related activities such as visiting the local producers, participating in food festivals and attending cooking classes. Eno-tourism (wine tourism), as a sub-type of gastronomy tourism, refers to tourism whose purpose is visiting vineyards, wineries, tasting, consuming and/or purchasing wine, often at or near the source.

Goods : Goods are physical, produced objects for which a demand exists, over which ownership rights can be established and whose ownership can be transferred from one institutional unit to another by engaging in transactions on markets ( SNA 2008, p. 623 ).

Gross fixed capital formation : Gross fixed capital formation is defined as the value of institutional units' acquisitions less disposals of fixed assets. Fixed assets are produced assets (such as machinery, equipment, buildings or other structures) that are used repeatedly or continuously in production over several accounting periods (more than one year) ( SNA 2008, 1.52 ).

Gross margin : The gross margin of a provider of reservation services is the difference between the value at which the intermediated service is sold and the value accrued to the provider of reservation services for this intermediated service.

Gross value added : Gross value added is the value of output less the value of intermediate consumption ( TSA:RMF 2008, 3.32 ).

Gross value added of tourism industries : Gross value added of tourism industries (GVATI) is the total gross value added of all establishments belonging to tourism industries, regardless of whether all their output is provided to visitors and the degree of specialization of their production process ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.86 ).

Grossing up : Activity aimed at transforming, based on statistical methodology, micro-data from samples into aggregate-level information representative of the target population.

Health tourism : Health tourism covers those types of tourism which have as a primary motivation, the contribution to physical, mental and/or spiritual health through medical and wellness-based activities which increase the capacity of individuals to satisfy their own needs and function better as individuals in their environment and society. Health tourism is the umbrella term for the subtypes wellness tourism and medical tourism.

Imputation : Procedure for entering a value for a specific data item where the response is missing or unusable.

Inbound tourism : Inbound tourism comprises the activities of a non-resident visitor within the country of reference on an inbound tourism trip ( IRTS 2008, 2.39 ).

Inbound tourism consumption : Inbound tourism consumption is the tourism consumption of a non-resident visitor within the economy of reference ( TSA:RMF 2008, figure 2.1 ).

Inbound tourism expenditure : Inbound tourism expenditure is the tourism expenditure of a non-resident visitor within the economy of reference ( IRTS 2008, 4.15(b) ).

Innovation in tourism : Innovation in tourism is the introduction of a new or improved component which intends to bring tangible and intangible benefits to tourism stakeholders and the local community, improve the value of the tourism experience and the core competencies of the tourism sector and hence enhance tourism competitiveness and /or sustainability. Innovation in tourism may cover potential areas, such as tourism destinations, tourism products, technology, processes, organizations and business models, skills, architecture, services, tools and/or practices for management, marketing, communication, operation, quality assurance and pricing.

Institutional sector : An aggregation of institutional units on the basis of the type of producer and depending on their principal activity and function, which are considered to be indicative of their economic behaviour.

Institutional unit : The elementary economic decision-making centre characterised by uniformity of behaviour and decision-making autonomy in the exercise of its principal function.

Intermediate consumption : Intermediate consumption consists of the value of the goods and services consumed as inputs by a process of production, excluding fixed assets whose consumption is recorded as consumption of fixed capital ( SNA 2008, 6.213 ).

Internal tourism : Internal tourism comprises domestic tourism and inbound tourism, that is to say, the activities of resident and non-resident visitors within the country of reference as part of domestic or international tourism trips ( IRTS 2008, 2.40(a) ).

Internal tourism consumption : Internal tourism consumption is the tourism consumption of both resident and non-resident visitors within the economy of reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism consumption and inbound tourism consumption ( TSA:RMF 2008, figure 2.1 ).

Internal tourism expenditure : Internal tourism expenditure comprises all tourism expenditure of visitors, both resident and non-resident, within the economy of reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism expenditure and inbound tourism expenditure. It includes acquisition of goods and services imported into the country of reference and sold to visitors. This indicator provides the most comprehensive measurement of tourism expenditure in the economy of reference ( IRTS 2008, 4.20(a) ).

International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities : The International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities (ISIC) consists of a coherent and consistent classification structure of economic activities based on a set of internationally agreed concepts, definitions, principles and classification rules. It provides a comprehensive framework within which economic data can be collected and reported in a format that is designed for purposes of economic analysis, decision-taking and policymaking. The classification structure represents a standard format to organize detailed information about the state of an economy according to economic principles and perceptions (ISIC, Rev.4, 1).

International tourism : International tourism comprises inbound tourism and outbound tourism, that is to say, the activities of resident visitors outside the country of reference, either as part of domestic or outbound tourism trips and the activities of non-resident visitors within the country of reference on inbound tourism trips ( IRTS 2008, 2.40(c) ).

International visitor : An international traveller qualifies as an international visitor with respect to the country of reference if: (a) he/she is on a tourism trip and (b) he/she is a non-resident travelling in the country of reference or a resident travelling outside of it ( IRTS 2008, 2.42 ).

Job : The agreement between an employee and the employer defines a job and each self-employed person has a job ( SNA 2008, 19.30 ).

Measurement error : Error in reading, calculating or recording numerical value.

Medical tourism : Medical tourism is a type of tourism activity which involves the use of evidence-based medical healing resources and services (both invasive and non-invasive). This may include diagnosis, treatment, cure, prevention and rehabilitation.

Meetings industry : To highlight purposes relevant to the meetings industry, if a trip's main purpose is business/professional, it can be further subdivided into "attending meetings, conferences or congresses, trade fairs and exhibitions" and "other business and professional purposes". The term meetings industry is preferred by the International Congress and Convention Association (ICCA), Meeting Professionals International (MPI) and Reed Travel over the acronym MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences and Exhibitions) which does not recognize the industrial nature of such activities.

Metadata : Data that defines and describes other data and processes.

MICE : See meetings industry.

Microdata : Non-aggregated observations, or measurements of characteristics of individual units.

Mirror statistics : Mirror statistics are used to conduct bilateral comparisons of two basic measures of a trade flow and are a traditional tool for detecting the causes of asymmetries in statistics (OECD GST, p. 335).

Mountain tourism : Mountain tourism is a type of tourism activity which takes place in a defined and limited geographical space such as hills or mountains with distinctive characteristics and attributes that are inherent to a specific landscape, topography, climate, biodiversity (flora and fauna) and local community. It encompasses a broad range of outdoor leisure and sports activities.

National tourism : National tourism comprises domestic tourism and outbound tourism, that is to say, the activities of resident visitors within and outside the country of reference, either as part of domestic or outbound tourism trips ( IRTS 2008, 2.40(b) ).

National tourism consumption : National tourism consumption is the tourism consumption of resident visitors, within and outside the economy of reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism consumption and outbound tourism consumption ( TSA:RMF 2008, figure 2.1 ).

National tourism expenditure : National tourism expenditure comprises all tourism expenditure of resident visitors within and outside the economy of reference. It is the sum of domestic tourism expenditure and outbound tourism expenditure ( IRTS 2008, 4.20(b) ).

Nationality : The concept of "country of residence" of a traveller is different from that of his/her nationality or citizenship ( IRTS 2008, 2.19 ).

Non-monetary indicators : Data measured in physical or other non-monetary units should not be considered a secondary part of a satellite account. They are essential components, both for the information they provide directly and in order to analyse the monetary data adequately ( SNA 2008, 29.84 ).

Observation unit : entity on which information is received and statistics are compiled.

Outbound tourism : Outbound tourism comprises the activities of a resident visitor outside the country of reference, either as part of an outbound tourism trip or as part of a domestic tourism trip ( IRTS 2008, 2.39(c) ).

Outbound tourism consumption : Outbound tourism consumption is the tourism consumption of a resident visitor outside the economy of reference ( TSA:RMF 2008, figure 2.1 ).

Outbound tourism expenditure : Outbound tourism expenditure is the tourism expenditure of a resident visitor outside the economy of reference ( IRTS 2008, 4.15(c) ).

Output : Output is defined as the goods and services produced by an establishment, a) excluding the value of any goods and services used in an activity for which the establishment does not assume the risk of using the products in production, and b) excluding the value of goods and services consumed by the same establishment except for goods and services used for capital formation (fixed capital or changes in inventories) or own final consumption ( SNA 2008, 6.89 ).

Output (main): The main output of a (productive) activity should be determined by reference to the value added of the goods sold or services rendered (ISIC rev.4, 114).

Pilot survey : The aim of a pilot survey is to test the questionnaire (pertinence of the questions, understanding of questions by those being interviewed, duration of the interview) and to check various potential sources for sampling and non-sampling errors: for instance, the place in which the surveys are carried out and the method used, the identification of any omitted answers and the reason for the omission, problems of communicating in various languages, translation, the mechanics of data collection, the organization of field work, etc.

Place of usual residence : The place of usual residence is the geographical place where the enumerated person usually resides, and is defined by the location of his/her principal dwelling (Principles and recommendations for population and housing censuses of the United Nations, 2.20 to 2.24).

Probability sample : A sample selected by a method based on the theory of probability (random process), that is, by a method involving knowledge of the likelihood of any unit being selected.

Production account : The production account records the activity of producing goods and services as defined within the SNA. Its balancing item, gross value added, is defined as the value of output less the value of intermediate consumption and is a measure of the contribution to GDP made by an individual producer, industry or sector. Gross value added is the source from which the primary incomes of the SNA are generated and is therefore carried forward into the primary distribution of income account. Value added and GDP may also be measured net by deducting consumption of fixed capital, a figure representing the decline in value during the period of the fixed capital used in a production process ( SNA 2008, 1.17 ).

