Find Your Next Adventure

Seasonal picks, hidden gems, travel trends, and the nudge you didn’t know you needed.

Not sure where to go next? That’s literally the point of this page. Whether you’ve got a month in mind and need a destination, or you’re just scrolling for ideas on a Tuesday night, we’ve got you covered. Seasonal travel picks, trending destinations, bucket list experiences, and the kind of trip ideas that’ll make you open Skyscanner in a new tab before you’ve finished reading.

12 Monthly Guides

Where to go, every month

Destination Roundups

Curated travel lists

Travel Trends

What's hot right now

Seasonal Picks

The best trips by season

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FAQs

How do I decide where to travel next?

Start with what you’ve got: your budget, your available dates, and what kind of trip you’re in the mood for. If you’ve got a month in mind, check our month-by-month guides above. They’ll match you with destinations that are at their best during that specific time. If you’re completely open, browse the seasonal picks or destination roundups and see what grabs you. Sometimes the best trips start with a photo that makes you think “yeah, I need to go there.”

It depends on what you want. May, June, and September are the sweet spot for most of Europe. Warm enough for outdoor exploring, not so packed that every restaurant has a queue. July and August are peak season (and peak prices) but they’re the only option if you’re tied to school holidays. December is magic for Christmas markets in Germany, Austria, and the Czech Republic. And shoulder months like April and October are genuinely underrated for southern Europe: think Greece, Portugal, and southern Italy.

Southeast Asia is still the gold standard for budget travel. Countries like Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, and Indonesia offer incredible experiences for £25-40/US$30-50/€28-45 per day. In Europe, look at Portugal, the Balkans (especially Montenegro and Albania), and Poland. Mexico and Guatemala are great value in the Americas. The trick is timing: travelling in shoulder season almost always cuts costs by 20-30% compared to peak.

Set-jetting (visiting filming locations from popular shows and movies) is still massive. Noctourism, exploring cities and natural sites after dark, is growing fast. Slow travel continues to rise as people swap the 10-countries-in-2-weeks approach for spending proper time in one place. Coolcations (heading somewhere cold instead of defaulting to beach holidays) are also trending, especially among travellers who’ve done the Mediterranean thing already.

For popular destinations in peak season, 3-6 months is smart. Flights to long-haul destinations like Southeast Asia, Australia, and South America tend to be cheapest 4-6 months out. European short-haul flights can often be grabbed 6-10 weeks before. Accommodation varies wildly: unique stays like treehouses and overwater villas book up months ahead, while standard hotels are often cheaper closer to the date. The one universal rule? The more flexible your dates, the less you’ll pay.

Both work, but for different people and different trips. If you’re visiting somewhere for the first time and it involves expensive flights, plan the big stuff (flights, key accommodation, must-do experiences) and leave gaps for spontaneity. If you’re doing a road trip or backpacking through a region you know a bit, lean into spontaneity. The worst trips are the ones that are planned to the hour with no breathing room. The second worst are the ones with no plan at all where you waste days figuring out logistics.

The “book on a Tuesday” thing is largely a myth at this point. Airlines use dynamic pricing that changes constantly. What actually saves money: being flexible on dates (even shifting by a day or two can save 20-30%), booking directly with airlines rather than through third-party sites for customer service, and setting up price alerts so you grab dips. Also, flying midweek (Tuesday to Thursday departures) is genuinely cheaper than weekend flights on most routes.

Use fare comparison tools like Skyscanner with the “Everywhere” destination option to see the cheapest flights from your airport. Set up Google Flights price tracking for routes you’re interested in. Follow deal-alert accounts on social media (Secret Flying, Jack’s Flight Club). For accommodation, compare Booking.com prices with direct hotel booking: direct is often cheaper with added perks. And don’t sleep on package deals for popular resort destinations. They’re not exciting, but they can be 30-40% cheaper than booking everything separately.

Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. If you click through and make a purchase, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools and services I genuinely think are useful for travellers, and your support helps keep The Travel Tinker running (and lets me keep making free planning tools and guides).

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