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If you're considering travel to Iran as an American, you need to understand the political landscape because sanctions, diplomatic relations, and political tensions directly affect your ability to travel, spend money, and stay safe. Travel Advisory...
Let's be direct: getting an Iran visa as an American is the most difficult of almost any country in the world. While it's not impossible, the process is significantly more complex for Americans. Here's exactly how it works. Travel Advisory from US...
Iran isn't just old — it's one of the cradles of human civilization. When Rome was still a village, Persia was building an empire that stretched from Egypt to India. When most of Europe was in the Dark Ages, Isfahan was the "Half the World" — one of ...
For Americans, the tour operator isn't just a convenience — it's a legal requirement. Iran mandates that citizens of the US, UK, and Canada travel with a government-licensed guide throughout their stay. Your tour operator is simultaneously your visa ...
You land in Tehran. You walk out of the airport into a country that your government tells you not to visit, that your media portrays as hostile, and whose leaders regularly chant "Death to America" on television. You're nervous. And within 30 minutes...
This might surprise you: there are Americans in Iran right now. Not many, and they're not there casually — but they exist, and their stories paint a more nuanced picture of US-Iran relations than the headlines suggest. Who Are the Americans in Ira...
We're not going to sugarcoat this. The US State Department rates Iran as Level 4: Do Not Travel — its highest warning level, the same as active war zones like Syria, Somalia, and Yemen. That sounds terrifying. But the reasons for Iran's Level 4 ratin...
Getting to Iran from the United States requires some coordination and massive planning. There are no direct flights between the US and Iran, and there haven't been for decades. US sanctions do mean that no American airlines can fly there, and Iran's ...
Here's the paradox of traveling to Iran as an American: the country itself is incredibly cheap, but getting there is expensive. Iran's currency has lost enormous value against the dollar due to sanctions and inflation, which means your money goes abs...
The short answer: yes, people absolutely still travel to Iran — and the numbers might surprise you. Before COVID-19, Iran was receiving over 8 million international visitors per year. While the pandemic and geopolitical tensions reduced those numbers...