You can travel to Rome and skip the pizza place your friend told you about but you have to visit the Colosseum. Some travel destinations are simply a must-see. But that doesn't mean you'll like them.
To learn more about these questionable places, Reddit user u/superlemondaze made a post on the platform, asking: "What's a tourist attraction you've been to that was 100% not worth the hype?" And people responded.
As of today, the question has 23.6K upvotes and 17.2K comments, many of which describe why some of the most popular spots can feel overcrowded, overpriced, and simply overrated.
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The glass bridge over the grand canyon.
Total rip-off tourist trap.
It takes HOURS to get there from Vegas
They charge you $20 to park in an empty desert
They charge you $30 per person to take the bus from the parking to the attraction (it's like walking from parking into a mall - no distance at all!)
Then they charge you $30 per person if you actually want to walk on the bridge
You cannot take pictures or bring a camera onto the bridge, but they will sell them to you, of course.
There is one overpriced place to eat where they sell you canned food heated up in a microwave for big money... or you could drive 5 hours back to Vegas...
Go there to get scalped.
It is now and it should stay there. As a warning for everyone on how scamming isn't only an internet thingy.
Load More Replies...I never understood the joy of any of the tourist spots tbh, I'd rather go where the locals go.
The skywalk is owned by the Hualapai tribe, which like most Native American tribes suffers from higher than average rates of poverty and unemployment. You know the price and what it offers, so either go there or don't. But "go there to get scalped" is a cheap shot.
Agreed. i have been, and stayed the night at their little "western town" lodge thing nearby, also owned by the Hualapai, and located on the rim. I took my friend who is from a tropical island and third world country. This, to her, was a dream experience. For some people, it is worth it to have those silly touristy things. What is gimmicky and weird to you, can be golden memories to the woman standing right next to you. And i remember this and try to see places from a non-American perspective.
Load More Replies...But the canyon itself is one of the greatest things on the planet.
Ummm.... you could just go, y'know, LOOK AT THE GRAND CANYON. There's lots of places to do that. it's rather large, y'know....
Your tone and attitude implies you have a problem with this person, but the content of your post suggests you completely agree with them and the intent of this overall thread. Not sure what point your are trying to make.
Load More Replies...There's no need to do the gimmicky glass bridge. The canyon itself is a natural wonder that no photo can do justice to. Don't let this person put you off going to see it. To me, it sounds like someone who can barely tolerate being out of a city anyway....and "empty desert"? The desert is beautiful - you just have to know what to look at.
I don't think they were knocking the entire Grand Canyon experience, just the glass bridge site.
Load More Replies...There's a fabulous little town nearby with the greatest diner and pies!
Don’t not go to see the canyon because of this post. It’s absolutely beautiful and there are so many places you can see that beauty for free.
Load More Replies...Driving there and back from Vegas seems like doing that visit the hard way. They should have done a little research and found the non-touristy way to visit. A few years back we went through the Tombstone area on a road trip and wanted to make a quick stop. We totally avoided the corral area as it's a major tourist trap, however, we found an interesting museum there in a preserved theater/saloon. It was a historical museum with tours that included history about the area, people and life in that time period. We also respectfully visited Boot Hill cemetery just a little ways out of town. They have a little store with caretakers who keep an eye on the cemetery, and remind visitors to be respectful as there many people laid to rest there. It's a fascinating experience if you're a history buff.
Tombstone is probably one of the greatest places I've ever been. Loved the old town!
Load More Replies...I just went myself...they didnt charge for the bus, maybe they stopped, but it was definitely not worth the money. The views are better just hiking around yourself without going onto the skywalk.
You should absolutely go see the canyon but don't go to one of the observation points find one of the smaller points and walk to the canyon a little ways down the road. Best views for free.
It doesn't even belong to Grand Canyon National Park. It's a tourist trap
Everything involving money is a scam. Especially when it comes to food and our needs as humans. If you don't have money, you're telling me we can't eat? A life sustaining thing we all need. And there is plenty of it to go around. But if we don't have money we are denied that need? It's insane! Just think about it. All these resources here for us all to live and someone came up with a system to deny us a basic human need. If we don't have a piece of paper or coin? Just nuts.
When I went we parked in the parking lot, didn't have to pay (we are veterans and have free access to all national parks) but there was a parking fee of $20 per car. We didn't see the glass bridge (wouldn't've done it anyway). We went to two of the overlooks, hit up the gift shop and went to eat at the MCD's which was expensive. Overall I spent $60 including the food.
The things the submitter admitted to is disappointing. I hope they didn't try to buy the Brooklyn Bridge back at the NYNY casino back in Vegas.
I'd never even heard of this, which is surprising because it's such an obvious ripoff
"scalped" is so appropriate. And ironic as bounty hunters were paid coin per scalp to murder Indians. White America (Government and settlers) broke every treaty, stole sovereign land, hunted, starved and massacred First Nation Peoples. Children kidnapped and ferreted away to be Americans, punished if they spoke their native tongue. Tribes were magnanimously granted remote, barely arable pockets of land; desolate and useless for white exploitation. Shunted out of sight, dismissed out of White American-mind. Forgotten discards. The indignant comments below illustrate mean-spirited ignorance
It's built on reservation land and run by the tribe who owns the land. Considering the very long history of broken treaties, massacre, stolen property and exile to pockets of land the white government could not exploit, 'scalping' seems an appropriate word. More so as that's how white bounty hunters earned their reward for murdering Indians: coin per scalp. White America has yet to acknowledge its barbarism of First Nation Peoples. Or provide the most basic, clean, safe homes, resources, electricity, running water and infrastructure. Read: Killers of the Flower Moon, David Grann for a glimpse into the menace of White Greed.
This is good to know and should be reminded over and over again on their Review sight. !!!
That is f'n horrible. I do a lot of travel photography and there's no way I'd be up for that abuse.
They charge that much to pay for insurance in case the bridge plummets to the floor of the canyon
We didn’t pay for any of that, cos we took a bus tour. Had a great day.
Seemed like an interesting attraction until you explained the back ground.
guess i don't have to be worried about getting dizzy and air sick on that bridge.
and after reading about the Hualapi that owns this, if i get a chance to go i will happily pay the price, maybe not go out on the bridge, but happily pay the price
Load More Replies...We were thinking about it until we researched it and it is indeed a rip off. The only people we who went there were pissed when they started getting charged for damned near breathing the air. The natives are great at ripping off the white man. Don't go.
Thanks for the heads up. This sounds like too little return for the price.
Well, I guess I can write that off my bucket list without even going there.
This was built for and is owned by the Hualapai tribe so let them gouge the tourists, a small recompense for the white mans’ destruction and devastation of their lives and homes. Still less expensive than a Walt Disney theme park.
That is taking the full advantage of the tourist more than what it actually offers..
I was thinking that maybe you don't know how incredibly ignorant (look it up) you sound...and that maybe you really don't know the history of that tribe, or Indians in general, or how long and difficult and costly that incredible work of engineering was but then you ended your whining with " Go there to get scalped" My opinion and tolerance of your ignorance ended at that point.
I visited in 1981 and there wasn't any rip offs like this going on. Just the canyon and the quiet vastness of the place.
Not something that enthralls me to visit, that being said it must be spectacular to walk on a glass bridge.
First, the Hualapai People are well within their rights to milk all the money they can off of us white folks who have taken most of their land and killed so many of their ancestors. Second, it’s less than 2.5 hours from the Skywalk to Vegas. What are you driving? A Model-T?
You are the biggest racist as*hol* I have encountered on this site. What makes you use such mean and horrible slur as you did! Your disgusting. And what makes you think that some of those people who got scalped didn’t have it coming? What we did to the Indian nations is despicable. Try educating yourself before making comments like that. 😠
Or you take an all-included tour bus from Las Vegas, and it won't cost you that much...
