One of the most common travel mistakes people make is not realizing that many countries require your passport to be valid for at least six months beyond your return date. Unfortunately, I learned this the hard way. A few years ago, I was flying from Los Angeles to Vancouver with my boyfriend. He printed his boarding pass at the airport kiosk with no problem, but mine wouldn't print. The screen kept flashing "expired document," which made no sense because my passport wasn't expired yet. It turned out my passport was set to expire in less than six months. Many countries require your passport to be valid for at least six months beyond your return date, and airlines enforce this rule because they can face penalties if a traveler arrives without the required documents and is denied entry. The airline wouldn't let me check in or board the flight, and we had to cancel our trip entirely. Now as a family travel blogger who has taken more than 25 flights with my kids, one of the first things I check before booking an international trip is that every passport is valid for at least six months beyond the return date. Jennifer Pham Family Travel Blogger, Diapers to Destinations
Carry Cash While it's not essential for every country you'll visit, there are still many destinations where carrying cash is necessary. Buying street food is a great example. I once made the mistake of lining up for a long time at one of Singapore's famed hawker centres to try a signature noodle dish, only to be left disappointed and hungry when I finally reached the front of the queue and discovered it was cash only. Paying for taxis is another reason to carry cash while travelling. In a time when we're accustomed to ordering Ubers, many countries still don't widely use ride sharing apps, so you'll need to catch a good old-fashioned taxi. After stepping off the plane in Fiji last year, I asked a taxi driver the fare to my hotel and he asked me if I had cash because he couldn't accept card payment. Not wanting to pay airport ATM prices, I was lucky he accepted the last Australian note I had in my wallet. Unfortunately, that meant I overpaid, it would have been cheaper if I could have paid in Fijian Dollars. Do your research before you set off to check whether you should carry cash and consider exchanging some local currency. You don't want to be stuck at the airport without a taxi or missing out on trying the local street food.
The biggest travel mistake I kept making, and the one most people still do, was choosing hotels based on star ratings and review scores alone. For years I'd book the highest rated hotel in a city and end up disappointed. Not because the hotel was bad, but because it was wrong for that trip. A boutique design hotel perfect for a couples' weekend is a terrible pick when you're traveling with a toddler. A business hotel near the convention center is soul crushing when you're trying to explore a city's culture. The lesson was simple but took me embarrassingly long to learn which is that context matters more than quality. A 4.2 star hotel in the right neighborhood, near the right amenities, matched to your actual travel intent, will beat a 4.8 star hotel that's optimized for a completely different kind of traveler. That realization is actually what led me to build Tripvento. We rank hotels not just by how good they are, but by who they're good for. Whether you're a solo explorer, a family with young kids, a remote worker who needs reliable Wi-Fi and a quiet lobby, or a couple looking for a romantic getaway. Same city, completely different rankings depending on the intent. So the advice I'd give is that before you book, ask yourself why you're traveling, not just where. The answer should shape every decision that follows.
One mistake I made early on — and still see travelers make all the time — is underestimating how long it actually takes to get between sites. On paper, places can look quite close together in Egypt, but once you factor in traffic, security checkpoints, and the natural pace of travel, everything takes longer than expected. I've seen people try to fit Cairo, the pyramids, and a museum into one day, and end up rushing through what should be the highlight of their trip. What I learned is that a well-paced itinerary is always better than an overpacked one. When you allow extra time, everything feels more relaxed, and you actually experience a place instead of just moving through it. Now, I always tell travelers: do less, but do it well — it makes a far bigger difference than trying to see everything.
As owner of DFW RV Rentals, I've delivered RVs nationwide for disaster displacements, coordinating 48-72 hour setups with insurance teams. Early on, I placed a pop-up camper for a family of four after a flood; its minimal space and setup hassles turned their recovery into daily frustration over two weeks. Lesson learned: Match RV type to needs--pop-ups suit solo trips, but families need travel trailers' full kitchens and multiple sleeping areas for comfort. Tip: List group size and stay length first; our sanitized fleet ensures spacious options like fifth-wheels avoid cramped surprises.