Production : Economic production may be defined as an activity carried out under the control and responsibility of an institutional unit that uses inputs of labour, capital, and goods and services to produce outputs of goods or services ( SNA 2008, 6.24. ).

Purpose of a tourism trip (main): The main purpose of a tourism trip is defined as the purpose in the absence of which the trip would not have taken place ( IRTS 2008, 3.10. ). Classification of tourism trips according to the main purpose refers to nine categories: this typology allows the identification of different subsets of visitors (business visitors, transit visitors, etc.) See also destination of a tourism trip ( IRTS 2008, 3.14 ).

Quality of a tourism destination : Quality of a tourism destination is the result of a process which implies the satisfaction of all tourism product and service needs, requirements and expectations of the consumer at an acceptable price, in conformity with mutually accepted contractual conditions and the implicit underlying factors such as safety and security, hygiene, accessibility, communication, infrastructure and public amenities and services. It also involves aspects of ethics, transparency and respect towards the human, natural and cultural environment. Quality, as one of the key drivers of tourism competitiveness, is also a professional tool for organizational, operational and perception purposes for tourism suppliers.

Questionnaire and Questionnaire design : Questionnaire is a group or sequence of questions designed to elicit information on a subject, or sequence of subjects, from a reporting unit or from another producer of official statistics. Questionnaire design is the design (text, order, and conditions for skipping) of the questions used to obtain the data needed for the survey.

Reference period : The period of time or point in time to which the measured observation is intended to refer.

Relevance : The degree to which statistics meet current and potential users' needs.

Reliability : Closeness of the initial estimated value to the subsequent estimated value.

Reporting unit : Unit that supplies the data for a given survey instance, like a questionnaire or interview. Reporting units may, or may not, be the same as the observation unit.

Residents/non-residents : The residents of a country are individuals whose centre of predominant economic interest is located in its economic territory. For a country, the non-residents are individuals whose centre of predominant economic interest is located outside its economic territory.

Response and non-response : Response and non-response to various elements of a survey entail potential errors.

Response error : Response errors may be defined as those arising from the interviewing process. Such errors may be due to a number of circumstances, such as inadequate concepts or questions; inadequate training; interviewer failures; respondent failures.

Rural tourism : Rural tourism is a type of tourism activity in which the visitor's experience is related to a wide range of products generally linked to nature-based activities, agriculture, rural lifestyle / culture, angling and sightseeing. Rural tourism activities take place in non-urban (rural) areas with the following characteristics:

  • Low population density;
  • Landscape and land-use dominated by agriculture and forestry; and
  • Traditional social structure and lifestyle

Same-day visitor (or excursionist): A visitor (domestic, inbound or outbound) is classified as a tourist (or overnight visitor), if his/her trip includes an overnight stay, or as a same-day visitor (or excursionist) otherwise ( IRTS 2008, 2.13 ).

Sample : A subset of a frame where elements are selected based on a process with a known probability of selection.

Sample survey : A survey which is carried out using a sampling method.

Sampling error : That part of the difference between a population value and an estimate thereof, derived from a random sample, which is due to the fact that only a subset of the population is enumerated.

Satellite accounts : There are two types of satellite accounts, serving two different functions. The first type, sometimes called an internal satellite, takes the full set of accounting rules and conventions of the SNA but focuses on a particular aspect of interest by moving away from the standard classifications and hierarchies. Examples are tourism, coffee production and environmental protection expenditure. The second type, called an external satellite, may add non-economic data or vary some of the accounting conventions or both. It is a particularly suitable way to explore new areas in a research context. An example may be the role of volunteer labour in the economy ( SNA 2008, 29.85 ).

SDMX, Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange : Set of technical standards and content-oriented guidelines, together with an IT architecture and tools, to be used for the efficient exchange and sharing of statistical data and metadata (SDMX).

Seasonal adjustment : Seasonal adjustment is a statistical technique to remove the effects of seasonal calendar influences on a series. Seasonal effects usually reflect the influence of the seasons themselves, either directly or through production series related to them, or social conventions. Other types of calendar variation occur as a result of influences such as number of days in the calendar period, the accounting or recording practices adopted or the incidence of moving holidays.

Self-employment job : Self-employment jobs are those jobs where remuneration is directly dependent upon the profits (or the potential of profits) derived from the goods or services produced.

Self-employed with paid employees : Self-employed with paid employees are classified as employers.

Self-employed without employees : Self-employed without employees are classified as own-account workers.

Services : Services are the result of a production activity that changes the conditions of the consuming units, or facilitates the exchange of products or financial assets. They cannot be traded separately from their production. By the time their production is completed, they must have been provided to the consumers ( SNA 2008, 6.17 ).

Social transfers in kind : A special case of transfers in kind is that of social transfers in kind. These consist of goods and services provided by general government and non-profit institutions serving households (NPISHs) that are delivered to individual households. Health and education services are the prime examples. Rather than provide a specified amount of money to be used to purchase medical and educational services, the services are often provided in kind to make sure that the need for the services is met. (Sometimes the recipient purchases the service and is reimbursed by the insurance or assistance scheme. Such a transaction is still treated as being in kind because the recipient is merely acting as the agent of the insurance scheme) (SNA 2008, 3.83).

Sports tourism : Sports tourism is a type of tourism activity which refers to the travel experience of the tourist who either observes as a spectator or actively participates in a sporting event generally involving commercial and non-commercial activities of a competitive nature.

Standard classification : Classifications that follow prescribed rules and are generally recommended and accepted.

Statistical error : The unknown difference between the retained value and the true value.

Statistical indicator : A data element that represents statistical data for a specified time, place, and other characteristics, and is corrected for at least one dimension (usually size) to allow for meaningful comparisons.

Statistical metadata : Data about statistical data.

Statistical unit : Entity about which information is sought and about which statistics are compiled. Statistical units may be identifiable legal or physical entities or statistical constructs.

Survey : An investigation about the characteristics of a given population by means of collecting data from a sample of that population and estimating their characteristics through the systematic use of statistical methodology.

System of National Accounts : The System of National Accounts (SNA) is the internationally agreed standard set of recommendations on how to compile measures of economic activity in accordance with strict accounting conventions based on economic principles. The recommendations are expressed in terms of a set of concepts, definitions, classifications and accounting rules that comprise the internationally agreed standard for measuring indicators of economic performance. The accounting framework of the SNA allows economic data to be compiled and presented in a format that is designed for purposes of economic analysis, decision-taking and policymaking ( SNA 2008, 1.1 ).

Total tourism internal demand : Total tourism internal demand, is the sum of internal tourism consumption, tourism gross fixed capital formation and tourism collective consumption ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.114 ). It does not include outbound tourism consumption.

Tourism : Tourism refers to the activity of visitors ( IRTS 2008, 2.9 ).

Tourism characteristic activities : Tourism characteristic activities are the activities that typically produce tourism characteristic products. As the industrial origin of a product (the ISIC industry that produces it) is not a criterion for the aggregation of products within a similar CPC category, there is no strict one-to-one relationship between products and the industries producing them as their principal outputs ( IRTS 2008, 5.11 ).

Tourism characteristic products : Tourism characteristic products are those that satisfy one or both of the following criteria: a) Tourism expenditure on the product should represent a significant share total tourism expenditure (share-of-expenditure/demand condition); b) Tourism expenditure on the product should represent a significant share of the supply of the product in the economy (share-of-supply condition). This criterion implies that the supply of a tourism characteristic product would cease to exist in meaningful quantity in the absence of visitors ( IRTS 2008, 5.10 ).

Tourism connected products : Their significance within tourism analysis for the economy of reference is recognized although their link to tourism is very limited worldwide. Consequently, lists of such products will be country-specific ( IRTS 2008, 5.12 ).

Tourism consumption : Tourism consumption has the same formal definition as tourism expenditure. Nevertheless, the concept of tourism consumption used in the Tourism Satellite Account goes beyond that of tourism expenditure. Besides the amount paid for the acquisition of consumption goods and services, as well as valuables for own use or to give away, for and during tourism trips, which corresponds to monetary transactions (the focus of tourism expenditure), it also includes services associated with vacation accommodation on own account, tourism social transfers in kind and other imputed consumption. These transactions need to be estimated using sources different from information collected directly from the visitors, such as reports on home exchanges, estimations of rents associated with vacation homes, calculations of financial intermediation services indirectly measured (FISIM), etc. ( TSA:RMF 2008, 2.25 ).

Tourism destination : A tourism destination is a physical space with or without administrative and/or analytical boundaries in which a visitor can spend an overnight. It is the cluster (co-location) of products and services, and of activities and experiences along the tourism value chain and a basic unit of analysis of tourism. A destination incorporates various stakeholders and can network to form larger destinations. It is also intangible with its image and identity which may influence its market competitiveness.

Tourism direct gross domestic product : Tourism direct gross domestic product (TDGDP) is the sum of the part of gross value added (at basic prices) generated by all industries in response to internal tourism consumption plus the amount of net taxes on products and imports included within the value of this expenditure at purchasers' prices ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.96 ).

Tourism direct gross value added : Tourism direct gross value added (TDGVA) is the part of gross value added generated by tourism industries and other industries of the economy that directly serve visitors in response to internal tourism consumption ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.88 ).

Tourism expenditure : Tourism expenditure refers to the amount paid for the acquisition of consumption goods and services, as well as valuables, for own use or to give away, for and during tourism trips. It includes expenditures by visitors themselves, as well as expenses that are paid for or reimbursed by others ( IRTS 2008, 4.2 ).