Meh, we have been there, we enjoyed every single minute of it. Can't wait to go back there and discover even more. The restaurant over the glass bridge has even prettier and more interesting view of the great scenery. Sorry for the people who go to a natural wonder and can't enjoy it because of the fees. You don't go there every single day, so what is wrong?
"It takes HOURS to get there from Vegas" isn't the grand canyon in Arizona tho? but the rest I totally understand
Went there, nothing special- there is so much beauty around the crane canyon for free! The crappy part it that you have to drive a lot further to get to the beauty free parts. The Skywalk is literally a trap, you can't drive around it, and you have to pay for at least parking to go to the edge and see the Canyon
We enjoyed the Skywalk and surrounding area as the scenery is beautiful. What we didn't enjoy was the amount of garbage people had dumped on the ground. Water bottles and cups everywhere and several trash containers nearby.
I can understand the need for the bus - people are idiots and will walk randomly in any direction. This causes severe damage to native plants that take forever to regrow. And there IS a giant hole in the ground that can kill them in one direction, and the desert which will kill you in all others.... the prices are too high, tho. The food I can understand, it's not like they have a garden or even a nearby supermarket, so EVERYTHING is shipped in and must be stored. They are still recouping the cost of construction, and maintenance, so it will be pricey for maybe another decade or so. Unless fewer people go, then they need to keep the prices high to stay open.
I live in Brazil, went there before and felt the same. And worst: I've payed to see some "indians" dancing.
Best attractions at the Grand Canyon are the donkey trails and air tours. Decades ago I took an air tour of the Grand Canyon. A group of young college girls sat in the row behind me. As they pilots explained the emergency procedures, I listened to the girls talking quietly in German behind me. They didn't know that I understood them until I laughed when one asked, "Wo ist der Fallschirm?"
I wanted to do the glass bridge at the Grand Canyon because the Grand Canyon is incredible. Been there before. So on our next trip to Vegas we did a tour including the Hoover Dam. Great tour, great guide, loved the Hoover Dam, loved the different perspective of the canyon but the glass bridge was an appalling experience. The bridge was nothing more than a tacky tourist trap. Literally a line to get to it, a line on it with those getting their pictures taken all being directed to do the same poses, and a line off. There was none of the 'omg I'm standing on glass over the canyon' expected feeling. Don't waste your time or money.
OR, you Google a drone image from above and get all that for free. Tourism = money for nothing
You park in the middle of the desert? I live in AZ. The canyon is not in the desert.
I tend to be skeptical of these posts, but there are definitely better views of the Grand Canyon than the glass thingy. (As for the food, I think I just ate authentic American Doritos and Cheetos (for some reason the exported ones taste gross.))
Travel blogger and speaker A Lady in London has been to 112 countries and she's only visited a few attractions that she thought were over-hyped. It was primarily because she isn't really drawn to such places to begin with.
"Most of them were attractions that heavily marketed themselves or got lots of coverage on social media," A Lady in London told Bored Panda. "I went because I was curious after seeing them advertised or talked about online so much, and not because I was truly interested in them."
While the traveler acknowledges that some companies and individuals might prey on tourists, she doesn't think that makes the whole industry corrupt or dishonest. "I think most are genuinely trying to offer something that appeals to a certain demographic. If I'm not in their demographic, I'm probably not going to enjoy their attraction. But someone who is in their demographic might love it," she explained. "Like most things in life, the degree of enjoyment of tourist attractions tends to be relative to one's interests."
Don't worry. Everyone can find something they're into. "There are lots of ways people can discover cool, less popular sights when they're traveling," A Lady in London, who also documents her trips on Instagram, said. "As a professional travel blogger, I obviously recommend following blogs and social media accounts that share about under-the-radar places. Local knowledge is key, so if you can find influencers who specialize in a specific destination, you'll often discover great places through their content."
The Dead Sea. You're in Israel. In the desert. It's blazing hot, like 115°F. You think you'll go take a dip in the Dead Sea to cool off, right? Wrong. First, you have to pay to go through a spa to use their towels, pools, etc. Then you take the wagon/shuttle that drives you from the spa down to the shore. The wagon/shuttle goes about 5 miles per hour in the scortching sun. No breeze. Next, you get to the shore of the Dead Sea. You the proceed to run over the sand that's so hot you're sure your feet will burn off. You tentatively step into the water....and it's like the hottest bath you've ever taken in your life. The water is maybe 1° away from boiling. But you figure you've made it this far, might as well get the full experience. So you submerge. It's a mistake. Every pore on your body is burning from the salt. If you have shaved any part of your body within the last three years, you will feel the salt seep into the little micro cuts and burn you from the inside out. You find cuts on your body you didn't even know you had. Even your asshole is burning because you have pooped and wiped within the last week, so your skin is raw there. And the worst part is, when you decide you have had enough of this boiling body of water, you practically have to crawl out because you're too bouyant to stand. And in the process of crawling out, you scrape your knees on the bottom where the salt rocks have crystalized which sets off a whole new round of pain. So now you're hot, sticky from the salt, and every inch of your body burns.
Dubai. It's the most soulless, cultureless, and artificial city I've been to. The shameless and obscene display of bling-bling only adds to this vibe, and the supertall skyscrapers and mega malls get old sooner or later.
To top it off, all of this is built overnight on what is essentially slave labor.
Cory and G Varga, the wife and husband duo behind the blog You Could Travel, have also been to a few tourist attractions they could've probably passed on. "The most disappointing was by far the Manneken Pis in Brussels," they told Bored Panda. "Then we have La Rambla and Mercado de La Boqueria in Barcelona: overcrowded and overpriced. The famed Checkpoint Charlie in Berlin is a bit of a tourist trap and Camargue in the South of France because of factories and pollution."
The couple is warier of the industry than A Lady in London and said that at the end of the day, people are here to make money. "Naturally, travel industry players invest heavily in marketing and as we know, marketing can sometimes be deceiving. Travel agents operate on commission so their goal is to sell you a dream: more expensive hotel, upgrades on flights, more experiences to visit. Luckily, travelers are also savvier and can see right through the ads."
"Modern travelers rely mostly on recommendations of friends and relatives, online recommendations, social media, and travel blogs. Commercial information is not so relevant to them anymore. We do appeal to all industry key players to change some of their practices ... and adopt a more ethical stance."
Cory and G Varga think the best way to learn about unbeaten paths is by simply exploring. "Ditch the hop-on-hop-off options and grab a city map (or just use digital maps on your phone) and go on an adventure. It's perfectly okay to want to see popular attractions but travel between them on foot if possible. It's the curious sights in-between that are so much more interesting and unusual. A cute family-run bistro, an obscure century-old shop, a friendly local with a story to tell," the wife and husband explained.
The Taj Mahal (Agra). It's surrounded by 10-meter-high walls, and the entrance fee is ludicrously expensive compared to any other attraction in India. If you're in Agra and want to see the Taj Mahal, go across the river. There are some gardens almost directly across from it, and there's a great spot by the river with a brilliant view of the Taj Mahal, particularly at sunset. This experience is totally free, and you won't have to deal with crowds.
That's some solid advice. The Taj Mahal is still a magnificent monument and worth seeing it.
While the Louvre is wonderful, the Mona Lisa was a huge disappointment.
The painting itself is tiny and there are always hordes of people around it.
There are a million better things to see at the Louvre.
In 2020, global international tourism arrivals fell by 73%, according to the World Tourism Organization, and recovery hopes for 2021 have been dented by waves of new infections. But as vaccination programs advance around the world, opportunities are arising for restrictions to be gradually eased.
Destination and tourism businesses are trying to rebound while also being sufficiently nimble to manage the abrupt tightening of restrictions that could be imposed in response to future infection waves and the emergence of new variants of the virus. Let's hope this brings more transparency to the industry and more chances to travelers!
