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UK Travel ETA Requirement – How to Apply for Your UK Travel Authorization Planning a trip to the United Kingdom? If you're a visitor from a visa-exempt country, you may need a travel authorization called a UK Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA)....
Morocco's economy is powered by a mix of large state-owned enterprises, dynamic private conglomerates, and a growing number of multinational subsidiaries. Whether you're a potential investor, job seeker, or business partner, understanding the corpora...
Chile is one of the most geographically extraordinary countries on earth — a sliver 4,300km long and nowhere more than 180km wide, stretching from the driest desert on the planet in the north to the sub-Antarctic wilderness of Patagonia in the so...
South America is one of the world's great destinations for shopping — particularly if you are interested in things that are genuinely produced there rather than imported and relabelled. Three countries stand out for the sheer quality and uniquene...
Rwanda is a country that demands you update your understanding of Africa. In 1994, it experienced one of the worst genocides in modern history — approximately 800,000 people killed in 100 days. Thirty years later, it is one of the fastest-growing e...
Italy has a well-worn tourist trail: Rome, Venice, Florence, the Amalfi Coast, Cinque Terre. They're famous for a reason, and they're worth seeing. But Italy is a country of 20 regions and thousands of years of layered history. What follows are ei...
Denver has no shortage of great restaurants, but none of them come close to matching the sheer strangeness and history of the Buckhorn Exchange. Open since 1893, it's the oldest restaurant in Colorado — and one of the most genuinely unusual dining ex...
If you're a smoker and you fly internationally, you already know the drill: most airports have eliminated indoor smoking entirely, and lighting up means leaving the terminal, going through security again, or waiting hours until you land. But some maj...
Lebanon entered 2026 in a condition that its residents describe with characteristic gallows humour as "the new normal" — which is to say, better than 2020 (the Beirut port explosion), better than 2023 (the southern border escalation with Israel),...
Japan consists of 6,852 islands, of which 421 are inhabited. The four main islands — Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Shikoku — account for approximately 97% of the total land area. The remaining 6,800+ are an extraordinary archipelago of volcanic peaks...
Hamburg is Germany's second largest city and, by historical wealth, arguably its most important. It is a city-state — one of three in Germany (alongside Berlin and Bremen) — meaning that Hamburg city and Hamburg state are the same political entity. I...
Bhutan is a tiny Buddhist kingdom in the eastern Himalayas, landlocked between India and China, with a population of just 780,000 people. It had no roads until the 1960s, no television until 1999, and deliberately maintained strict controls over tour...
Mexico is the world's 10th largest country by area, home to 130 million people, 35 UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and some of the most extraordinary cuisine, natural landscapes, and pre-Columbian history on the planet. It is also the subject of travel ...
North Macedonia is a small, landlocked country in the southern Balkans bordered by Albania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Kosovo. It was part of Yugoslavia until 1991, spent the following 25 years in a diplomatic standoff with Greece over its name (r...
Portugal is one of the oldest nation-states in Europe — its borders have remained essentially unchanged since 1139 AD — and its physical landscape tells a much longer story. Here are the ancient and historic sites that every visitor seriously interes...
Hungary sits in the Carpathian Basin at the geographic heart of Europe, bordered by Austria, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia. It is a landlocked country of 10 million people with a language related to nothing else in Europe,...
Paris is frequently ranked among the world's most expensive cities. It is also a city where you can spend a week of extraordinary experiences without paying for most of them. Here are ten things — genuinely good, not consolation prizes — that are fre...
Between 1850 and 1920, over 1.3 million Swedes emigrated to the United States — at one point representing the third-largest immigrant group after Germans and Irish. They settled predominantly in the Upper Midwest (Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa...
LoDo — Lower Downtown Denver — is the roughly 25-block area bounded by the South Platte River to the west, Larimer Street to the north, 20th Street to the east, and Speer Boulevard to the south. It is today Denver's most densely packed dining and nig...
Japan is by virtually every measure the most comprehensively designed country in the world for blind and visually impaired navigation. What makes this particularly remarkable is that the infrastructure is not a recent accessibility retrofit — it is a...
Denver Union Station opened in 1881 and immediately established itself as one of the most important railroad junctions in the American West. At its peak, 80 trains a day passed through its platforms. Today, after a $500 million regeneration, it's the...
Denver International Airport opened in 1995, ran 16 months behind schedule, cost $4.8 billion (more than double the original estimate), and immediately began generating conspiracy theories that have never quite stopped. Here's what's actually true — ...
There are 23 million bicycles in the Netherlands — more than one for every person. Every day, Dutch people cycle 14 million kilometres collectively. The country has over 35,000 kilometres of dedicated cycle paths. This is not a quirk of Dutch charact...
The pub in Ireland predates the nation itself. For centuries it served as the community centre, the post office waiting room, the wake venue, and the only heated place to meet in a wet country. That history hasn't gone away. Walk into the right pub o...
After you've read the list of what you can't do in Qatar, here's the good news: Qatar has invested billions of dollars in creating extraordinary things to see and do. It's a genuinely surprising destination for curious travelers. Visit the Museum ...
In the center of Salt Lake City, Utah, stands one of the most recognizable religious landmarks in the Western Hemisphere: Temple Square, a 35-acre complex that serves as the global headquarters and most sacred site of the Church of Jesus Christ of La...
Dubai has made an industry out of redefining what "luxury" means. In a city with dozens of seven-figure penthouses and floating villas, pinpointing the "most expensive" hotel is genuinely contested — but one name consistently leads every list: the Bu...
Sweden's reputation is clean design, sensible social democracy, and stunning fjords — all true. But Sweden also contains some of the most wonderfully strange places in all of Europe. Here are five that prove the country has a deeply weird side worth ...
Walk into any bar in the Czech city of České Budějovice — known in German as Budweis — and order a Budweiser. You'll get a crisp, full-bodied Czech lager that has been brewed here since 1895. It has nothing to do with the American beer you might know...
Latvia may be small, but it punches far above its weight when it comes to things to see and do. Here are the top 10 places you shouldn't miss. 1. Riga Old Town The UNESCO-listed Old Town is the beating heart of the Latvian capital. Wander through...