Tourism industries : The tourism industries comprise all establishments for which the principal activity is a tourism characteristic activity. Tourism industries (also referred to as tourism activities) are the activities that typically producetourism characteristic products. The term tourism industries is equivalent to tourism characteristic activities and the two terms are sometimes used synonymously in the IRTS 2008, 5.10, 5.11 and figure 5.1 .

Tourism product : A tourism product is a combination of tangible and intangible elements, such as natural, cultural and man-made resources, attractions, facilities, services and activities around a specific center of interest which represents the core of the destination marketing mix and creates an overall visitor experience including emotional aspects for the potential customers. A tourism product is priced and sold through distribution channels and it has a life-cycle.

Tourism ratio : For each variable of supply in the Tourism Satellite Account, the tourism ratiois the ratio between the total value of tourism share and total value of the corresponding variable in the Tourism Satellite Account expressed in percentage form ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.56 ). (See also Tourism share).

Tourism Satellite Account : The Tourism Satellite Account is the second international standard on tourism statistics (Tourism Satellite Account: Recommended Methodological Framework 2008 –TSA:RMF 2008) that has been developed in order to present economic data relative to tourism within a framework of internal and external consistency with the rest of the statistical system through its link to the System of National Accounts. It is the basic reconciliation framework of tourism statistics. As a statistical tool for the economic accounting of tourism, the TSA can be seen as a set of 10 summary tables, each with their underlying data and representing a different aspect of the economic data relative to tourism: inbound, domestic tourism and outbound tourism expenditure, internal tourism expenditure, production accounts of tourism industries, the Gross Value Added (GVA) and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) attributable to tourism demand, employment, investment, government consumption, and non-monetary indicators.

Tourism Satellite Account aggregates : The compilation of the following aggregates, which represent a set of relevant indicators of the size of tourism in an economy is recommended ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.81 ):

  • Internal tourism expenditure;
  • Internal tourism consumption;
  • Gross value added of tourism industries (GVATI);
  • Tourism direct gross value added (TDGVA);
  • Tourism direct gross domestic product (TDGDP).

Tourism sector : The tourism sector, as contemplated in the TSA, is the cluster of production units in different industries that provide consumption goods and services demanded by visitors. Such industries are called tourism industries because visitor acquisition represents such a significant share of their supply that, in the absence of visitors, their production of these would cease to exist in meaningful quantity.

Tourism share : Tourism share is the share of the corresponding fraction of internal tourism consumption in each component of supply ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.51 ). For each industry, the tourism share of output (in value), is the sum of the tourism share corresponding to each product component of its output ( TSA:RMF 2008, 4.55 ). (See also Tourism ratio ).

Tourism single-purpose consumer durable goods : Tourism single-purpose consumer durables is a specific category of consumer durable goods that include durable goods that are used exclusively, or almost exclusively, by individuals while on tourism trips ( TSA:RMF 2008 , 2.41 and Annex 5 ).

Tourism trip : Trips taken by visitors are tourism trips ( IRTS 2008, 2.29 ).

Tourist (or overnight visitor): A visitor (domestic, inbound or outbound) is classified as a tourist (or overnight visitor), if his/her trip includes an overnight stay, or as a same-day visitor (or excursionist) otherwise ( IRTS 2008, 2.13 ).

Tourism value chain : The tourism value chain is the sequence of primary and support activities which are strategically fundamental for the performance of the tourism sector. Linked processes such as policy making and integrated planning, product development and packaging, promotion and marketing, distribution and sales and destination operations and services are the key primary activities of the tourism value chain. Support activities involve transport and infrastructure, human resource development, technology and systems development and other complementary goods and services which may not be related to core tourism businesses but have a high impact on the value of tourism.

Travel / traveller : Travel refers to the activity of travellers. A traveller is someone who moves between different geographic locations, for any purpose and any duration ( IRTS 2008, 2.4 ). The visitor is a particular type of traveller and consequently tourism is a subset of travel.

Travel group : A travel group is made up of individuals or travel parties travelling together: examples are people travelling on the same package tour or youngsters attending a summer camp ( IRTS 2008, 3.5 ).

Travel item (in balance of payments): Travel is an item of the goods and services account of the balance of payments: travel credits cover goods and services for own use or to give away acquired from an economy by non-residents during visits to that economy. Travel debits cover goods and services for own use or to give away acquired from other economies by residents during visits to other economies ( BPM6, 10.86 ).

Travel party : A travel party is defined as visitors travelling together on a trip and whose expenditures are pooled ( IRTS 2008, 3.2 ).

Trip : A trip refers to the travel by a person from the time of departure from his/her usual residence until he/she returns: it thus refers to a round trip. Trips taken by visitors are tourism trips.

Urban/city tourism : Urban/city tourism is a type of tourism activity which takes place in an urban space with its inherent attributes characterized by non-agricultural based economy such as administration, manufacturing, trade and services and by being nodal points of transport. Urban/city destinations offer a broad and heterogeneous range of cultural, architectural, technological, social and natural experiences and products for leisure and business.

Usual environment: The usual environment of an individual, a key concept in tourism, is defined as the geographical area (though not necessarily a contiguous one) within which an individual conducts his/her regular life routines ( IRTS 2008, 2.21 ).

Usual residence : The place of usual residence is the geographical place where the enumerated person usually resides (Principles and recommendations for population and housing censuses of the United Nations, 2.16 to 2.18).

Vacation home : A vacation home (sometimes also designated as a holiday home) is a secondary dwelling that is visited by the members of the household mostly for purposes of recreation, vacation or any other form of leisure ( IRTS 2008, 2.27 ).

Valuables : Valuables are produced goods of considerable value that are not used primarily for purposes of production or consumption but are held as stores of value over time ( SNA 2008, 10.13 ).

Visit : A trip is made up of visits to different places.The term "tourism visit" refers to a stay in a place visited during a tourism trip ( IRTS 2008, 2.7 and 2.33 ).

Visitor : A visitor is a traveller taking a trip to a main destination outside his/her usual environment, for less than a year, for any main purpose (business, leisure or other personal purpose) other than to be employed by a resident entity in the country or place visited ( IRTS 2008, 2.9 ). A visitor (domestic, inbound or outbound) is classified as a tourist (or overnight visitor), if his/her trip includes an overnight stay, or as a same-day visitor (or excursionist) otherwise ( IRTS 2008, 2.13 ).

Wellness tourism : Wellness tourism is a type of tourism activity which aims to improve and balance all of the main domains of human life including physical, mental, emotional, occupational, intellectual and spiritual. The primary motivation for the wellness tourist is to engage in preventive, proactive, lifestyle-enhancing activities such as fitness, healthy eating, relaxation, pampering and healing treatments.

  • The Meaning of Travel Destination: An Expert's Perspective

As a travel expert, I have spent countless hours exploring different destinations and helping others plan their dream vacations. And one question that often comes up is, what exactly does travel destination mean? While it may seem like a simple concept, there is actually a lot more to it than meets the eye. When we talk about a destination, we are referring to the place where someone is going or where something is being sent. It is the end point of a journey, whether it be a physical trip or a metaphorical one. For example, Disney World in Florida can be considered a destination for families planning a vacation. But destination can also have a deeper meaning.

It can represent our ultimate goal or purpose in life. Just like how Alex pushed away his love interest in the original text because their destinies were different, we too may have to make tough decisions in order to reach our desired destination. In the world of travel, destinations are constantly changing and evolving. As an expert, I have seen popular destinations come and go, while others remain timeless. And with the rise of social media and technology, people are now looking for unique and close-to-home destinations that offer something different from the usual tourist spots. But what makes a destination truly special? Is it the scenery, the culture, or the activities? In my opinion, it's a combination of all these factors and more.

The Power of Destination Marketing

The importance of delivering goods to the destination.

But no matter how we define it, one thing remains constant - a destination should be able to capture our hearts and leave us with unforgettable experiences.

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Meanings of ultimate and destination.

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(Definition of ultimate and destination from the Cambridge English Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

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  • Definition of ultimate
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Ran Zilca

Is There an Ultimate Destination?

The notion of an ultimate destination is an illusion..

Posted July 24, 2014

I’m sitting on a flight from Paris to New York, trying to pass eight long hours, and getting bored . The airplane does not have an in-flight entertainment system, and my Kindle book-reader ran out of battery, so I resort to reading anything I can lay my eyes on. First I read the duty-free catalog (twice), then the airline’s travel magazine, and to my embarrassment I even read the safety card. Eventually I empty my pockets, pull out my boarding pass, and stare at it. On its back there is some fine-print titled “advice to international passengers on carrier liability," and it starts with the following words:

Passengers on a journey involving an ultimate destination

It sounds like an inspirational message you would see inside a fortune cookie, not on the back of a boarding pass. The text then goes on to describe international treaties and the rights of passengers in transit, but the words “ultimate destination” get me thinking. Is there ever an ultimate destination?

Many wisdom traditions advocate the focus on journey instead of destination – taking intentional action but not being attached to its outcome. The Bhagavad Gita [1], one of the most prominent Hindu scriptures, speaks of it explicitly, saying:

“You have a right to your actions, but never to your actions’ fruits. Act for the action’s sake”.

A similar advice is provided in the Tao Te Ching [2], Lao Tzu’s book of “the way,” where

“… the Master takes action

by letting things take their course.

He remains as calm at the end as at the beginning.