If you go to the Great Wall of China, I'd suggest not going to the section right there in Beijing. Very rebuilt and touristy.
Take a van ride a ways out of the city, to the Simitai section. Now there's some uncrowded, old-school Great Wall.
Disney Parks. Want to eat? Be ready to Shell out $50 a person per day. Oh, you came for the rides? Enjoy the four or five you make it on unless it's a busy day, those days enjoy the two or three.
Disneyland is my idea of hell on earth - rampant consumerism, screaming brats and obnoxious parents
Machu Picchu. I respect the Incas for building it, the real issue I have with it is the current management. It’s flooded with people (they let in over 3x the cap sto make money) being annoying and it’s very expensive, they bus people up a huge hill all day and we are required to have a tour guide and only spend 3 mins at certain areas. It’s misrepresenting the history of the Incas to people with selfie sticks. Not my fave
You are WAY better off seeing the Inca capitol, Cusco because it’s where they actually lived and thrived. See Sasqsyhuaman and the Qoricancha sun temple. Go on a backpacking trip and you will find Inca and pre Inca stuff Everywhere. With no idiotic tourists families. I highly recommend it.
¡Viva Perú!
Sydney Opera House. The tours are expensive and the inside is kind of underwhelming. The outside is free and is also the best part. ALTERNATIVE: Just walk around Sydney harbor. It's free and gorgeous.
An acquaintance once told me a great joke about it. Australia has the best performing arts centre in the world, the only problem is the outside is in Sydney, the inside is in Melbourne and the carpark is in Adelaide.
The Liberty Bell. Wait in a long line to look at... a bell. That looks exactly like it does in all the Philly souvenirs. They don't even let you lick it.
Every Hard Rock Cafe. Seriously, the pricing is similar to a nice chain restaurant, but the food is right on par with Applebee’s.
Madame Tussauds in London. You're in a city filled to the brim with history and culture and free museums, but you'd rather wait in line for hours and pay a fortune to go see a mannequin of Justin Bieber?
Some could say that a 200 year old wax museum is part of that history.
The London Eye
What you expect
Whisked into your futuristic pod by smiling flight attendants, you gently rise above the ancient city of London. The crowds fall away as the panorama of the city is laid out before you - truly an experience for the ages
What happens
A snotty customer services assistant rips your d**k out through your wallet as you are shuffled into a stiflingly hot glass pod with dozens of other people. Sweaty tourists barge you out of the way to get to the windows before you have even left the ground. There are children, and they are screaming. The ride is 45 minutes long.
Generic rule: do not visit popular cities at summer and mid of tourist season.
Times Square and Piccadilly Circus, same damn chain restaurants and tourist traps
Mount Rushmore. It looks exactly like any picture you've ever seen. It's not easy to get up close to it. If you're in that area, I recommend prioritizing Devil's Tower. It's well worth it.
Mt Rushmore is shitty, anyway - it’s on a spot that’s sacred in Native American culture and I think I remember reading that the people who made it KNEW that.
Waikiki Beach. It's a horrible, crowded concrete beach surrounded by traffic and overpriced stores.
Go to literally any other beach in Oahu. But the coolest thing to do is drive up to north shore, and pick a spot on any one of the many relatively isolated beaches there and enjoy the scenery.
Pyramids of Giza; might be being too harsh, but the swarm of aggressive market vendors surrounding them makes the place a bit of a nightmare. One woman from our group asked a guard to take her photo standing next to the pyramids, and the guard refused to give it back without recieving payment (I cant recall the amount but being extorted by a man with an AK-47 isn't an ideal situation). Inside the tombs themselves it reeked of piss and was a claustrophobes complete nightmare. A ~ 5 foot tall, very steep ramp with f**k all to prevent a fall wide enough to fit 1.5 men at best with a steady stream of people coming up from the opposite direction. Being literally yelled at to buy headscarves and assorted plastic s*** by the truly horrible merchants outside completely ruined my experience of the place, which I'm so, so sad about because I spent months looking forward to the trip.
Unfortunately if you want to experience the wonders of Ancient Egypt you have to put up with the modern inhabitants. If you are really interested best join a special interest tour or a university group. As well as knowing the real facts about what you are seeing they know how to deal with the annoying locals.
Branson. The Simpsons weren't really joking when they described it as Las Vegas ran by Ned Flanders.
The Leaning Tower of Pisa - five minutes, that photo, and you're done.
Bourbon Street, New Orleans
Now don’t get me wrong, the food is smash so I’d recommend hitting it anyways (Pat O’Brien’s and NOLA Poboys were my favorites). But the whole street itself is dirty, smells like sewage, and is overloaded with mostly ear rapingly loud rap music and maybe a couple jazz bands.
I can't hear or read 'New Orleans' without salivating. Some of the best food I eaten anywhere was in a strangers front yard in New Orleans, he was grilling up for his family and just offered up some food to 2 passing European tourists. If you're reading this, I love Derrick & Leanne!
Plymouth Rock
Put bluntly, this attraction is massively lame, no one even knows if this is the right rock or even if there was a rock.
Not to mention that the rock is nowhere near the shore, and it's frightfully small; you can't even get close, and it's just this rock in the middle of a fenced off area. When we were kids, we were taught Plymouth Rock was this huge historical thing, and then it's a huge disappointment. I recommend you visit the living history museum at Plimoth Plantation, instead.
Hitlers typewriter. It's a typewriter, I'm not sure what I expected.
"Hitler's typewriter" sounds like a Netflix production on a really tight budget.
Roswell, New Mexico. You’d think it would be a hotspot for conventions and space geeks, but it was an incredibly tiny town with dozens of alien shops and barely any people. It was creepy as hell.
It needs a museum dedicated to explaining how aliens crossed the interstellar void in a craft made of weather balloon materials
Oktoberfest. Way too crowded for my liking. I had a much better time at fests in the smaller villages.
Munich here. Been to Oktoberfest every year of my life, first time w/ 3 months-I´m 46 now. Always has been overcrowded in the evenings, but turned unacceptable in the last 10 years. Primitive party crowd like somewhere else in the world. Nothing special, just embarrasing. I recommend coming at 11 in the moning, have some chicken, pretzel and 2-3 Maß of beer and leave at 15 at latest, befor the crazy people arrive. That´s cool. You will meet kind, local people, that are lightly drunk and still able to talk. Or you just visit any of the bavarian beergardens with better food and lower prices for beer and food. Oktoberfest is basically for your insta-bucket-list. :-)
Romeo and Juliet's balcony in Verona. Like, 10,000 people all crammed into this tiny alleyway just to see a balcony that I found out was built after the play was written.
I understand Romeo and Juliet is a work of fiction, but the story of the balcony is it inspired the play. I now know that isn't true but as someone knowing very little about Shakespeare, I thought it was true when I went to the wonderful city of Verona.
The "Juliet's balcony" story is so silly I can't summon up much sympathy for this disappointed tourist
M&M World in London. Every single tourist has a bag from there, they don't even sell the unusual flavours of M&M, just the usual UK packets of peanut and solid chocolate. I just don't understand it...
Stand in front of the store in London, turn 180degs, hey-presto the Lego store :) Much better :)
Any instagram gimmick where you need to spend money on tickets and wait in line for a photo op
Specifically thinking of Museum of Ice Cream
Takeshita Street in Harajuku (Tokyo). I couldn't move my elbows an inch without bumping into someone, and pretty much every shop had a 30-minute line. I went to see the Harajuku-style fashion associated Takeshita Street, but hardly saw any of that. So essentially I was packed like a sardine for hours while waiting in long lines to shop for overpriced clothes. I love Tokyo, but I definitely won't be going back to Harajuku anytime soon.
Go on the side streets and alleys. They're full of tiny shops and artisans that are way more interesting and original than tourist traps like this. ...///... Frankly, I don't know how dumb you'd have to be NOT to have fun in Tokyo. Every time we go, we find more gorgeous parks and wonderful places.
