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Travel FAQ: answers to the most-asked questions about visas, safety, booking, packing, transport and etiquette for destinations worldwide. The reference you wish someone had handed you before your first trip.
Walk 5+ minutes away from main squares, eat where locals queue, avoid restaurants with picture menus in 5 languages, check Google reviews in the local language (filter Italian in Rome, French in Paris). Apps like Spotted by Locals and EatingEurope curate vetted local spots.
Yes, if you’re not an EU citizen. The EU’s EHIC card covers basic medical for EU residents in other EU countries; everyone else can face €5,000-50,000 bills for an emergency room visit. Policies start at $20-30 per person per week and cover cancellation, lost baggage and emergencies.
Immediately: (1) file a police report (needed for insurance and replacement), (2) contact your country’s embassy/consulate for an emergency passport (24-72 hours typical), (3) cancel your credit cards, (4) notify your airline about the return flight. Always travel with a photocopy of your passport kept separately from the original.
Depends heavily on country. In the US, tipping is cultural (restaurants, bars, taxis, hotels, hairdressers, spas). In Japan, never tip. In most of Europe, tipping is light — round up or leave 5-10% for good service. South America is mixed; Scandinavia usually has service included.
For Europe, US, Canada, Japan, Australia: just ensure your standard vaccinations are current (tetanus, MMR, COVID). For Southeast Asia, Latin America and Africa: Hepatitis A, Typhoid are often recommended, and Yellow Fever is required for certain countries. Check your government’s travel health site 6-8 weeks before departure.