He has nothing, thus has nothing to lose…”

In the Buddha’s teachings, the source of all human suffering is the desire to have predictable, expected outcomes to the actions we take [3], to have well-identified destinations. Four years ago, I rode from New York to California on a quest to finding inner peace . I spent five weeks on the road riding in contemplation and meeting with different experts, scientists, and authors. I started out with specific plans in mind, but it was only when I let go and let the road carry me to new places that I started to experience what the road truly had to offer. Towards the end of my ride when I was in Southern California, I met with Deepak Chopra, and discussed this with him. His view, was that flexibility is the source of inner strength and inner peace:

“I’ve never used the word strength in my vocabulary. I used the word flexibility (in consciousness). In fact, I have a favorite saying that comes from the Yoga Vasistha, “Infinite flexibility is the secret of immortality.” It’s, in a way, an evolutionary principle that you adapt. It’s not the strong who survive but the ones who adapt. An oak tree is very strong but with the first storm, it may crack, whereas a little thin vine that is flexible will survive the same storm. So, I think more in terms of flexibility. Flexibility is an attitude more than anything else. It means that I don’t need to always be rigidly attached to anything: a situation, a relationship, a point of view, or an outcome. If you are flexible, the challenge is gone.”

The notion of an ultimate destination is an illusion. It blinds one from seeing that new destinations unfold along the way, and it kills flexibility. It’s important to set goals . The process of planning your desired destinations helps you gain clarity and unveil your dreams . But dump your plans as soon as you hit the road, and let the road take you to new destinations that are not on your on your itinerary. You may discover that your ultimate destination pales in comparison to them.

[1] Stephen Mitchell (2000). Bhagavad Gita: A New Translation. Author Harmony ISBN 9780609605509 http://www.amazon.com/Bhagavad-Gita-A-New-Translation/dp/0609810340

[2] Mitchell, Stephen (1988). Tao Te Ching. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061142666 http://www.amazon.com/Tao-Te-Ching-Laozi/dp/0060812451

[4] Four Noble Truths http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Noble_Truths

Ran Zilca

Ran Zilca is a research scientist, entrepreneur, and author.

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What Defines a Destination

What Defines a Destination?

Written by Micaela Pacheco on May 21, 2020 . Posted in Tourism Development .

Destinations and the journeys that accompany them are continually adapting and diversifying for the coming trends in travel. Destination management  has become increasingly  important as tourism leaders coordinate the management of all elements that make up a destination, including the attractions, amenities, access, marketing, and pricing. But what actually defines a particular place from a tourism perspective? The following aspects factor into the many ways we explore and adventure through a destination to ultimately shape its identity.

1. Location 

Where a destination is located is the most obvious factor. Geographically, destinations can be defined as individual towns, cities, regions (such as states), countries or routes comprised of multiple locations often linked together through a particular theme.  Destinations that are part of a larger route will often partner with other businesses and vendors to create a more streamlined and accessible experience for travelers.  To learn more about the creation of a route where businesses are partnering together, read more about Solimar’s work along the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail .

2. Attractions 

Destinations are also often defined by the area’s attractions. If your location is famous for its national parks, for example, consider centering management efforts around carrying capacity to protect biodiversity while reducing overcrowding to ensure an enjoyable visitor experience. The key attractions of a place is also vital for establishing a brand identity and marketing to potential customers. 

For example, the owner of a hotel in Armenia may recognize that their clientele is mainly travelers with an appreciation for the country’s local culture and gastronomy. This hotel might partner with local businesses that offer master classes in local handicrafts or wineries that offer tastings, and create a package with these stakeholders. This strategy creates a more attractive experience for visitors while encouraging them to stay longer and increase their spending. 

 3. Target Market 

It is crucial to remain cognizant of the buyer persona when creating, marketing and defining a tourism destination. Are people coming to your destination to relax, to learn, or to explore?  Emerging destinations may choose to analyze their suppliers by conducting  data analytics online or by doing market research collection through the use of customer surveys. This research will provide excellent insight into partnership opportunities, pricing structures and target markets.  

Over the years, Solimar  International has consulted with hundreds of  tourism destinations and destination management organizations to help them in their journey towards developing and operating in a sustainable way. Read more about some of our projects here . 

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Definition of 'destination'

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Destination in british english, examples of 'destination' in a sentence destination, related word partners destination, trends of destination.

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Destination Marketing 101: Your Ultimate Guide

Destination Marketing 101: Your Ultimate Guide

In an era where travel has become more accessible than ever, businesses and marketers are increasingly turning their attention to the art and science of promoting destinations. Whether you’re a seasoned marketer or just dipping your toes into the travel industry, understanding the nuances of destination marketing can significantly impact your success. 

In this comprehensive guide, we’ll navigate the landscape, exploring the definition, benefits, and proven strategies to make your destination stand out.

What is Destination Marketing?

At its core, destination marketing is a specialized form of marketing that promotes a specific location to attract visitors and boost the local economy. This type of marketing goes beyond conventional tourism marketing efforts, aiming to create a compelling narrative that captivates potential travelers. The focus is on crafting an identity for a destination, transforming it from a spot on the map to a must-visit experience.

What are the Benefits of Destination Marketing?

Destination marketing isn’t just about increasing tourist footfall; it’s about creating sustainable growth and fostering a positive impact on the local community. These are some of the main benefits:

  • Economic Growth : Successful destination marketing can lead to increased spending by tourists, benefiting local businesses and creating job opportunities.
  • Cultural Exchange : By showcasing the unique aspects of a destination, marketing efforts contribute to cultural exchange, fostering a deeper understanding between visitors and locals.
  • Community Development : A thriving tourism industry often leads to improved infrastructure, public services, and community well-being.

Now that we’ve covered why destination marketing matters, let’s shift gears and dive into the practical strategies to make it work seamlessly.

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What Are The Best Strategies for Destination Marketing Success?

Embarking on successful destination marketing involves employing a set of strategic moves that go beyond the basics, ensuring your efforts resonate with your audience and leave a lasting impact. Let’s dive into these key strategies and see what they entail.

1. Understand Your Target Audience

Understanding your target audience is the foundation of any successful destination marketing campaign. Dive deep into demographics, interests, and behaviors to create detailed buyer personas. For instance, if your destination is a paradise for adventure enthusiasts, consider age groups, preferences, and online behaviors associated with this demographic.

To illustrate even further, imagine your analysis reveals a significant interest in eco-friendly travel among your audience. Tailor your marketing messages to highlight sustainable practices and the environmental initiatives your destination supports.

2. Target Pain Points

Addressing the pain points of potential travelers is a strategic move that builds trust and connection. Identify common concerns, such as safety, accessibility, or language barriers, and showcase how your destination mitigates these issues.

Create content addressing safety measures, accessible infrastructure, and language support in your destination. Implement customer service initiatives that directly tackle concerns raised by previous travelers.

For example, if safety is a concern, feature testimonials from solo travelers who felt secure during their visit. Highlight security measures and partnerships with local law enforcement to reassure prospective visitors.

3. Identify USPs (Unique Selling Points)

USP is a distinctive and compelling characteristic or benefit that sets a product, service, or brand apart from its competitors in the eyes of the target audience. Every destination has unique features that make it uniquely attractive to visitors. 

Identifying and using these USPs is crucial for creating a compelling narrative that resonates with your target audience. Conduct surveys and interviews to discover what visitors find most memorable about your destination. Showcase unique attractions, experiences, or cultural elements that differentiate your destination from others.

An employee is doing marketing analysis

4. Analize Your Competitors

A thorough analysis of competitors in the travel industry can provide valuable insights into market trends, successful strategies, and areas for differentiation. By understanding what works and what doesn’t, you can refine your destination marketing plan.

Get started by monitoring competitors’ social media channels, websites, and marketing materials. Then, find gaps in their strategies and capitalize on areas where your destination excels. 

If your competitors primarily focus on luxury experiences, consider targeting a niche market, such as budget travelers, or emphasize unique cultural aspects that others haven’t extensively promoted.

5. Craft a Compelling Destination Brand

Developing a compelling brand is about more than just a visually appealing logo; it’s about creating a holistic brand identity that resonates with your audience. Let’s see what goes into it.

Logo and Visual Elements

Invest in a professional logo that encapsulates the spirit of your destination. The logo should be versatile and easily recognizable. Extend the visual identity beyond the logo. Consistent color schemes, fonts, and imagery across all marketing materials contribute to a cohesive and memorable visual brand.

Brand Personality

Define the personality of your destination as if it were a person. Is it adventurous, relaxed, or culturally vibrant? Align your marketing messages, visuals, and tone with this personality. Create content that reflects the desired personality, whether it’s through adventurous activity guides, serene landscapes, or cultural anecdotes.

For example, if your destination has a laid-back beach vibe, your brand personality may be casual, easy-going, and carefree. Emphasize leisurely activities, sunsets, and relaxation in your marketing materials.

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Creating a Memorable Tagline

Craft a tagline that encapsulates the essence of your destination in a few words. The tagline should be catchy, easy to remember, and evoke the emotions you want associated with your brand. Keep it concise and impactful, and test it with a focus group to ensure it resonates with your target audience.

Consistency is Key

In the end, ensuring you maintain consistency across all platforms is crucial for brand recognition. Whether it’s social media, print materials, or your website, a cohesive brand identity builds trust and familiarity. 

Create brand guidelines to ensure consistency in visuals, tone, and messaging. Regularly audit your marketing materials to ensure they align with the established brand identity.

6. Focus on Video and Visuals

In today’s digital world, catching the eye is all about the visuals. Think of it like a visual feast – you want potential travelers to savor the experience before they even arrive. Let’s break it down:

Video Content

Videos are like a magic carpet ride, giving viewers a taste of the adventure, beauty, and vibe of your destination. Picture this: clips of local life, thrilling activities, and stunning landscapes, all in motion. A good video can transport people and make them feel the excitement, making them want to pack their bags pronto.

Stunning Images

Invest in top-notch photos that capture the heart of your destination. Whether it’s a jaw-dropping view or a candid moment of local life, these images should make potential travelers daydream about being there.

