By Travel + Leisure – When the time comes to travel again, these destinations — all right in your own backyard — are the ones to visit next.
Even for the compulsive jetsetters among us, it’s a simple truth that most travel stories are aspirational in the best of times. There are too many incredible places to see, not enough vacation days, and sometimes we all have to content ourselves with scrawling another spot on the bucket list and hoping the stars align.
But this year, as we all sat at home and watched the world come to a halt, “aspirational” took on new meaning. When restrictions relaxed this summer, the familiar wanderlust crept back in. With even the most straightforward international getaways ruled out, and many travelers still hesitant to hop on a plane, even simple trips — scenic drives, camping weekends, staycations across town — suddenly felt novel and luxurious.
Some spots on the list ahead are newly blossoming thanks to hotel or infrastructure developments or revamped cultural attractions. Others caught on this summer, as social distancing made empty expanses of wilderness more compelling than ever and we all looked for new wells of charm in our own home states. What they all have in common is that singularity that makes a destination memorable — the sense that this place has something to offer that you won’t find anywhere else in the world.
Ahead, Travel + Leisure’s 50 best places to travel in 2021, listed in alphabetical order.
1. Alaska’s Coast
In the midst of the pandemic, Alaska’s entire May to September cruise season was cancelled in 2020. That left some 1.3 million travelers unable to board ships to experience thunderously calving glaciers, frolicking humpback whales, lively gold rush towns, and fascinating Alaska Native arts scenes. Tourism providers missed serious income. Cruise lines and local officials express muted optimism about 2021, which may be the best year to see Alaska given that cruise ships are unlikely to sail full and coastal towns won’t have their typical crowds even post-vaccine rollout. Or skip the civilization part: Vast national parks such as Glacier Bay, Misty Fjords, and Kenai Fjords are best reached by boat. Small ship soft-adventure lines such as UnCruise Adventures and Lindblad Expeditions — and ultra-luxurious Seabourn with its zodiac and kayak exploration program on the 450-passenger Seabourn Odyssey — have one-week itineraries that spend most of their time in the wild. For more privacy, rent the six-passenger, 78-foot Sea Mist for a luxury yachting experience in Prince William Sound, home to more active tidewater glaciers than anywhere else in the world. — Fran Golden
2. Astoria, Oregon
Credit: Getty Images
Goonies never say die, and neither does the nostalgia of visiting Astoria, the northwestern Oregon town at the mouth of the Columbia River where the ‘80s cult classic film was shot. The oldest American settlement in the West, this charming seaside town evokes a simpler time with its colorful Victorian houses and treasure-filled antique shops. Around these parts, freshness matters only for fish and beer. A new mobile passport program by the North Coast Craft Beer Trail ensures drinkers find their way to both big names like Fort George Brewery — famous for its IPAs — and smaller spots like the 20-barrel Buoy Beer, built in a former fish cannery right on the river. It’s one of many old cannery sites that have found new lives here, most notably the boutique Cannery Pier Hotel, where new ownership plans a February unveiling of renovations to its spa — famed for the Finnish sauna and water-view hot tub. Though the town made its name on tinned fish, Astoria now thrives on the direct connection to fresh seafood at places like South Bay Wild Fish House, from the family behind a fishing vessel of the same name. At their restaurant, sustainably caught Dungeness crab, Oregon pink shrimp, black cod, and more goes direct from boat to bánh mì. — Naomi Tomky
3. The Berkshires
4. Big Sky, Montana
5. Birmingham, Alabama
6. The Black Hills of South Dakota
7. Buffalo, New York
8. Burlington, Vermont
9. Cape May, New Jersey
10. The Catskills
11. Cincinnati, Ohio
12. Delaware
13. Denver’s Lower Highlands
14. Florida’s Middle Keys
15. Fort Worth, Texas
16. Galena, Illinois
17. Grand Staircase-Escalante, Utah
18. The Gulf Coast
19. Indianapolis, Indiana
20. Kansas City, Missouri
21. Las Vegas
22. Lexington, Kentucky
23. Lopez Island, Washington
24. Los Angeles
25. Miami
26. Nantucket
27. Nashville
28. New Orleans
29. New York City
30. North Carolina’s Triangle
31. Northern Minnesota
32. Northwest Arkansas
33. Oahu, Hawaii
34. Omaha, Nebraska
35. Orlando
36. Palm Springs, California
37. Park City, Utah
38. Rhode Island
39. Richmond, Virginia
40. The Rockies
41. Santa Fe, New Mexico
42. The Sea Islands
43. Sonoma, California
44. Texas Hill Country
45. Tucson, Arizona
46. Tulsa, Oklahoma
47. The U.S. National Parks
48. Washington, D.C.
49. White Sands, New Mexico
50. Wyoming
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