As a co-owner at Glass Bottom Boats of Islamorada (we run out of Robbie's Marina), the most common travel mistake I made--and see guests repeat--is assuming you can "just show up" and still make a timed departure. I used to cut it close like an airport gate, and I learned boats don't wait once the crew brief, headcount, and safety checks start. Our tours require check-in 30 minutes before departure, and we run 2-hour trips at 9:30am, 12:00pm, 3:00pm, plus a night tour 20 minutes after sunset. I've watched families arrive 10 minutes before, then lose their spot because parking, walking through the marina, and getting everyone settled takes longer than people think--especially with kids or grandparents. What I do now: I set an "arrival deadline" in my phone for 45-60 minutes before the boat leaves, not the departure time. It gives me time for parking, restroom, and (if you're at Robbie's) the inevitable "we have to stop and look at this" detours. Bonus lesson from running a Seakeeper-stabilized boat: don't assume "it'll be fine" if the forecast looks iffy--call and ask what the plan is. On windy days we pivot from reef stops (Cheeca/Alligator/Caloosa) to calmer Florida Bay routes, and knowing that ahead of time sets expectations and saves a lot of frustration.
I once made the mistake of planning some of the main things I wanted to do on a trip for the first day. The reason why this was a mistake was because my flight ended up being cancelled and I wasn't able to make it onto another flight until 24 hours later. So, I missed the entire first day of my trip. I had to try to reshuffle my schedule and find ways to squeeze in the things I had planned for that first day at other times, which was difficult. There were a few things I just couldn't reschedule (like a dinner reservation at a super hard-to-get-into restaurant). From that experience I learned to always leave that first day a bit more empty in case a travel hiccup occurs.
Always have trusted medical insurance! The accident is a funny thing; it does not exist until it happens. And when it happens, time and quality matter. I got very sick on a remote island of Vanuatu - the agent from the medical insurance did not provide any support. It was just my Embassy in Australia and the local people who took me to the hospital. Emergency lines that are supposed to work 24/7 in each country went silent! Take antibiotics and a first aid kit with you whenever you go! It's better to carry extra stuff than to suffer. Take care of yourself ;) We not only live once, we live each day ;)
Biggest travel mistake I made early on: treating a passage like "just a longer drive" and not building a proper window + contingency plan. I learned this the hard way on my first big run after flying solo to Athens at 19--tall ship from Athens to Monte Carlo--where the ocean doesn't care about your schedule, especially when you're responsible for others onboard. Now when I do yacht deliveries, I won't depart until the boring stuff is locked in: correct charts/nav gear, working VHF, and emergency procedures briefed so everyone knows what happens if things go sideways. If any of that is fuzzy, you're not "adventuring," you're gambling. The lesson: don't plan for the best-case day--plan for the day you lose an engine, the weather shifts, or someone gets seasick and you need a safe stop. I evaluate forecast patterns, crew numbers for days at sea, fuel budget/provisioning, and I map bailout points before we cast off; that single habit prevents most "we're stuck and stressed" travel stories. Practical tip: before any trip on water, write a one-page passage plan (ETD/ETA range, fuel burn, comms check, and 2-3 safe alternates) and treat it like a checklist, not a vibe. It's the difference between feeling confident and feeling trapped when conditions change.
My name is Nikita Oleinik, and I am the founder of Qazaq Adventure, an Almaty-based travel company that organizes hiking tours and mountain trips across Kazakhstan. When I first started working as a mountain guide in Kazakhstan, I often noticed the same mistake tourists would make — underestimating how quickly the weather can change in the mountains. In the Tian Shan mountains, conditions can shift within an hour. It might be sunny and warm in the morning, and then suddenly strong winds, rain, or even snow can roll in. I've seen many travelers begin a hike in light clothing simply because it was warm in the city. They assume the hike will be short and easy. But once you gain altitude, temperatures drop quickly and the wind becomes much stronger. That's when people realize how important it is to be prepared. There are several other common mistakes tourists make in the mountains. Many arrive wearing regular sneakers with soft soles that don't grip well on rocky trails. Others bring too little water or underestimate the distance and elevation of the hike. Some assume that if a route looks short on the map, it will be easy — but in the mountains things always feel very different. After years of guiding, I've learned that the mountains follow one simple rule: it's always better to carry an extra jacket or an extra bottle of water than to find yourself unprepared. Good preparation makes a hike not only safer, but much more enjoyable. Nikita Oleinik Founder, Qazaq Adventure https://qazaqadventure.com/ https://www.instagram.com/bionikkz Almaty, Kazakhstan
A common mistake I made was opening travel credit cards at random times and missing out on calendar-year benefits. I learned that timing matters because some cards tie annual credits to the calendar year rather than your cardmember year. By opening certain travel cards in December you can often take advantage of the same annual credit twice in a short period, an effect sometimes called the "triple dip." For example, cards with a $200 airline credit can be redeemed across adjacent calendar years if you time enrollment right. I also discovered that opening a card before the holidays can give you immediate access to lounge benefits and travel protections when they matter most. My practical takeaway is to check whether credits are calendar-year based and consider applying late in the year to maximize the card's first-year value.