Virtual Reality Tours

Virtual reality tours are like having a personal tour guide without leaving your couch. Use VR tech to create virtual adventures, letting people explore your destination from the comfort of their homes. These virtual tours are like a teaser, sparking excitement and making them want to see more.

7. Work With Influencers

Engaging with influencers can significantly boost your destination’s visibility. These social media figures have large followings, making them effective messengers for your brand. Partnering with influencers aligns your destination with trusted voices in the digital space, reaching audiences that value their recommendations. 

Encourage influencers to share genuine experiences , adding authenticity to your marketing efforts. Choose influencers whose style resonates with your destination’s vibe, creating a natural and effective partnership. It’s about leveraging their influence to narrate your destination’s story in a way that feels both honest and appealing.

8. Create Collaborations and Partnerships

Other than influencers, explore diverse partnerships that can elevate your brand and enhance the overall appeal of your destination. Connecting with local businesses is a smart move to enhance your destination’s charm. 

By teaming up with nearby spots, you’re not just supporting the community but also giving visitors a richer experience. Work with restaurants, shops, and attractions to create packages that add value for travelers. These local partnerships boost your destination’s local ties and create a more complete experience for visitors.

Also, collaborative campaigns , whether with nearby destinations or brands that complement yours, spread your message to a wider audience. Think of joint promotions, shared content, and events that bring more eyes to your destination.

Find partners who share your values for a seamless collaboration that benefits everyone involved. Through these campaigns, you’re not just marketing a place – you’re crafting a story that captures a broader audience’s attention and interest.

Two coworkers are exchanging ideas about business

9. Create And Optimize Your Destination Website

Your destination’s website is the virtual gateway for potential travelers. Ensure it’s user-friendly, visually appealing, and provides all the necessary information. Then, optimize it for search engines to increase its visibility. This includes keyword optimization, local SEO, and creating high-quality content that resonates with your target audience.

10. Start Blogging

Content marketing is a powerful tool in destination marketing. And the good news is – there are so many topics to cover! Start a blog on your website to share engaging stories, travel tips, and insider information about your destination. This not only attracts organic traffic but also positions your destination as an authority. Ensure that you keep this content in line with your SEO strategies, targeting the right keywords and optimizing it to rank well in search engines

11. Social Media Strategies

Harness the power of social media to connect with your audience on a personal level. Here’s how:

  • User Reviews and Testimonials : Encourage visitors to share their experiences on social media platforms. User-generated content adds authenticity and serves as valuable social proof.
  • Running Social Media Contests : Engage your audience with contests that encourage participation. Whether it’s photo contests or travel stories, these initiatives create a buzz and attract attention.
  • Showcasing Authentic Experiences: Use your social media channels to showcase authentic experiences. Share real stories from visitors, behind-the-scenes glimpses, and captivating visuals that convey the essence of your destination.

12. Online Advertising Strategies

Use online advertising to broaden your destination’s visibility across digital landscapes. This strategic approach involves deploying different types of ads tailored to meet the varied online behaviors of your potential visitors.

Here are the types of online ads you can use: 

  • Display Advertising : Think of this as your digital billboard. Display ads utilize captivating visuals strategically placed on websites, drawing attention to the unique features of your destination.
  • Search Advertising : Have you ever noticed the label “Ad” at the top of your search results? That’s search advertising at work. It ensures your destination stands out when users actively seek travel options.
  • Social Media Ads : Picture your destination seamlessly integrated into users’ social feeds. Social media ads act as tailored narratives, showcasing your offerings based on users’ interests and demographics.

Overall, online ads cast a broad net, extending your destination’s reach to a diverse audience. Tailor your ads to specific groups, addressing the preferences of adventure seekers, food enthusiasts, or cultural explorers. This ensures a more personalized and impactful engagement.

13. Events and Promotions

When it comes to creating buzz around your destination, events and promotions are your dynamic duo.

Hosting Destination Events

Imagine your destination as a vibrant host of engaging events that not only showcase its uniqueness but also foster a sense of community. Here are the types of events that will make your destination an easy-to-market, attractive place for travelers: 

  • Festivals : Dive into the heart of your destination’s culture by organizing festivals. These celebrations not only embrace local traditions but also draw in a diverse audience, adding a lively touch to your community.
  • Cultural Events : Elevate the allure of your destination through culturally rich events – from captivating art exhibitions to the rhythm of music festivals and captivating performances. It’s not just an event; it’s an invitation to experience the soul of your locale.

Limited-Time Promotions and Discounts

Now, let’s talk about creating a buzz that’s quick and effective – limited-time promotions and discounts. This strategy not only lures budget-conscious travelers but also amps up the overall curiosity about your destination. It’s like an exclusive invitation to a fantastic deal that can’t be missed.

Stay on Top of Your Destination Marketing Strategies

On a final note, once you start with destination marketing, you need to know how your efforts are performing and how you can improve in the future. Consider website analytics – it’s like peeking at a map to see where visitors are coming from, what they’re interested in, and where they’re spending the most time. 

Additionally, stay informed about industry trends—like virtual experiences or niche travel—to keep your marketing strategy relevant and appealing. This helps you adjust your marketing strategy, keeping it fresh, interesting, and in tune with what travelers are looking for. 

Wrapping It Up: Your Destination’s Next Chapter

And there you have it – a journey through destination marketing strategies that goes beyond the mundane. We’re not just talking about selling a place; we’re talking about creating connections, sharing tales, and building a community.

Now that you’ve got these strategies under your belt, your destination is more than a spot on the map; it’s a living, breathing experience waiting to captivate.

Are you curious about how Play Media can enhance your destination’s narrative? Let’s chat! Contact us for a consultation, and let’s turn your destination into a must-visit chapter in every traveler’s journey. 

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Ecotourism and Sustainable Travel

Welcome to an extraordinary world where luxury meets sustainability. As a discerning traveler, I understand the desire for unique and fulfilling experiences that not only indulge our senses but also align with our eco-conscious values. That’s why I’m excited to share with you the ultimate in eco-luxury : sustainable travel destinations that cater to the elite.

Gone are the days when luxury travel was solely defined by opulence and extravagance. Today, the elite eco-conscious vacationer seeks something more. They seek destinations that not only offer immaculate service and breathtaking views but also prioritize environmental conservation and community engagement. From secluded island resorts to pristine wilderness retreats, these sustainable travel destinations offer a truly transformative experience that goes beyond conventional tourism.

Join me on a journey to discover the world’s most fascinating sustainable travel destinations , where luxury and sustainability intertwine to create unparalleled experiences. Explore how classic destinations such as Scandinavia and Tuscany are reimagined through a sustainable lens. Venture into new frontiers that offer pristine beauty and cultural richness. Experience the wonders of ecotourism in exemplary destinations like Bhutan and Madagascar. Immerse yourself in the untamed beauty of remote locales like Patagonia and Mongolia. Unwind at exclusive island resorts that embrace sustainability. Create bonds through shared experiences at multigenerational-friendly destinations. Witness the leaders in environmental stewardship shaping the future of travel. Find serenity in secluded luxury destinations that contribute to conservation. Experience luxury in North America’s wilderness. Indulge in sophisticated retreats that prioritize both opulence and sustainability. Discover Asia’s pioneers in responsible travel. And learn how sustainability and exclusivity can coexist to create the ultimate journey.

Through this exploration, you’ll not only gain a deeper understanding of eco-luxury and sustainable travel but also be inspired to embark on your own journey of responsible and luxurious exploration. So, let’s begin this extraordinary adventure together, where sustainability is the new definition of luxury.

Key Takeaways:

  • Eco-luxury offers unique and fulfilling travel experiences for discerning travelers.
  • Sustainable travel destinations prioritize environmental conservation and community engagement.
  • Classic destinations like Scandinavia and Tuscany are reimagined through a sustainable lens.
  • New frontiers offer pristine beauty and cultural richness.
  • Ecotourism destinations like Bhutan and Madagascar showcase exemplary sustainable practices.

Reimagining Classic Destinations with a Sustainable Lens

Classic travel destinations hold a timeless appeal for travelers seeking cultural richness and natural wonders. However, in an era where sustainability is paramount, these destinations are reimagining themselves through a sustainable lens. Two prime examples of such destinations are Scandinavia and Tuscany.

Scandinavia: Combining Natural Wonders with Cultural Riches

Scandinavia, composed of countries such as Norway, Sweden, and Denmark, boasts unparalleled natural beauty. Majestic fjords, enchanting forests, and breathtaking landscapes offer sustainable travel experiences that leave a lasting impact. Moreover, Scandinavia’s commitment to eco-friendly practices is second to none. The region prioritizes sustainability, making it an ideal destination for eco-conscious travelers looking to immerse themselves in nature while minimizing their carbon footprint.

Tuscany’s Commitment to Culture and Sustainability

Tuscany, located in central Italy, is renowned for its rich cultural heritage. From historic cities like Florence and Siena to picturesque countryside dotted with vineyards and olive groves, Tuscany offers a sustainable travel experience steeped in history and authenticity. The region has made significant strides in preserving its cultural heritage while embracing sustainability in its tourism industry. Travelers can indulge in eco-friendly accommodations, savor locally sourced cuisine, and participate in immersive experiences that support the local community and environment.

New Frontiers in Luxurious Sustainable Travel

In the ever-evolving world of luxury travel, a new wave of sustainable destinations is emerging, offering discerning travelers unique and exquisite experiences that combine luxury and eco-consciousness. These destinations, often off the beaten path, showcase pristine natural beauty and cultural richness while prioritizing sustainability.

By choosing to explore these new frontiers in sustainable travel , you not only indulge in luxury eco-tourism experiences but also contribute to the preservation of these emerging sustainable destinations .

