The Travel Advice Everyone Gives That We Stopped Following, And Why Our Trips Got Better

Travel advice is everywhere. Scroll social media for five minutes and you’ll be told to wake up before sunrise, visit destinations during shoulder season, avoid tourist traps, pack light, stay in the city center, and always seek out hidden gems.

Some of this advice is useful, some of it is outdated, and some of it sounds good on the internet but falls apart in the real world. After years of traveling across North America, Europe, Africa, and the Pacific, we’ve learned something surprising. Many of the travel “rules” people swear by simply don’t work for everyone.

In fact, some of our best travel experiences happened because we ignored conventional wisdom entirely. The truth is that travel has become increasingly personal. What works for a backpacker in their twenties may not work for a couple planning the adventure of a lifetime.

“Avoid Tourist Attractions”

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

Few pieces of travel advice are repeated more often than the idea that tourists should avoid tourist attractions. The logic seems reasonable. If everyone goes there, it must be overrated.

The reality is often the opposite. Some places become famous because they are genuinely extraordinary. Mont Saint-Michel attracts millions of visitors because there is simply nothing else quite like it. The same can be said for Glacier Bay in Alaska, the Serengeti in Tanzania, or the Sphere in Las Vegas.

The mistake is not visiting famous attractions. The mistake is visiting them exactly the way everyone else does. Tourist attractions are not the problem. Surface-level experiences are.

“Always Choose The Cheapest Flight”

Photo Credit: Deposit Photos.

This advice can save money, but it can also ruin a trip before it begins. Years ago, we often booked the least expensive flight available. We would endure long layovers, awkward connections, and exhausting travel days to save a few hundred dollars.

Eventually, we started calculating the real cost. An extra eight hours in airports, increased stress, greater risk of delays, and lost vacation time can turn a bargain into a bad decision.

Today, we often view airfare through a different lens. If a slightly more expensive itinerary gives us additional time at a destination or significantly reduces travel fatigue, that extra cost frequently delivers better value.

“You Need To See Everything”

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

Many travelers unknowingly turn their vacations into endurance events. Every hour gets scheduled, every attraction gets pinned on a map, and every day becomes a race against the clock.

We understand the temptation because we used to do the same thing. Then we visited destinations where slowing down produced better results, especially in places like Alaska, Tanzania, and France.

During an UnCruise expedition in Alaska, some of our favorite moments happened when there was no agenda at all. We sat on deck watching humpback whales surface in the distance, lingered in remote coves, and spent time talking with guides and crew members who understood the region far better than any guidebook.

“Luxury Travel Isn’t Authentic”

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

There is a persistent belief that luxury and authenticity cannot coexist. That assumption misses an important reality because authenticity is not determined by price.

Some luxury experiences create remarkable access to people, places, and cultures. During our travels, we have enjoyed luxury safari camps, mountain resorts, expedition cruises, and boutique hotels. What mattered was never the thread count of the sheets or the size of the room.

What mattered was whether the experience helped us connect more deeply with the destination. A great guide in Tanzania, a naturalist in Alaska, a local historian in Tennessee, or a chef explaining regional traditions in Quebec can turn a trip into something unforgettable.

“The Hidden Gem Is Always Better”

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

The internet loves hidden gems. Every destination supposedly has a secret beach, an undiscovered town, or a restaurant known only to locals.

Sometimes those places are wonderful, and sometimes they are hidden for a reason. One of the most valuable lessons we’ve learned is that popularity alone is not a reason to avoid something.

Thunder Bay, Ontario surprised us because it was not on our radar. At the same time, Glacier Bay exceeded expectations despite being one of Alaska’s most celebrated destinations. The smartest travelers don’t chase hidden gems or famous attractions. They remain open to both.

“Travel Is About Escaping Reality”

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

For many years, travel marketing focused on escape. Escape your job, your responsibilities, your schedule, and your daily life.

Yet some of our favorite trips did not feel like an escape at all. Instead, they felt like an extension of the things we already love, including hiking, wildlife, photography, cycling, music, and local history.

That realization changed how we travel. Rather than asking where everyone else is going, we started asking which destinations align with our passions. The result has been more fulfilling experiences and fewer disappointing trips.

“Bad Weather Ruins A Trip”

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

This may be the most overrated travel myth of all. Would we prefer sunshine every day? Of course, but some of our favorite photographs and experiences happened because the weather refused to cooperate.

Storm clouds create dramatic landscapes. Fog transforms ordinary scenes into something mysterious. Rain often drives away crowds, especially in places where people are chasing the same postcard-perfect view.

In Iceland, Alaska, and parts of Canada, weather changes by the hour. If you wait for perfect conditions, you may spend the entire trip waiting. Experienced travelers learn to adapt rather than complain.

“You Have To Travel Far To Have A Great Adventure”

Photo Credit: Explore Ridgeland.

Social media often makes it seem as though meaningful travel requires crossing oceans. The reality is much simpler.

Some of the most memorable experiences we’ve enjoyed were surprisingly close to home. We’ve explored remarkable music history throughout Tennessee, cycled scenic trails in Mississippi, discovered fascinating communities across Alabama, and uncovered hidden outdoor adventures throughout the American South.

Distance does not determine adventure. Curiosity does. Many travelers spend years dreaming about faraway destinations while overlooking extraordinary experiences in their own region.

The Best Travel Rule Is Knowing Which Rules To Ignore

Photo Credit: Jenn Coleman.

Travel advice can be helpful, but it can also become limiting. The longer we travel, the more convinced we become that there is no universal formula for the perfect trip.

Some travelers thrive on packed itineraries while others prefer slow exploration. Some seek luxury resorts while others prefer remote wilderness. Some love iconic attractions while others enjoy wandering without a plan.

None of these approaches are wrong. The best trip is not the one that follows someone else’s rules. It is the one that leaves you excited to plan the next adventure.

That might mean photographing wildlife in Tanzania, hiking glaciers in Alaska, exploring musical history in Tennessee, cycling through Mississippi, or discovering an unexpected favorite destination you had barely heard of before you arrived.

Travel becomes infinitely more rewarding when you stop worrying about doing it the “right” way. The truth is that there is no right way. There is only your way, and that is exactly what makes travel so extraordinary.