Hi there! We actually have two: The Too-Long Excursion: We learned this one the hard way in Costa Rica. We booked a full-day excursion thinking more time meant more value, more to see, more everything. But by hour four, our son was done. Completely done. What should have been an incredible experience turned into us bribing a tired eight-year-old through the back half of the day. Now we cap excursions at three to four hours when kids are involved. A shorter, focused experience where everyone is present beats a marathon day of tears. Skip Checking a Bag: For years we checked bags on every trip — it felt like the safe move with a child. To ensure you have everything you need Then one trip we were forced to carry on only, and it changed everything. No waiting at baggage claim, no $50 fees each way, no anxiety watching the carousel wondering if it made the connection. Everything we needed fit. Now we haven't checked a bag in years, and we actually pack better because of the constraint. Whatever you think you need, you probably don't or you can get at your destination. Hope this helps! Thank you! Erinn Pina CEO, The Travel Trio www.thetraveltrio.com
I booked a week-long trip to southern Morocco in August because the flights were cheap. Nobody told me it would be 47 degrees Celsius in the Sahara region that time of year. We spent most of the trip inside air-conditioned riads instead of exploring. The lesson: cheap flights exist for a reason. Off-season in some destinations isn't just "fewer tourists." It's genuinely uncomfortable or even dangerous weather conditions that locals know to avoid. Now when I plan trips for clients at Sun Trails, seasonality is the first conversation, not the last. Morocco has four completely different climate experiences depending on the region and month. The coast is mild year-round. The interior desert is brutal in summer. The Atlas Mountains get snow in winter. The imperial cities are best in spring and fall. My advice: before you book anything based on price, spend five minutes checking the actual weather data for your specific destination during your travel dates. Not "Morocco weather" in general. The specific city, the specific month. A three-hour drive in Morocco can mean a 15-degree temperature difference.
A travel mistake that taught me a lot was assuming I would always have reliable internet access when I needed important information. On one trip I had my hotel confirmation, transportation details, and even museum tickets saved in email and cloud apps. It felt organized at the time, until I landed in a city where the airport WiFi barely worked and my phone signal was inconsistent. Standing outside the airport trying to pull up an address or booking confirmation suddenly became stressful, and it made the first hour of the trip far more complicated than it needed to be. That experience changed the way I prepare for travel. Now I make sure essential details are accessible offline and easy to reach. One trick that has worked surprisingly well is creating a simple QR code using Freeqrcode.ai that links to a single travel page or document with all my trip information. I keep that code saved on my phone and sometimes print a small copy inside my passport holder. Even if my inbox is cluttered or an app fails to load quickly, I can scan the code and instantly open the page that holds hotel addresses, reservation numbers, emergency contacts, and transportation instructions. It sounds like a small adjustment, yet it removes a lot of friction during those moments when you are tired, navigating a new place, and just need the right information without digging through ten different apps.
A mistake I made early on: assuming "extended stay = hotel is fine" and not locking in a real living setup when I was going to be in Chicago for 30+ days. I'm a corporate housing specialist at Ryan Corporate Housing, and I've watched the same assumption quietly blow up budgets and routines for execs, medical travelers, and relocating families. One real case: a client booked a nightly place (think short-term rental/hotel style) for what became a 60-90 day medical stay, and the add-ons piled up--cleaning/service fees, taxes, and constant meal costs because there wasn't a full kitchen rhythm. When they switched into a furnished corporate apartment with a flat monthly rate (utilities + secured Wi-Fi included, full kitchen, often in-unit laundry), their costs stabilized and their day-to-day stress dropped fast. What I learned: as soon as your trip looks like it could cross ~30 days, plan it like a temporary home, not a vacation. Ask upfront: "Is it a flat monthly rate or nightly with taxes/fees?", "Is Wi-Fi/utilities included?", "Do I have in-unit laundry and a real workspace?", and "Can I extend month-to-month if my dates change?" Also, don't underestimate the 'first-night problem'--arriving late and realizing you need basics. Our apartments are stocked so people aren't running to a store at 10pm, and we run a 24-hour QA turnaround so you're not gambling on cleanliness; that one operational detail saves more trips than people realize.