If you crave adventure and yearn to discover hidden gems, consider venturing beyond the well-trodden path. These emerging destinations, with their commitment to sustainability, provide an opportunity to connect with nature and immerse yourself in a truly enriching and responsible travel experience.

Whether you are captivated by untouched landscapes, vibrant local cultures, or a combination of both, the new frontiers in luxurious sustainable travel offer a range of choices to suit your preferences. From remote island getaways to serene mountain retreats, there is a destination that embodies your vision of sustainable luxury.

“Sustainable travel allows us to explore new frontiers while ensuring that future generations can enjoy the beauty and wonder of these destinations.”

new frontiers in sustainable travel

These examples represent just a glimpse of the diverse and captivating sustainable destinations waiting to be explored. When planning your next luxurious sustainable travel experience, consider these newly emerging frontiers and embark on a journey that combines opulence, cultural immersion, and a commitment to safeguarding our planet.

Ecotourism and Sustainable Travel: The Elite’s Passage to Paradise

When it comes to travel, the elite are seeking more than just luxury and indulgence. They are looking for experiences that align with their values and support the preservation of our planet. This has given rise to the concept of elite ecotourism , where sustainability and luxury intertwine to create unforgettable travel paradises.

Exemplary Destinations: Bhutan and Madagascar

In the realm of sustainable travel, Bhutan and Madagascar stand out as exemplary eco-destinations . Bhutan, known as the “Last Shangri-La,” has placed a strong emphasis on preserving its pristine environment and cultural heritage. With its commitment to being carbon-negative and its focus on Gross National Happiness, Bhutan offers a truly sustainable and enlightening travel experience for the elite.

Madagascar, on the other hand, is a biodiversity hotspot teeming with unique flora and fauna found nowhere else on earth. The country’s dedication to conservation and ecotourism has led to the creation of protected areas and initiatives that support local communities. For the elite seeking to immerse themselves in nature’s wonders while contributing to pioneering sustainable change , Madagascar is a must-visit destination.

Pioneering Change: Costa Rica and New Zealand

In the realm of sustainable travel, Costa Rica and New Zealand have emerged as pioneering nations, leading the way in sustainable practices. Costa Rica is renowned for its extensive protected areas, commitment to renewable energy, and its well-established ecotourism industry. From lush rainforests to pristine beaches, Costa Rica offers the elite a chance to experience sustainable travel at its finest.

New Zealand, known for its breathtaking landscapes and rich Maori culture, has embraced sustainability as a core value. The country’s strong focus on conservation and eco-friendly practices has resulted in innovative initiatives such as the Tiaki Promise, which encourages visitors to care for the land and respect local customs. For the elite seeking a blend of adventure, luxury, and sustainable travel, New Zealand offers a truly remarkable experience.

Adventure and Luxury Intersect in Remote Locales

When it comes to travel, the perfect blend of adventure and luxury can elevate your experiences to new heights. Exploring remote locales that offer untamed beauty and cultural authenticity allows you to immerse yourself in the true essence of a destination. From the breathtaking landscapes of untamed Patagonia , Chile to the timeless traditions of Mongolia’s steppes, there are remarkable journeys waiting to be discovered.

The Untamed Beauty of Patagonia, Chile

Patagonia, located in southern Chile, is a land of rugged wilderness and awe-inspiring natural wonders. Its dramatic landscapes encompass vast glaciers, towering granite peaks, and pristine forests, creating an outdoor enthusiast’s paradise. Luxury adventure travel in Patagonia offers opportunities for hiking, kayaking, horseback riding, and even wildlife encounters.

Imagine standing in awe of the majestic Torres del Paine National Park, with its iconic granite spires piercing the sky. Embark on a thrilling trek along the W Circuit, experiencing the raw beauty of Patagonia’s fjords, lakes, and glaciers along the way. After a day of exploration, retreat to a luxury eco-lodge or a secluded wilderness camp, where you can rejuvenate in comfort and soak in the tranquility of your surroundings.

untamed Patagonia

Timeless Traditions of Mongolia’s Steppes

Mongolia’s vast steppes present a unique convergence of cultural traditions, nomadic heritage, and breathtaking landscapes. In this remote destination, you can immerse yourself in the rich history and enduring customs of the Mongolian people. Experience a truly authentic way of life as you stay in traditional ger camps and share meals with local families.

Embark on a horseback riding expedition through the vast Mongolian steppe, traversing pristine wilderness and encountering nomadic herdsmen along the way. Explore the iconic Gobi Desert, where you can witness the breathtaking beauty of towering sand dunes and encounter endangered wildlife unique to this region.

Immerse yourself in cultural traditions by attending traditional festivals, witnessing traditional throat singing performances, or learning the art of archery from master craftsmen. Luxury adventure travel in Mongolia offers a perfect blend of exploration and comfort, allowing you to experience the untamed beauty of the steppes while indulging in luxurious accommodations and authentic cultural experiences.

In conclusion, adventure and luxury can coexist in remote destinations , offering unparalleled experiences that combine breathtaking landscapes, cultural immersion, and utmost comfort. Whether you choose to explore the untamed beauty of Patagonia or the timeless traditions of Mongolia, luxury adventure travel allows you to connect with the world in a profound and transformative way.

A New Era of Island Escapes

In this new era of luxury travel, island escapes have taken on a whole new meaning. Gone are the days of crowded beaches and overdeveloped resorts. Today, discerning travelers seek exclusive island resorts that offer unparalleled experiences in harmony with nature. These luxury island escapes are not only about indulgence, but also about sustainability.

Exclusive island resorts are at the forefront of sustainable island tourism , setting a new standard for responsible travel. They go beyond simply offering luxurious accommodations and amenities. They prioritize environmental stewardship , community engagement, and cultural preservation. These resorts are committed to minimizing their carbon footprint and protecting the delicate ecosystems that surround them.

To illustrate this commitment to sustainability, let’s take a closer look at one of these exclusive island resorts: [Resort Name] . Situated in the heart of a pristine marine reserve, this secluded haven offers a glimpse into the future of sustainable island tourism . The resort’s eco-friendly practices include solar power, biodegradable products, and responsible waste management.

“Our mission is to provide our guests with unforgettable experiences while preserving the beauty and integrity of our island paradise. We strive to create a synergy between luxury and sustainability, ensuring that future generations can continue to enjoy these idyllic surroundings.”

In addition to their commitment to sustainability, these exclusive island resorts also offer a range of activities and amenities that cater to the most discerning travelers. From private villas with breathtaking ocean views to personalized spa treatments using locally sourced ingredients, each aspect of the guest experience is curated to perfection.

Furthermore, these luxury island escapes provide opportunities for cultural immersion and community engagement. Guests can participate in local conservation efforts, interact with indigenous communities, and learn about the rich history and traditions of the island.

By choosing to stay at these exclusive island resorts, travelers not only indulge in luxury, but also contribute to the preservation of the natural beauty and cultural heritage of these destinations. They become part of a new era of sustainable island tourism , where responsible travel is seamlessly blended with exclusive experiences.

Multigenerational Travel: Creating Bonds Through Shared Experiences

In today’s fast-paced world, multigenerational travel has become a popular trend among families seeking meaningful connections and unforgettable adventures. This style of travel allows multiple generations to come together, create lasting memories, and strengthen familial bonds. Two destinations that excel in offering family-friendly experiences are the United Kingdom and Kyoto, Japan, each with its unique blend of history, culture, and excitement.

United Kingdom: A Tapestry of Historical and Modern Delights

The United Kingdom is a treasure trove of historical delights that captivate travelers of all ages. From iconic landmarks like Buckingham Palace and Stonehenge to the medieval charm of castles such as Windsor Castle and Edinburgh Castle, there is something for everyone to explore and appreciate. Families can embark on immersive journeys through time, learning about the rich heritage of this diverse nation.

Moreover, the United Kingdom offers a wide range of family-friendly attractions, such as interactive museums, theme parks, and scenic countryside landscapes. Kids can unleash their imagination at the Harry Potter Studio Tour in London or have fun at LEGOLAND Windsor Resort. Meanwhile, adults can indulge in world-class theater productions in the West End or enjoy traditional afternoon tea in charming tea rooms.

With its seamless blend of history, culture, and modern marvels, the United Kingdom is an ideal destination for multigenerational travel , offering experiences that cater to every generation’s interests.

Kyoto, Japan: Bridging Generations with Cultural Immersion

If you’re looking to bridge generations through cultural immersion, Kyoto, Japan, is the perfect destination. Known for its rich heritage, ancient temples, and traditional geisha culture, Kyoto offers a glimpse into Japan’s fascinating history.

The city’s UNESCO World Heritage Sites, including Kinkaku-ji (Golden Pavilion) and Kiyomizu-dera Temple, provide opportunities for families to embark on spiritual and educational journeys. Strolling through the iconic bamboo forest of Arashiyama or participating in a traditional tea ceremony allows visitors to experience the tranquility and beauty that Kyoto embodies.

For kids, Kyoto offers a mix of modern attractions, including the Kyoto Railway Museum and the Toei Kyoto Studio Park, where they can immerse themselves in Japanese pop culture and samurai history.

With its cultural richness and serene landscapes, Kyoto invites multigenerational travelers to connect with one another while exploring the wonders of tradition and modernity.

family exploring historical ruins

In conclusion, multigenerational travel provides an excellent opportunity for families to create lasting bonds through shared experiences. The United Kingdom and Kyoto, Japan, offer distinct family-friendly destinations , with the United Kingdom boasting historical treasures and modern delights, while Kyoto immerses visitors in a blend of culture and tradition. Whether exploring ancient castles or partaking in tea ceremonies, these destinations cater to the diverse interests of every generation, ensuring a memorable and enriching multigenerational travel experience.

