Small Travel Items/Nomad Cities/Past Year’s Trends
Nomadico issue #136
A weekly newsletter with four quick bites, edited by Tim Leffel, author of A Better Life for Half the Price and The World’s Cheapest Destinations. See past editions here, where your like-minded friends can subscribe and join you.
Stocking Stuffers for Travelers
If you’ve got a budding traveler in the house you’ll be in this season, I’ve got a few suggestions for stocking stuffers that will actually be appreciated. The ideal item is something that’s small, easy to pack, and is generic enough that it isn’t impacted by the recipient’s personal style preferences. Some items we’ve covered that fit the bill are an indestructible spork, a retractable luggage lock, Sugru bonding fixer, or reusable gear ties from Nite Ize.
A New Nomad Cities Site
Add RoamRank to the list of sites crawling the web to get data on where digital nomads should go live. It only took me 20 seconds to spot some errors: the word “accrurate” when talking about their data sets and the “places where weed is legal” having several where it’s really not. But the costs of living are fairly close to the reality I’ve seen lately in Bangkok ($1,496 monthly), Barcelona ($2,026), and Prague ($1,707), though Budapest is definitely more expensive than Sofia, which they have about equal. – submitted by Mark F. of Recomendoz
Norse Atlantic Now on Kayak and Skyscanner
Budget airlines crossing an ocean are rare since few of them last, but Norse Atlantic is still hanging in there, flying between five cities in the USA and seven in Europe, plus a couple of routes to Bangkok and Cape Town. You wouldn’t discover any of that without going to their website before, but now they’re in the back-end booking system Sabre, which means they’ll show up in regular flight searches from now on, in places like Kayak and Skyscanner.
Travel Trends from 2024
Travel Pulse reported on a study from a travel insurance company with trends they saw this past year, based on data from all the policies purchased. Insurance claims were way up, first of all, with flight cancellations being the #1 culprit. Other notes: boomers took 39% of all trips, a third of travelers opted for a cruise, and “average trip cost for Americans in 2024 was $5,861, up 25% from 2023.” For an average vacation of 17 days though, which seems really long for Americans. It looks like the people buying travel insurance the most are the ones going on really long cruises…
12/26/24