The Fyre Festival
A festival promoted on Instagram by social media influencers turned out to be a massive scam. Who could have guessed....
Mackinac Island. I’m a Michigan native, and I can tell you right now that it’s a complete tourist trap. The fudge is okay... and the entire island smells like fudge and horse poop. If you want to get fudge, but with less horse poop, and less tourists, go to Frankenmuth, MI. The whole town is Bavarian in style, plus it’s home to Bronners, the largest Christmas store in the world! The fudge is honestly so much better there, there aren’t a ton of tourists, and it’s so much cleaner. Plus there’s an ice fest in the winter. My family goes every year!
Tl;dr: don’t go to Mackinac Island, you’ll regret it. Instead, go to Frankenmuth, you won’t regret it!
Kuta beach, Bali. It's nothing but a dirty beach and drunk bogans. If you're visiting Bali, head down south to Canggu or Uluwatu area and enjoy the view of the ocean from top of the hill.
I had to google "bogan", and discovered that they are chavs Down Under
Not ridiculously hyped up, but got to say the Harry Potter Platform 9 3/4 thing at Kings Cross station, it's not even on a platform anymore it's been moved to some random part inside the station (I suppose for people to use it without having to buy a ticket/ go through a barrier) but there are sometimes the most ridiculous queues just to get a photo with it.
Temple Bar (Dublin). There are better pubs a block away, but all the tourists go to Temple Bar to pay twice the price for a Guinness.
My heart is sad about this one... my hubby has been going here since he was a young lad and has many great stories about it.... he has ingnored the crowds, which he loves when there is good craic...but I am not as convinced and enjoy the irish pubs where that feeling of community, (maybe some local musos and a rough wood booth gives me space to enjoy a pint can be had).... I think he still loves the Temple Bar because of the past and that is hard to let go of sometimes...
The Little Mermaid (Copenhagen). Most tourists know that it's just a small statue on a rock, yet still they come here and swarm around it like a flock of seagulls. I don't understand why.
Have you looked around when standing there? It's very nice in the surroundings.
The Mall of America. It’s just like any mall in the US. All the same stores just more of them. Edit: struck a nerve with this one. If you like malls in general you will probably like this one. Yes, there is more to do then your standard mall but I still found it pretty underwhelming. The one thing I forgot about that many have pointed out is Legoland. That is legitimately cool.
Cadbury world. Offensively bad.
USED to be amazing, then the Americans (Kraft) bought it, hiked the prices, and lowered the required visitor IQ to 6. Even the shop which used to be full of good, cheap chocolate is now just a shop. A rubbish shop.
The Sugar Factory (in Orlando and elsewhere).
My SO was hyped about it, and it seemed popular (there was a 3+ hour wait for tables). But it's only popular because it's owned by the Kardashians...and even if you didn't know that fact before going in (I didn't), you could figure it out from the restaurant itself. The ambiance was gaudy and loud, and the dining area felt dirty. The food was terrible and overpriced. The "hook" was big sugary alcoholic drinks and desserts (the "sugar" part), but even those sucked. Their headline drinks were big goblets with candy and dry ice vapor coming out, but they were $40+ each, so we passed. We got a couple of cheaper dessert-themed drinks, but even though we got different ones they all had the same taste of cheap vodka with lots of sugar. We got some actual desserts too, but you could tell they were pre-made over-processed garbage with no flavor. It probably came out of a package.
The worst part was their birthday cheer. If someone had a birthday, they would blare really loud and obnoxious club music, and all the wait staff would start dancing around on the tables while they brought out some dessert with road flares sticking out of it for candles. This wouldn't have been so bad if they hadn't done it FOUR TIMES during our meal.
I pity those poor employees.
Nothing on earth would induce me to add more filthy lucre to the Kardashians' overflowing coffers
Khao San Road. I love Thailand but I absolutely hated Khao San Road. It's entirely fabricated for tourists to make tour groups feel like they're doing something exotic and adventurous. Signs for "We don't check ID!" "Take a picture eating a scorpion for $5!" "Fake passports sold here!" and then it's just t-shirts and bars. Compared to the rest of the country it's gross, fake, and douchey.
Our son's favorite vacation place was Thailand. He said that all the great places they used to go have been torn down so that they can build over priced tourist hotels. He said all the little street "restaurants" were gone, all the little shops, everything that made Thailand such a great place to visit had been torn down because they are turning it into a "high class tourist" destination. That was his last trip he said.
Top of the Empire State Building. You spend all that time in line for the elevators, in what is a very nice Art Deco piece of architecture, for the opportunity to struggle taking pictures through a caged roof and squint at what would otherwise be an excellent view of New York City.
Totally not worth it.
I can recommend Rockefeller Center. Nice view and you actually get to take a picture of the Empire State Building.
Rockefeller Christmas Tree. There was so many people we couldn’t even get that close. And once we were somewhat near I realized the only real reason we were there was to take pictures/“make memories”. The only memories I have from that night was the stress of that damn city!
I wouldn't travel to NYC to see the Rockefeller Christmas Tree, in particular. But Manhattan in Christmas is gorgeous. (Or at least was. I haven't been since the '90s.) Looking at the lights and thinking about crass commercialism is as hard-heartedly Puritanical as looking at flowers and thinking "smut!!!" And the tree is part of a scene including the ice rink, the angels, the hall of nations, etc., that certainly IS worth it.
There’s plenty of incredible things to do and see in Amsterdam. However, the sex museum is not one of them.
Many people visit Amsterdam and leave the Netherlands thinking that they know all about the Dutch. Amsterdam is just as typical Dutch as New York is typical Russian. The best things in Amsterdam are the trains and busses to other parts of the Netherlands.
Daytona beach. It’s like a Permanent carnival plus some street preachers, people of Walmart, and homeless teens. It also smells like diesel fuel, feet, beer, and cigarettes.
Daytona Beach is "overhyped"? According to who? Why would anyone even visit that place? What is this person thinking
Pier 39 in San Francisco. I'm from the East Coast...I'd never been to SF before. Everyone said "skip Pier 39....it's a tourist trap". However...since I'd never been before...I figured I'd go and see for myself.
It's a tourist trap. Nothing of value save for the sea lions, and Musee Mechanique....other than that....chains & ripoffs.
The pawn shop from Pawn Stars. A guy who was with us in Vegas insisted on going, and the rest of us got dragged along. We got corralled through the store and there was literally nothing worth a second look there. Waste of time.
I was particularly annoyed at the prices of used musical instruments there. I’ve been selling drums for 10 years, and I’m not about to buy a kit for higher than the new price just for the honour of having bought it there.
Atlantic City is a row of dingy casino hotels against a gross beach with a strip of disgusting shops in between. At least Vegas is clean.
I don't believe Atlantic city has ever advertised itself as anything other than kinds sleazy
The infield at the Kentucky Derby. You won’t see a horse all day and will be surrounded by the drunkest rednecks north of the Daytona 500.
People in the infield freak the horses out. Grew up with race horses and I have a grudge against the Triple Crown. The races are too close together to give the horses a break in between, they have people in the infield where they do not belong, the horses are all 3 year olds and some times their legs are just not developed enough (should be 4 year olds), and they pack the field so there are way too many horses racing at once. Always bugged the hell out of me. Won't watch the races.
Manneken Pis in Brussels. Don't get me wrong, Brussels is BEAUTIFUL and I absolutely loved visiting. There's so much interesting folklore and a lot of souvenirs and what not around Manneken Pis, and you expect it to be this really amazing statue... Until you see it. It's down a tiny little street with hundreds of people stuffed into the corner where he sits. I know he's very respected and loved in Belgium, but he's just so tiny and the street was so crowded... I found it very hard to be excited once I actually saw him. Brussels is amazing though and I'll definitely be back one day!