Leading the Way in Environmental Stewardship

In the travel industry, environmental stewardship plays a pivotal role in ensuring the preservation of our planet’s natural beauty for future generations. It is the responsibility of destinations, resorts, and organizations to lead the way in implementing sustainable practices and promoting eco-friendly initiatives.

These sustainable travel leaders set a precedent for the industry, demonstrating how luxury and environmental consciousness can go hand in hand. By adopting eco-friendly practices, they showcase the potential to create exceptional experiences that minimize the impact on the environment.

Through their commitment to environmental stewardship, these leaders not only prioritize sustainability but also inspire and educate travelers about the importance of responsible and eco-friendly tourism. By showcasing the positive impact of sustainable travel practices, they encourage others to follow suit and support the preservation of our planet.

These forward-thinking leaders embrace innovative approaches to reduce waste, conserve resources, and protect fragile ecosystems. They prioritize renewable energy, water conservation, waste reduction, and responsible sourcing in their operations. By incorporating sustainability into every aspect of their business, they set an example for others to follow.

Leading the way in environmental stewardship, these organizations emphasize the importance of sustainable tourism as a means to protect our planet while providing luxurious and memorable experiences for travelers. By choosing to support these eco-friendly leaders, individuals can contribute to the collective effort of preserving the natural wonders of our world for generations to come.

environmental stewardship

The Intersection of Privacy, Exclusivity, and Nature Conservation

This section explores the unique intersection of privacy , exclusivity , and nature conservation within luxury travel. It delves into the secluded destinations of the Seychelles and the Maldives, which offer an unparalleled sense of privacy and exclusivity for discerning travelers. These remote and idyllic locations not only provide a luxurious escape from the hustle and bustle of everyday life but also prioritize the conservation of their pristine natural environments.

Enclaves of Seclusion: From the Seychelles to the Maldives

Immerse yourself in the secluded enclaves of the Seychelles and the Maldives, where privacy and exclusivity are taken to new heights. Nestled in the Indian Ocean, the Seychelles boasts idyllic white sand beaches, crystal-clear waters, and lush tropical landscapes. Choose from a range of private luxury villas situated on secluded islands, where you can unwind in complete seclusion and experience the unparalleled beauty of nature.

Similarly, the Maldives offers a collection of exclusive private resorts scattered across its picture-perfect atolls. Indulge in luxuriously appointed villas and bungalows, each with its own private pool and direct access to the turquoise waters of the Indian Ocean. Here, privacy is paramount, and the natural beauty of the Maldives is protected and celebrated.

Contributing to Conservation through Luxurious Stays

What sets these secluded luxury destinations apart is their unwavering commitment to nature conservation . Through promoting sustainable tourism practices, these destinations strive to protect their unique ecosystems and preserve the rare flora and fauna that call these paradises home.

By choosing to stay in these luxurious havens, you are actively contributing to conservation efforts. The resorts in the Seychelles and the Maldives often collaborate with local organizations, engage in coral reef restoration, and implement eco-friendly initiatives to minimize their environmental impact.

Whether it’s supporting local conservation projects, participating in educational activities, or simply appreciating the untouched natural beauty surrounding you, your luxury stay in these secluded destinations becomes a meaningful contribution to preserving the planet’s most exquisite sanctuaries.

Luxury Meets Wilderness in North America’s Highest Echelons

When it comes to luxury wilderness travel , North America offers some of the most breathtaking destinations that blend opulence with the raw beauty of its untouched landscapes. From the desert tranquility of Amangiri to the expansive wilderness of Vermejo, discerning travelers can immerse themselves in the lap of luxury while experiencing the serenity of the natural world.

Desert Tranquility: Amangiri and its Majestic Surroundings

Amangiri, located in the heart of the American Southwest, is a sanctuary that perfectly embodies the intersection of luxury and wilderness. Nestled amidst the dramatic sandstone formations of Utah’s Canyon Point, this luxury resort provides a tranquil oasis for those seeking to reconnect with nature.

At Amangiri, guests can indulge in the ultimate desert getaway, surrounded by breathtaking views and unparalleled serenity.

With its sleek and minimalist design, Amangiri seamlessly blends into the rugged landscape, offering guests a sense of harmony and tranquility. Its spacious suites and villas boast panoramic views of the desert, allowing guests to wake up to awe-inspiring vistas every morning.

From exploring the desert on guided hikes and horseback rides to stargazing under the clear night skies, Amangiri offers a myriad of outdoor activities for adventure enthusiasts. After a day of exploration, guests can unwind at the resort’s world-class spa or savor delectable cuisine inspired by the flavors of the Southwest.

Eco-Sanctuaries: Vermejo’s Expansive Wilderness

For those seeking a sustainable escape in North America’s high echelons, Vermejo is the epitome of an eco-sanctuary. Spanning over 590,823 acres of pristine wilderness in New Mexico and Colorado, this conservation-oriented destination offers an unparalleled opportunity to immerse oneself in nature while enjoying luxurious accommodations and amenities.

Vermejo’s expansive wilderness serves as a haven for wildlife and provides a blissful retreat for those looking to reconnect with nature.

With its commitment to conservation and wildlife management, Vermejo offers guests a chance to engage in activities such as guided wildlife tours, fly fishing in pristine lakes and rivers, and exploring the pristine wilderness through hiking and mountain biking trails.

Vermejo’s luxurious lodges and guest houses provide the perfect blend of comfort and sustainability. Guests can unwind in elegantly designed rooms that feature eco-friendly materials and stunning views of the surrounding landscapes. The resort’s farm-to-table dining concept ensures that guests can savor delicious meals prepared with locally sourced and sustainable ingredients.

In addition to its commitment to environmental sustainability, Vermejo actively engages in conservation and education initiatives, offering guests the opportunity to learn about the unique ecosystems and wildlife that call this wilderness home.

For luxury travelers with a deep appreciation for the beauty of untouched natural landscapes, Amangiri and Vermejo exemplify the meeting point between opulence and the wilderness, providing unforgettable experiences that honor their commitment to luxury in harmony with nature’s splendor.

Sophisticated Retreats Blending Opulence and Sustainability

This section explores sophisticated retreats that blend opulence and sustainability. Discerning travelers seeking a luxurious and eco-conscious vacation can find the perfect harmony of opulent sustainable travel experiences at these remarkable destinations. Grootbos, Habitas Tulum, and Whitepod represent the pinnacle of sophistication in their commitment to sustainable practices and offering guests unforgettable stays.

Grootbos: A Benchmark for Sustainable Luxury

Grootbos stands as a benchmark for sustainable luxury, setting the standard for opulent and environmentally responsible travel. Nestled within the pristine wilderness of South Africa’s Cape Floral Kingdom, this breathtaking retreat combines elegant accommodations with a deep dedication to conservation and community upliftment.

“Grootbos is a sanctuary where guests can immerse themselves in the natural beauty of the region while making a positive impact on the environment. From its eco-friendly lodges to innovative conservation projects, Grootbos showcases that luxury and sustainability can seamlessly coexist.”

Guests at Grootbos can enjoy sumptuous suites and villas, gourmet cuisine, and a range of exclusive activities that showcase the area’s unique flora and fauna. The retreat’s commitment to sustainable practices extends to every aspect of its operations, from its ecologically sensitive design to its conservation initiatives. Grootbos provides an unparalleled luxury experience while leading the way in sustainable tourism.

Habitas Tulum and Whitepod: Innovators in Eco-Friendly Operations

Habitas Tulum and Whitepod are true innovators in eco-friendly operations, offering guests exceptional and sustainable stays in two distinct settings.

Habitas Tulum, located on the pristine beaches of Mexico’s Riviera Maya, redefines luxury with its unique blend of sophistication and environmental consciousness. The resort’s design seamlessly integrates with the natural surroundings, utilizing locally sourced materials and renewable energy sources. Guests can revel in opulent accommodations, curated wellness experiences, and immersive cultural activities, all while knowing that every aspect of their stay aligns with eco-friendly principles.

Whitepod, situated in the Swiss Alps, is an eco-resort that combines luxurious accommodation with a minimal ecological footprint. The resort’s unique concept of “pod” accommodation allows guests to experience the beauty of the Alpine landscape while minimizing the impact on the environment. Each pod is designed to be energy-efficient and offers panoramic views, providing an exclusive and sustainable retreat for nature enthusiasts.

At Habitas Tulum and Whitepod, sustainability is not just a buzzword but a fundamental value that informs every aspect of the guest experience. From locally sourced organic cuisine to community engagement initiatives, these retreats showcase that luxury and environmental responsibility can go hand in hand.

“Habitas Tulum and Whitepod exemplify the epitome of opulent sustainable travel , offering guests the opportunity to indulge in lavish experiences while contributing to a more sustainable future.”

Through their unique approaches to eco-friendly operations, Grootbos, Habitas Tulum, and Whitepod demonstrate that sophisticated retreats can blend opulence and sustainability, providing guests with unforgettable and guilt-free luxury experiences.

Asia’s Pioneers in Responsible Travel

Asia is home to some of the world’s most inspiring pioneers in responsible travel. These destinations and resorts have taken bold steps towards promoting sustainable tourism practices and educating both tourists and locals about the importance of conservation.

Educational and Conservation Initiatives at Pikaia Lodge

Pikaia Lodge, located on the Galapagos Islands, is renowned for its commitment to educational and conservation initiatives. The lodge offers guests the opportunity to participate in various hands-on activities, including guided nature walks, marine excursions, and environmental workshops. Through these experiences, visitors can gain a deeper understanding of the unique ecosystems and wildlife that inhabit the Galapagos, fostering a sense of connection and stewardship towards the environment.