My biggest travel mistake was not researching local transportation options before arriving in a new city. I once landed in Bangkok and assumed ride-sharing apps would work the same as at home. Instead I ended up paying triple the normal fare to a taxi driver who took the longest possible route. The lesson was that spending 30 minutes before any trip researching how locals actually get around saves both money and stress. Now I always check if the city has a metro system, what the standard taxi fares should be, and whether there are local transport apps that work better than international ones. This simple preparation has saved me hundreds of dollars across multiple trips and eliminated the anxiety of being taken advantage of as a tourist.
Over 30 years managing Doma Shipping, I've orchestrated thousands of relocations from the US to Poland, blending shipments with travel bookings. My big mistake was once rushing a family relocation parcel without double-checking the detailed inventory list, leading to a 10-day customs hold in Gdynia despite air shipping's usual 5-10 day delivery. I learned to mandate full documentation--passport, visa, itemized lists--two weeks early; now our team preps everything, slashing delays and letting clients book synced flights worry-free. Pair sea parcels (weeks-long) with flexible travel; use our tracking to time arrivals perfectly and avoid stranding belongings.
Years ago, when I wasn't living full-time in Cozumel, I did something that lots of travelers do when they're just trying to "experience" as much of their destination as possible. I planned too many things into my daily itinerary. You probably have experienced the feeling; waking up early, rushing to a beach, grabbing some food, taking a tour, and then heading out to the next thing on your list. This all seemed to remind me of the older style travel guide books from the 1990's that were filled with lists of things to see/do. It appeared on paper as if it would be a busy but productive day. However, in reality, it was very exhausting. Cozumel Has a Different Pace of Life In Cozumel, there is a different pace of life than what most of us are used to. Here is an example of how one morning could look. Start by sipping a cup of coffee on your patio. Then take a slow walk around the area. Depending on the tide, maybe take a snorkeling trip after the sun comes up a little bit and the blue-green waters turn that brilliant turquoise everyone photographs. At this point, traveling feels good again. What I Tell My Traveler Friends Today When planning your trip to Cozumel, leave some space in your daily planner. Not necessarily blank time. Just a little extra breathing room. Extra time to get another cup of coffee. Time to spend with the local folks. Time to watch the sun set without looking at the clock. And interestingly enough, those less hectic times usually create the lasting memories visitors bring back home. NOT the rushed ones.
Biggest mistake I made early on: booking a sailing delivery trip without verifying the marina's tidal schedule and entry depth in advance. We arrived at low tide in a shallow-cut Virginia inlet with a 6-foot keel and couldn't get in -- wasted half a day anchored offshore waiting for water. Now I treat every coastal transit the same way I treat a yacht transaction -- due diligence first. I pull NOAA tide tables, cross-reference the marina's controlling depth, and confirm entrance range with the dockmaster directly before we ever leave the dock. Deltaville, where Norton Yachts is based, is actually a designated USCG Harbor of Safe Refuge -- meaning it's designed to handle exactly these kinds of situations. But most stops along the Chesapeake aren't, and assuming they are is how you end up stuck. The fix is simple: add 30 minutes to your pre-departure checklist specifically for tidal and depth research. It costs nothing and saves you from the kind of delay that can cascade into missed weather windows, extra fuel burn, and real safety exposure.
One travel mistake I made—and one I see many people repeat—is trying to do too much in too little time. On one of my early trips, I planned an ambitious itinerary covering multiple cities in just a few days. On paper, it looked exciting: famous spots, local markets, temples, viewpoints—everything packed in neatly. But in reality, it turned into a rushed, exhausting experience. I remember constantly checking the clock, worrying about the next destination, and barely having time to actually feel the place I was in. Instead of enjoying the sunrise, I was already thinking about the next bus. Instead of relaxing at a cafe, I was calculating travel time. By the end of the trip, I had visited many places—but experienced very little. That trip taught me a valuable lesson: travel is not about ticking off locations, it's about creating memories. Now, I always plan with breathing space. I keep fewer destinations and allow extra time for each. This gives me the freedom to explore hidden corners, talk to locals, and enjoy unplanned moments—like discovering a quiet street, attending a local festival, or simply sitting and absorbing the atmosphere. Another thing I learned is to always factor in delays—whether it's traffic, weather, or just fatigue. Over planning leaves no room for reality, and that's where stress begins. If I could give one piece of advice, it would be this: slow down your travel plans. Choose quality over quantity. You'll come back with better stories, deeper experiences, and far less stress. In the end, the best trips aren't the busiest ones—they're the ones you truly live.