The Blue Lagoon (Iceland). I was shocked by how pricey it was for the experience, especially considering most of the public hot baths are free and there are geothermic springs everywhere in Iceland. I felt like I had to check it out, but in the end it felt like a rip-off.
This may not be known to everyone but Magnolia Silos in Waco, TX as made famous by the TV show "Fixer Upper". 100% waste of time and money. Everything in the store can be bought at Target or it's just show merchandise.
People come from across the country for this little store. Go somewhere else man.
If people want to travel for Bravo/TLC/crap tv filming locations, they’re getting exactly what they want. I’ve never seen the p**n, storage or house renovation mock reality shows, but I imagine if o were interested in one I’d know exactly what the destination entails.
The corn palace and wall-drug. The Dakota's love to make s*** up to get people to stop.
Centralia, Pennsylvania. A town that has had a coal mine fire underneath it still burning since 1962. It sounds super cool to go see it but its just a few roads with graffiti on them and a bunch of ATV trails
The Fountain of Youth down here in St. Augustine, Florida. The actual fountain is just a fake cave with a pipe that you fill a cup from. There were way cooler things there than that like a dude who fired a cannon, a bunch of crazy peacocks, and these guys who built replica ships using the techniques from the 16th/17th century.
The Alamo. I picture it being the stoic little fort on a lonesome Texas prairie but instead it's a little building in the middle of the City with all this touristy stuff around it like the Guinness Book of World Records
That famous philly cheese steak place in philly. Awful service plus the food downright sucked.
If you ever come to a Chicago, stay away from Navy Pier. Everything is way overpriced (rides, games, food) and the tourists that visit are rude and annoying.
Sitting at the end of the pier on a warm summer day and enjoying the breeze and view is nice. This is another place where I don’t know what people really expect it’s obviously a tourist trap— the Farris wheel gives it away.
Four Corners. For those not from America/don’t know, it’s a spot where the corners of four different state borders touch. None of them were states I had any real fondness for (Colorado, Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico) and once you get over the “zany” fun of being in 4 states at once it’s just a bunch of s**tty food carts. It was the classic tourist trap on a family vacation you try to talk your parents out of and fail at.
Astronomical Clock in Prague. Everyone makes it seem like this crazy wild event when the clock hits the hour and throngs of people gather in the square to watch it every hour and are disappointed when it hardly does anything.
VERY cool considering the time period in which it was made, very very interesting, but not an extravagant display by any means.
I found it more fun to go and watch the the people get disappointed every hour after I had seen it the first time.
Will probably get downvoted in to oblivion for this, but the Sistine chapel left me wanting. The art is absolutely incredible but it's let down by the room itself. I was expecting it to be held with a bit more prestige. Instead it's just a big chapel absolutely crammed with tourists aiming their cameras at the ceiling.
It's a shame because the rest of the Vatican is amazing. So many beautiful rooms and corridors to walk through before you get to the chapel.
The Palace of Versailles. It’s become so crowded that you have to push your way around people to make it through the castle. It’s also developed a huge pickpocketing problem. A lot of people go just to take a photo in the hall of mirrors..
Yes there was a lot of people but you could get away from them and enjoy yourself. The gardens are lovely.
Cadillac Ranch and The Big Texan in Amarillo, TX. I Iove to travel and almost always have a great time experiencing new things, even if it's just to say I've been there. But I could have done without stopping in Amarillo and not missed much.
Cinque Terre (Italy). This one may be controversial, but I found this handful of villages in coastal Liguria to be very boring and overly touristy. All the hiking trails were closed. Either way, it's a day trip at best, and I would recommend visiting the Amalfi Coast over Cinque Terre.
The fascination of Cinque Terre is the view from the outside, not from the inside.
Stonehenge. It’s a 2hr drive from London, and after you get there and get your picture, there’s really to much else.
It's a monument people have erected more than 4000 years ago. If you're not interested in history don't go there. Don't expect Disneyland.
The Duomo (Florence). The outside of the Duomo is magnificent, but the interior is bland and underwhelming and not worth waiting in line for. If you've seen the outside, that's all you need to see. If you're thinking of going inside the view, you can get a much better view of Florence from across the river
I can't understand people who visit places that did not interest them in the first place and then disparage them. If you don't appreciate art and architecture just don't visit the Duomo. If you're only interested in the view, sip your drink and let monuments alone.
Some people just shouldn't travel. Honestly. Who goes to Disneyland and complains about crowds and overpriced food? Either go out of season and bring your own food, or don't go at all. The Liberty Bell is just a bell - who knew? What exactly were you expecting, a line of dancing entertainers in bell costumes? Egyptians live in Egypt and many are extremely poor. Your rich tourist $$ feed their families. There are plenty of wonderful people in that country, and lots of other amazing historical monuments if you don't like the crowds at the Pyramids. I've been to many of these places and had an amazing time. I go in with the right expectations and set up the experiences to suit me and my family. It's all about research and being realistic.
I have also been many of these places and enjoyed some of those but egypt especially Cairo and the pyramids have been very bad experience because of local people. I have been dealing with sellers in other countries in Africa and Asia and usually they do not not act so agressive way than next to pyramids. First taxi driver was taking us to atleast two destinations we didn't want to stop (his friends business) We had to get out of the car in the middle of the street because it was scary and annoying and he refuse to give our bags first. Next to the pyramids people really push their items to your hands even you say firm NO and yells to you and insist to give money. Almost impossible to walk thru (we went alone, not with tourist group so we were almost only persons at the moment and all vendors werw all over us) Worst part was that one man stuck his hand to my intime area while I was trying to walk forward and that is only time ever anywhere in the world that I have been sexually attacked
Load More Replies...We already had a post like this not long ago, and it didn't get any more interesting. Popular tourist destinations are really crowded, a building is just a building, a painting is just a painting, and a lake is just a like, who could have guessed. That can be said about virtually every place.
I remember that. And someone actually complained "Wall Street" was a disappointment. "It's just a street". Yep, that's what it is. What it's not supposed to be is a tourist destination
Load More Replies...I came to be discouraged from different places but I left with a million new travel wishes! Especially the christmas shop in michigan (or was it minnesota?) seems cool
Come visit us in Michigan! Frankenmuth has a Bronner's Christmas Wonderland (the biggest Xmas store in the world*), and then down the street a bunch of cute little shops, horse & buggy rides, and a lot of Bavarian architecture. You can also take a river boat ride and eat in at the Bavarian Inn Restaurant which is covered in murals, the staff dress in the old timey German style, and there is always an accordion player entertaining diners. Kids especially love it!
Load More Replies...I think I'd rather read a thread about tourist attractions that people thought were *better* than expected.
I want to go to a place everyone knows about to take my instagram selfie but it was too crowded because everyone wanted to do the same as me...
All I can say is how incredibly lucky I am to have been able to travel over so much of the world. There's very few places that I would actually complain about. All I think about is what are we creating now that somebody will be in awe of some 200 or 300 years in the future?
Most of these really aren't that bad, especially if you can learn to focus on the experience more than the tourists. Also, don't make that one attraction the main focus of your trip, instead, go there, then enjoy the small towns/natural areas nearby.
If you are complaining about crowd in a tourist attraction then you are a hypocrite. All other complaints are fine...
First Rule of Travel: Look at the top five sites people say you MUST see.... and avoid them. You have a lot more fun, learn a lot more, meet amazing and diverse people. Just act with courtesy and learn enough native language to be polite (I don't speak the language is the first phrase to learn, second is forgive me, third is please, thank you, may I request assistance, etc.).... the best of most countries is never at any site featured on postcards, in my experience.