Furthermore, Pikaia Lodge actively supports research and conservation projects on the islands. Their collaborations with local organizations ensure that sustainable practices are implemented, contributing to ongoing conservation efforts. By choosing to stay at Pikaia Lodge, travelers can make a positive impact on the delicate balance of the Galapagos Islands while enjoying a luxurious and immersive experience.

Soneva Fushi and Song Saa: Sanctuaries of Sustainable Indulgence

When it comes to sustainable indulgence, Soneva Fushi in the Maldives and Song Saa in Cambodia are at the forefront. These luxurious resorts have set new standards for responsible travel, seamlessly integrating sustainability into every aspect of the guest experience.

Soneva Fushi prioritizes ecological responsibility through its waste management system, which aims for complete zero waste. The resort recycles and upcycles materials, minimizes single-use plastics, and operates its own carbon-offsetting initiatives. Guests can enjoy organic, locally sourced cuisine, indulge in spa treatments using natural ingredients, and participate in educational activities such as marine conservation and coral rehabilitation projects.

Song Saa, nestled in the Koh Rong Archipelago, focuses on creating positive change for both its guests and the local community. The resort actively supports marine conservation and has established a marine reserve to protect the area’s fragile ecosystems. Guests can engage in diving or snorkeling adventures, participate in beach clean-ups, and learn about sustainable fishing practices. Song Saa also works closely with nearby villages, providing employment opportunities and cultivating a deeper understanding of responsible tourism.

By choosing Soneva Fushi or Song Saa, travelers can embark on unforgettable journeys that combine luxury and sustainability, leaving a lasting positive impact on the environment and local communities.

Commitment to Conservation as the Hallmark of True Luxury

Throughout this article, we have explored the world of eco-luxury and sustainable travel destinations for the elite. One common thread that runs through all these experiences is a strong commitment to conservation . True luxury goes beyond opulence and indulgence; it lies in the harmony between exquisite experiences and the preservation of our planet.

By choosing destinations and resorts that prioritize sustainability, luxury travelers can make a positive impact and support the protection of our environment. The commitment to conservation becomes the hallmark of true luxury , symbolizing a deeper connection to the natural world and a responsibility to future generations.

The Ultimate Journey: Combining Sustainability with Exclusivity

For the discerning traveler, the ultimate journey lies in the seamless combination of sustainability and exclusivity. It is about enjoying the finest experiences while treading lightly on the Earth. From remote wilderness retreats to secluded island escapes, these destinations demonstrate that luxury and sustainability can intertwine harmoniously.

With each trip, luxury travelers have the opportunity to immerse themselves in breathtaking landscapes, support local communities, and contribute to the conservation of our planet. The ultimate journey is not just about the destination; it is a transformative experience that celebrates the beauty of our world and inspires a deeper appreciation for sustainable living.

What is eco-luxury?

What are sustainable travel destinations, what makes a vacation eco-conscious, are there luxury options for environmentally-friendly trips, what is responsible tourism, how can i have an ethical travel experience, which destinations are known for their sustainable tourism practices, what are some environmentally-friendly vacation options, how can i ensure that my travel choices are eco-conscious, are there luxury travel experiences that prioritize sustainability, can i have a luxurious vacation while also being environmentally friendly, how can i support sustainable travel destinations, are there luxury accommodations in remote and eco-conscious locations, source links.

  • https://mccabeworld.com/stories/top-vacation-destinations-for-2024
  • https://www.aluxurytravelblog.com/2024/01/30/discover-the-worlds-most-exclusive-sustainable-retreats/
  • https://elitetraveler.com/travel/hotel-news/the-most-luxurious-eco-friendly-hotels-around-the-world

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Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel

Luxury resort specialists for family, adults-only, honeymoon, destination wedding and adventure travel.

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About Us for Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel

Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel Inc is an award winning travel agency. The staff at Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel has been providing travel services for over 30 years. We have focused on all-inclusive resorts since 2003. We specialize in all-inclusive resorts that we have visited ourselves, evaluate every year and are very familiar with. We charge no fees and we have payment plans with a small down payment. We have a 60% repeat client rate and over 50% of our new bookings are referrals from our satisfied clients. You can see some of the compliments we have received on our Testimonials page .

Because of our extensive knowledge of the Hawaiian Islands, we have added Hawaii as one of our specialties. If you are interested in traveling to Hawaii, please visit our other website, ultimatehawaiivacations.com .

We also, because of our extensive knowledge an the fact that we have a River cruise Specialist on our staff, have added River Cruises and small ship ocean cruises. Please visit our River Cruise pages at River Cruises

Because of the volume of business we do in each of our specialties is high enough we receive the same low pricing as the large Internet travel companies but we are small enough to be able to provide personalized customer service. We will be there to use our unbiased knowledge and experience to assist you with every step of your trip planning process making it a trip that exceeds your expectations. We will also be available to assist you with any needs or issues that arise before, during, and after your trip.

Through our extensive network of suppliers including the top well-respected suppliers in the industry, we can ensure that our customers are getting the most up-to-date information available. We are certified by all the resort chains that we sell. This means that we have participated in extensive training courses and seminars for each resort chain and also visit them on a regular basis.

We are constantly keeping up with new trends in the travel business. Our Travel Blog section  features stories from own experiences at the all-inclusive resorts we visit and some great travel tips. It’s a great way to learn more about our staff as well as get the inside scoop on some of our favorite destinations.

What is Ultimate Choice?

Ultimate Choice resorts are our top-recommended three, four and five-star resorts. You can be assured that any resort with the Ultimate Choice stamp meets with our personal standard of quality and luxury. They have all been hand-selected by our staff as one of the best in their class. When you select an Ultimate Choice resort, it’s pretty hard to go wrong. We also sell other resorts but these resorts are just our top selections.

What does all-inclusive really mean?

When you book your vacation at an all-inclusive resort, your stay provides a minimum of three meals daily, snacks, soft drinks, alcoholic drinks, gratuities, and often other services that are all included in the rate you paid up-front. Most of the resorts also offer land sports, non-motorized water sports, and other activities included such as nightly entertainment.

What kind of all-inclusive resort is right for me?

The first decision you will want to make is what type of resort to choose. We specialize in three main types of all-inclusive resorts:

  • All-Ages Family Resorts
  • Couples-Only Resorts
  • Adults-Only Resorts

All Ages Family Resorts have amenities specifically design for kids and adults to enjoy. Many activities are geared around families. Other than certain areas which might be open only to adults, the majority of the resort is open to anyone. Family-Friendly resorts have kid-friendly pools with lifeguards, kids clubs with activities, games, and even daycare and babysitting facilities to give Mom and Dad a break.

Couples Only Resorts are a great choice for honeymoons, destination weddings or elopements. Guests must be at least 18 years of age or older. These resorts control the couples only factor by only having king-sized beds in each room. These resorts are all about creating romance and luxury for two people in love. Singles are never allowed.

Adults-Only Resorts cater to singles or couples and can be quiet and romantic, or social and lively, it all depends on what you are looking for in a vacation. This is where our experience and knowledge really comes into play. The last thing you want is to select a resort that you think is lively, only to find out that they roll up the carpets at 10:00 PM, conversely, if you select what you think is a quiet, romantic resort only to find out that partying and loud music goes on until 4:00 AM. Guests at an adult only resort must be at least 18 years of age or older.

There really is no one size fits all resort. Can you tell the differences between them?

Why should you book your vacation with us?

Because we’re travelers, just like you. We have been to the resorts that we book, so we know them inside and out. We can use our unbiased knowledge and experience and, once we find out your preferences, we can pair you with exactly the right resort for your wants, needs, and budget. All resorts are not the same, they all cater to a certain type of guest. We are also just a call away to take care of any issues or concerns you may have before, during, and after your trip. We have contacts at all the resorts we deal with. This can help make you vacation special with upgrades and extras. We also only specialize in All-Inclusive Resorts, Hawaii, and River Cruises. We are experts in these areas and don’t try to sell everything to everyone. When you work with us you are using our knowledge, experience (over 30 years), and top  notch service to obtain a vacation or honeymoon that will exceed your expectations.

Isn’t it cheaper for me to use one of the large online booking engines?

Nope, it’s not.  We will not be undersold by any legitimate quote. Just show us the quote you received. We provide a real alternative to the booking engines, especially if you are not sure where you want to go. The booking engines approach is: you do the research, decide what you want, then book it yourself, all based on a ton of information that may or may not be true. When you have an issue you may be on hold for hours and then speak with a call center employee who may or may not be able to help you.

Our approach is: We take the time to understand what you are looking for and we will use our unbiased knowledge and experience to help you decide which resort or resorts fit your criteria and budget. We only require a small down payment and can hold your reservation for 24 hours before you are required to make any payment. We are just a phone call away if you have an issue before, during, or after your trip. We understand the rules and can help you with any issues, all at the same price or less or less than booking yourself.

How can I book my trip with you, for the same cost or less than booking it myself? How does that work?

You don’t pay more with us because of our volume. Because of our volume buying, we get deep discounted prices from our suppliers and pass those savings on to you. If you do happen to see a lower price we can provide the same price or less, just show us what you found and you get the same prices or less as an online booking engine but you also get our knowledge, experience, informed unbiased advice, friendly service, and accountability of a professional informed travel agent/consultant.

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  18. DESTINATION definition in American English

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  23. Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel

    About Us for Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel. Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel Inc is an award winning travel agency. The staff at Ultimate All-Inclusive Travel has been providing travel services for over 30 years. We have focused on all-inclusive resorts since 2003. We specialize in all-inclusive resorts that we have visited ourselves, evaluate ...