My main takeaway from this is that the worst thing about tourist traps... is the tourists. Who knew? I grew up in Blackpool and I swear people just turn off their brains when they go on holiday - wandering out into traffic just to get a better view of the Tower or the Illuminations. Oh, and that advice about "if you want the real experience, go back a few streets from the central tourist area" only applies to little towns in Spain or Italy. Go back a few streets in Blackpool and all you see is the second most deprived area in the UK (after a small town in Essex with a population of less than 5% of Blackpool). Stick to the tourist areas and maintain the illusion.
Go back a few streets in Blackpool and get offered literally every kind of illegal substance possible.
Load More Replies...I do not understand people who go on vacation to a place in the middle of the tourist season and get angry because it is full of tourists, surely the local people are more angry. If you don't like people there are many destinations to go to, otherwise there is no other option than to enjoy the place in the best possible way. Sometimes, you just have to be grateful that you could go, see and be in a place that many people in the world will never be able to meet. I mean, you're on holiday, just relax and enjoy!
For me, it was definitely the Plitvice Lakes in Croatia. Don't get me wrong, the area itself is gorgeous, it's just that the area is also FLOODED with people, the entire flipping day. Like, imagine a lake, which you can either walk around or take a boat to cross. Around where the boat departs there's a small area for people to wait for the boat, that area is about as big as the lake itself and it's PACKED with people. As in, wait for three hours before you can cross, if you're not going to walk around the lake. The boardwalks over the water are amazing but there's so many tourists that you can't cross them without risk of falling in the water, you constantly have to wait for people to take their selfies (with the risk of being hit in the face with a selfiestick). There's so many tourists that there's a traffic jam in front of the gates an HOUR before the park even opens. AT SEVEN IN THE MORNING. Never go there.
Ehehehehhe I'm from Croatia and I've been to Plitivice Lakes once. It wasn't as crowded as you say, but that was a long time ago and not during tourist season. It was pretty rainy, though. It's often rainy at nature parks built around rivers. Sadly, falling into the water is less of a risk, when it comes to Plitvice - landmines are a greater concern, but it's safe if you stay within the tourist infrastructure. Just don't wander around too far, and possibly stand by your tour/guide. Anyway, Plitvice Lakes are nice, but there's plenty of equally beautiful nature parks in Croatia.
Load More Replies...My family made the trip up the NC coast to visit the lighthouses. There they were...no information just them sitting there. But so remote we had to rush by one to get to the ferry. I held the camera out of the window and clicked. Very anticlimactic. We made the ferry.
I'd add Pamukkale in Turkey. Completely empty of water except one small artificially built part! We asked an employee why it was so, he said water enables algae and stuff to grow in the pools, so they keep it all dry except when promo material is being done :/ Understandable, but dissapointing.
A bit of a milder example since I still found it interesting, but the Victor Hotel (and town of Victor) in Colorado wasn't as cool as I thought it was gonna be. It's a historical hotel that's pretty well-known for its "haunted elevator", but the rooms only have one bed (unless you decide to borrow a foldable one) and there isn't much to do in the town. We ended up going to the nearby town Cripple Creek for food and other attractions.
As I stated in one of my comments, I'm so glad that I did my travelling back in the Sixties & Seventies, tourism was in it's infancy, not too crowded, I have wonderful memories of those days, I've written out my travel diaries, digitised my slides, and share the experiences with friends, who are all like me, in our 70's. All the places that I visited, are places I'd read about, like the song says - 'Far away places, with strange sounding names, far away over the sea .......'
True, many people haven't the inner resources to benefit from travel. Travel is about what YOU bring to IT. Yes, there are tourist traps to be avoided (the glass bridge is an excellent example) and there are overcrowded places that should be visited off-peak. Faced with a long line at the Fondation Vuitton museum in Paris, my wife had a great idea: ask the attendant what days/times are slowest. He told us--and three days later at a decently convenient hour were practically OWNED the place. Then there's the problem of essential interest. For every 'must-see,' as WHY. If the answer is because it's supposed to be quite something, you're almost guaranteed to get nothing out of the experience. If you're seriously interested in the American Revolution, the Liberty Bell may very well be more than a mere bell to you. If not, not. I love Italy and Shakespeare, so when in Verona I always drop by Juliet's House. Of course it's all a fiction, but so what? It's also an homage to love.
No need to travel, it's getting to d*** crowded and rude right here in this town these days.
Balmoral Castle in Scotland: You can only go in one room, the gardens are tiny, there is security cameras everywhere throughout the surrounding land and the police will harass you. It's not worth the money or time.
Almost every foreign person I ever spoke to loved Amsterdam. I live about 50km from Amsterdam and I don't see the appeal to the city. It's a overcrowded,dirty city. There are many much more beautiful places in the Netherlands.
THIS ARTICLE JUST PO ROVES HOW F*****G STUPID THE MASSES ARE! I LIVE ON A PLANET FILLED WITH MORONS!
I think it's not about the thing you are seeing or place you are visiting, but what feelings they bring in you. Some wonders of the world I deeply feel like I have a connection, and visiting them would probably make me feel amazing, no matter how expensive and crowded it is. And some, are just not my thing. So I don't go.
I think travel is about the people and your spirit. I went to Switzerland and love it and hate it, because I was with the wrong person and my mood was not the best. Try to visit your own city and you will be amazed the same way people who come from far away to visit it.
BOSTON: The aquarium is very famous, but meh. The science museum is surprisingly lame. Stick to the historical stuff. The great thing about Boston is that it's very compact; young people can walk around the whole city; I used to walk from work near Fenway and join my housemates as they got out of work going through Back Bay, downtown, North End, and up to Charleston in one big, walk that wasn't much longer than going down th national mall in DC
FROM DC: There are few places in the District itself that are overhyped. Mannassas (Bull Run) National Battlefield. The only thing to SEE is just a big field. A very historically important big field, but that doesn't mean there's anything to see or do there. If you want to get out of town, but still want to see the Air & Space Museum, go see the Udvar-Hazy (sp?) campus out towards Reston. And I'm no fan of the redo of the dinosaur exhibit at the Museum of Natural History. But typically ALL the free stuff is great.
There’s currently a fence up around the White House and you can only see it from a distance close to the Washington memorial. The fence was put up during the BLM protests last year by Trump and it has still not been taken down, so until it is down I have to say the White House is a disappointment since you can’t really see it because of the fence.
I think the point of this post isn't to discourage you from going there. The point is to go, but look ELSEWHERE nearby for the best experience.
Seattle. My highlight of the trip was the ferry ride over to Bainbridge Island. The PNW is truly beautiful. I also enjoyed snowshoeing near Mt. Rainer and exploring old growth forests on an excursion. I had a friend take me around Seattle for good food, breweries and shopping spots. With that said, I found it hard to enjoy much in the city due to the overwhelming homeless population. They weren't harassing me or anything, they were literately just everywhere and it was very sad. I've since then made donations to some organizations in Seattle, even though I live in Pennsylvania.
a question or challenge for you world traveling Pandas out there: how many of these 65 places have you been to? In the reply, put your handle up with "x/65" next to it if you have been to any of these places with the "x" being the number of places:
4/30 There are many American attractions. I only travel in Europe
Load More Replies...Maui the submarine that takes you around the harbor. Don't go unless you have kids under five who just watched the Mermaid. There is a person in a mermaid costume that comes up to the windows and shows you a rock and a starfish. That's it. It's like a smelly bus that is underwater. And that trolly that goes up the mountain out of Vancouver to some kind of tourist park. They did have a good movie but the rest was just trails with two bears behind a fence. Oh and a raptor show. Nice view from the trolly going down but found the whole place under whelming.
Surprised nobody said Wisconsin Dells. Big plastic animal statues, indoor hotel water parks, and fudge shops.
You clearly missed the Tommy Bartlett Water Show, and Circus World, and Duck tours, and the railway museum, and House on the Rock, and all the wine.
Load More Replies...Niagara falls. Casinos and restaurants. The best spots to take a picture are paying. They sell shirt saying "I survived Niagara Falls" but truth is there is nothing wild reminding there.
There are three things I have seen that left me totally disappointed. The Hope Diamond in Washingtion DC, it's a rock that is not really that big, tons of people were really excited about it, it was completely lost on me. The Magna Carta, in Salisbury Cathedral, it was a small piece of paper written in French, I don't know what I was expecing, but felt very underwhelmed when leaving there. Salem, Massachusetts, the famous witch trials city, it was a tourist trap, with nothing of any real substance, excited to go there, left really disappointed. There are a dozen witch museums and they are all expensive for what they are.
I want to mention one too.... The hypogeum in Malta! It's supposed to be the most famous sightseeing in the island but hear my advice and don't throw your money!!! It's ridiculously overpriced 40 Euros per person for a tour that lasts about 40 minutes! The place is impressive with underground tombs but they don't show any respect to it! The staff was bored when i was there, they didn't have headphones and you had to hold the thing to your ear for 40 minutes and the most important they didn't have many languages available! When your sight is called hypogeum (Greek word) i expect to have Greek language available!!! Especially for the 40 Euros i paid! We've been in other audio tours in Malta with 10 Euros and they had more languages available! Huge shame still crying for this money
I have to disagree about this one. Hypogeum is an amazing historical monument that is over 6000 years old with breathtaking architecture. The word hypogeum just means that it's an underground temple, it doesn't really have any Greek connection as far as I know. The guided tour provides enough information to at least give a glimpse into it's history. That is unfortunately not always the case for other megalithic structures in Malta, all of which are just awe-inspiring. If you are interested in history and especially in pre-history on Europe, hypogeum is definitely a must visit. Just a note for anyone interested: the number of people allowed inside is very restricted and you need to buy tickets an advance, I suggest checking their website as soon as you have your plane tickets booked) Honestly, to this day the Hal Saflieni Hypogeum remains one the most impressive places I've ever visited.
Load More Replies...I have 0 sympathy or surprise. Lower your expectations, or have them lowered for you by research.
Every single one of these are just stupid. Who knew a popular landmark can be a tourist trap. What did you expect? Do you people read at all before you travel?
Some people just shouldn't travel. Honestly. Who goes to Disneyland and complains about crowds and overpriced food? Either go out of season and bring your own food, or don't go at all. The Liberty Bell is just a bell - who knew? What exactly were you expecting, a line of dancing entertainers in bell costumes? Egyptians live in Egypt and many are extremely poor. Your rich tourist $$ feed their families. There are plenty of wonderful people in that country, and lots of other amazing historical monuments if you don't like the crowds at the Pyramids. I've been to many of these places and had an amazing time. I go in with the right expectations and set up the experiences to suit me and my family. It's all about research and being realistic.
I have also been many of these places and enjoyed some of those but egypt especially Cairo and the pyramids have been very bad experience because of local people. I have been dealing with sellers in other countries in Africa and Asia and usually they do not not act so agressive way than next to pyramids. First taxi driver was taking us to atleast two destinations we didn't want to stop (his friends business) We had to get out of the car in the middle of the street because it was scary and annoying and he refuse to give our bags first. Next to the pyramids people really push their items to your hands even you say firm NO and yells to you and insist to give money. Almost impossible to walk thru (we went alone, not with tourist group so we were almost only persons at the moment and all vendors werw all over us) Worst part was that one man stuck his hand to my intime area while I was trying to walk forward and that is only time ever anywhere in the world that I have been sexually attacked
Load More Replies...We already had a post like this not long ago, and it didn't get any more interesting. Popular tourist destinations are really crowded, a building is just a building, a painting is just a painting, and a lake is just a like, who could have guessed. That can be said about virtually every place.
I remember that. And someone actually complained "Wall Street" was a disappointment. "It's just a street". Yep, that's what it is. What it's not supposed to be is a tourist destination
Load More Replies...I came to be discouraged from different places but I left with a million new travel wishes! Especially the christmas shop in michigan (or was it minnesota?) seems cool
Come visit us in Michigan! Frankenmuth has a Bronner's Christmas Wonderland (the biggest Xmas store in the world*), and then down the street a bunch of cute little shops, horse & buggy rides, and a lot of Bavarian architecture. You can also take a river boat ride and eat in at the Bavarian Inn Restaurant which is covered in murals, the staff dress in the old timey German style, and there is always an accordion player entertaining diners. Kids especially love it!
Load More Replies...I think I'd rather read a thread about tourist attractions that people thought were *better* than expected.
I want to go to a place everyone knows about to take my instagram selfie but it was too crowded because everyone wanted to do the same as me...
All I can say is how incredibly lucky I am to have been able to travel over so much of the world. There's very few places that I would actually complain about. All I think about is what are we creating now that somebody will be in awe of some 200 or 300 years in the future?
Most of these really aren't that bad, especially if you can learn to focus on the experience more than the tourists. Also, don't make that one attraction the main focus of your trip, instead, go there, then enjoy the small towns/natural areas nearby.
If you are complaining about crowd in a tourist attraction then you are a hypocrite. All other complaints are fine...
First Rule of Travel: Look at the top five sites people say you MUST see.... and avoid them. You have a lot more fun, learn a lot more, meet amazing and diverse people. Just act with courtesy and learn enough native language to be polite (I don't speak the language is the first phrase to learn, second is forgive me, third is please, thank you, may I request assistance, etc.).... the best of most countries is never at any site featured on postcards, in my experience.
My main takeaway from this is that the worst thing about tourist traps... is the tourists. Who knew? I grew up in Blackpool and I swear people just turn off their brains when they go on holiday - wandering out into traffic just to get a better view of the Tower or the Illuminations. Oh, and that advice about "if you want the real experience, go back a few streets from the central tourist area" only applies to little towns in Spain or Italy. Go back a few streets in Blackpool and all you see is the second most deprived area in the UK (after a small town in Essex with a population of less than 5% of Blackpool). Stick to the tourist areas and maintain the illusion.
Go back a few streets in Blackpool and get offered literally every kind of illegal substance possible.
Load More Replies...I do not understand people who go on vacation to a place in the middle of the tourist season and get angry because it is full of tourists, surely the local people are more angry. If you don't like people there are many destinations to go to, otherwise there is no other option than to enjoy the place in the best possible way. Sometimes, you just have to be grateful that you could go, see and be in a place that many people in the world will never be able to meet. I mean, you're on holiday, just relax and enjoy!
For me, it was definitely the Plitvice Lakes in Croatia. Don't get me wrong, the area itself is gorgeous, it's just that the area is also FLOODED with people, the entire flipping day. Like, imagine a lake, which you can either walk around or take a boat to cross. Around where the boat departs there's a small area for people to wait for the boat, that area is about as big as the lake itself and it's PACKED with people. As in, wait for three hours before you can cross, if you're not going to walk around the lake. The boardwalks over the water are amazing but there's so many tourists that you can't cross them without risk of falling in the water, you constantly have to wait for people to take their selfies (with the risk of being hit in the face with a selfiestick). There's so many tourists that there's a traffic jam in front of the gates an HOUR before the park even opens. AT SEVEN IN THE MORNING. Never go there.
Ehehehehhe I'm from Croatia and I've been to Plitivice Lakes once. It wasn't as crowded as you say, but that was a long time ago and not during tourist season. It was pretty rainy, though. It's often rainy at nature parks built around rivers. Sadly, falling into the water is less of a risk, when it comes to Plitvice - landmines are a greater concern, but it's safe if you stay within the tourist infrastructure. Just don't wander around too far, and possibly stand by your tour/guide. Anyway, Plitvice Lakes are nice, but there's plenty of equally beautiful nature parks in Croatia.
Load More Replies...My family made the trip up the NC coast to visit the lighthouses. There they were...no information just them sitting there. But so remote we had to rush by one to get to the ferry. I held the camera out of the window and clicked. Very anticlimactic. We made the ferry.
I'd add Pamukkale in Turkey. Completely empty of water except one small artificially built part! We asked an employee why it was so, he said water enables algae and stuff to grow in the pools, so they keep it all dry except when promo material is being done :/ Understandable, but dissapointing.
A bit of a milder example since I still found it interesting, but the Victor Hotel (and town of Victor) in Colorado wasn't as cool as I thought it was gonna be. It's a historical hotel that's pretty well-known for its "haunted elevator", but the rooms only have one bed (unless you decide to borrow a foldable one) and there isn't much to do in the town. We ended up going to the nearby town Cripple Creek for food and other attractions.
As I stated in one of my comments, I'm so glad that I did my travelling back in the Sixties & Seventies, tourism was in it's infancy, not too crowded, I have wonderful memories of those days, I've written out my travel diaries, digitised my slides, and share the experiences with friends, who are all like me, in our 70's. All the places that I visited, are places I'd read about, like the song says - 'Far away places, with strange sounding names, far away over the sea .......'
True, many people haven't the inner resources to benefit from travel. Travel is about what YOU bring to IT. Yes, there are tourist traps to be avoided (the glass bridge is an excellent example) and there are overcrowded places that should be visited off-peak. Faced with a long line at the Fondation Vuitton museum in Paris, my wife had a great idea: ask the attendant what days/times are slowest. He told us--and three days later at a decently convenient hour were practically OWNED the place. Then there's the problem of essential interest. For every 'must-see,' as WHY. If the answer is because it's supposed to be quite something, you're almost guaranteed to get nothing out of the experience. If you're seriously interested in the American Revolution, the Liberty Bell may very well be more than a mere bell to you. If not, not. I love Italy and Shakespeare, so when in Verona I always drop by Juliet's House. Of course it's all a fiction, but so what? It's also an homage to love.
No need to travel, it's getting to d*** crowded and rude right here in this town these days.
Balmoral Castle in Scotland: You can only go in one room, the gardens are tiny, there is security cameras everywhere throughout the surrounding land and the police will harass you. It's not worth the money or time.
Almost every foreign person I ever spoke to loved Amsterdam. I live about 50km from Amsterdam and I don't see the appeal to the city. It's a overcrowded,dirty city. There are many much more beautiful places in the Netherlands.
THIS ARTICLE JUST PO ROVES HOW F*****G STUPID THE MASSES ARE! I LIVE ON A PLANET FILLED WITH MORONS!
I think it's not about the thing you are seeing or place you are visiting, but what feelings they bring in you. Some wonders of the world I deeply feel like I have a connection, and visiting them would probably make me feel amazing, no matter how expensive and crowded it is. And some, are just not my thing. So I don't go.
I think travel is about the people and your spirit. I went to Switzerland and love it and hate it, because I was with the wrong person and my mood was not the best. Try to visit your own city and you will be amazed the same way people who come from far away to visit it.
BOSTON: The aquarium is very famous, but meh. The science museum is surprisingly lame. Stick to the historical stuff. The great thing about Boston is that it's very compact; young people can walk around the whole city; I used to walk from work near Fenway and join my housemates as they got out of work going through Back Bay, downtown, North End, and up to Charleston in one big, walk that wasn't much longer than going down th national mall in DC
FROM DC: There are few places in the District itself that are overhyped. Mannassas (Bull Run) National Battlefield. The only thing to SEE is just a big field. A very historically important big field, but that doesn't mean there's anything to see or do there. If you want to get out of town, but still want to see the Air & Space Museum, go see the Udvar-Hazy (sp?) campus out towards Reston. And I'm no fan of the redo of the dinosaur exhibit at the Museum of Natural History. But typically ALL the free stuff is great.
There’s currently a fence up around the White House and you can only see it from a distance close to the Washington memorial. The fence was put up during the BLM protests last year by Trump and it has still not been taken down, so until it is down I have to say the White House is a disappointment since you can’t really see it because of the fence.
I think the point of this post isn't to discourage you from going there. The point is to go, but look ELSEWHERE nearby for the best experience.
Seattle. My highlight of the trip was the ferry ride over to Bainbridge Island. The PNW is truly beautiful. I also enjoyed snowshoeing near Mt. Rainer and exploring old growth forests on an excursion. I had a friend take me around Seattle for good food, breweries and shopping spots. With that said, I found it hard to enjoy much in the city due to the overwhelming homeless population. They weren't harassing me or anything, they were literately just everywhere and it was very sad. I've since then made donations to some organizations in Seattle, even though I live in Pennsylvania.
a question or challenge for you world traveling Pandas out there: how many of these 65 places have you been to? In the reply, put your handle up with "x/65" next to it if you have been to any of these places with the "x" being the number of places:
4/30 There are many American attractions. I only travel in Europe
Load More Replies...Maui the submarine that takes you around the harbor. Don't go unless you have kids under five who just watched the Mermaid. There is a person in a mermaid costume that comes up to the windows and shows you a rock and a starfish. That's it. It's like a smelly bus that is underwater. And that trolly that goes up the mountain out of Vancouver to some kind of tourist park. They did have a good movie but the rest was just trails with two bears behind a fence. Oh and a raptor show. Nice view from the trolly going down but found the whole place under whelming.
Surprised nobody said Wisconsin Dells. Big plastic animal statues, indoor hotel water parks, and fudge shops.
You clearly missed the Tommy Bartlett Water Show, and Circus World, and Duck tours, and the railway museum, and House on the Rock, and all the wine.
Load More Replies...Niagara falls. Casinos and restaurants. The best spots to take a picture are paying. They sell shirt saying "I survived Niagara Falls" but truth is there is nothing wild reminding there.
There are three things I have seen that left me totally disappointed. The Hope Diamond in Washingtion DC, it's a rock that is not really that big, tons of people were really excited about it, it was completely lost on me. The Magna Carta, in Salisbury Cathedral, it was a small piece of paper written in French, I don't know what I was expecing, but felt very underwhelmed when leaving there. Salem, Massachusetts, the famous witch trials city, it was a tourist trap, with nothing of any real substance, excited to go there, left really disappointed. There are a dozen witch museums and they are all expensive for what they are.
I want to mention one too.... The hypogeum in Malta! It's supposed to be the most famous sightseeing in the island but hear my advice and don't throw your money!!! It's ridiculously overpriced 40 Euros per person for a tour that lasts about 40 minutes! The place is impressive with underground tombs but they don't show any respect to it! The staff was bored when i was there, they didn't have headphones and you had to hold the thing to your ear for 40 minutes and the most important they didn't have many languages available! When your sight is called hypogeum (Greek word) i expect to have Greek language available!!! Especially for the 40 Euros i paid! We've been in other audio tours in Malta with 10 Euros and they had more languages available! Huge shame still crying for this money
I have to disagree about this one. Hypogeum is an amazing historical monument that is over 6000 years old with breathtaking architecture. The word hypogeum just means that it's an underground temple, it doesn't really have any Greek connection as far as I know. The guided tour provides enough information to at least give a glimpse into it's history. That is unfortunately not always the case for other megalithic structures in Malta, all of which are just awe-inspiring. If you are interested in history and especially in pre-history on Europe, hypogeum is definitely a must visit. Just a note for anyone interested: the number of people allowed inside is very restricted and you need to buy tickets an advance, I suggest checking their website as soon as you have your plane tickets booked) Honestly, to this day the Hal Saflieni Hypogeum remains one the most impressive places I've ever visited.
Load More Replies...I have 0 sympathy or surprise. Lower your expectations, or have them lowered for you by research.
Every single one of these are just stupid. Who knew a popular landmark can be a tourist trap. What did you expect? Do you people read at all before you travel?