Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Five Reasons to Feel Genuinely Hopeful About the World Right Now

We know. The news can be a lot. Every time you open a browser, there’s another headline designed to make your stomach drop. So today, we’re doing something different.

We’ve spent time researching, fact-checking, and verifying five stories that genuinely deserve to be celebrated – positive developments for animals, for the planet, and for the future. Every single one of them is real. Every single one of them matters. And all of them have been independently fact-checked, with any nuances noted as honestly as we can.

Here goes.


1. South Korea Has Ended Bear Bile Farming

On 1 January 2026, South Korea officially banned the breeding and possession of bears and the extraction of their bile – formally ending an industry that animal welfare organisations had campaigned against for over two decades.

Bear bile farming involved keeping Asiatic black bears (known as moon bears) in tiny cages for the extraction of bile from their gallbladders, used in traditional medicine. The conditions were acknowledged even by regulators to involve prolonged physical and psychological suffering.

The ban was introduced through a revised animal rights protection law, with violations carrying prison sentences of up to five years. The South Korean Ministry of Climate, Energy and Environment confirmed the change, stating: “Our plan to end bear farming is an implementation of our country’s resolve to improve the welfare of wild animals and fulfil our related international responsibility.”

The nuance worth knowing: Approximately 200 bears remain on farms across South Korea while the transition is managed, and animal welfare groups have noted that existing sanctuary capacity is limited. The legal industry has ended, but advocates are rightly continuing to push for faster rehoming of the remaining bears. The campaign isn’t completely finished – but the hardest part is done, and the result of over 20 years of tireless advocacy by organisations including World Animal Protection and Green Korea United.

This is what change looks like.


2. The Ozone Layer Is Steadily Recovering and the Numbers Are Encouraging

Remember the ozone layer? This might be the original good news story that got forgotten while other crises took the headlines. So let’s revisit it.

Thanks to the 1987 Montreal Protocol — in which countries around the world agreed to phase out ozone-depleting chemicals – the ozone layer has been measurably healing for decades. According to the latest assessments from the UN Environment Programme and the World Meteorological Organisation, recovery is firmly on track. The 2025 Antarctic ozone hole was the fifth smallest since 1992, closed earlier than average, and scientists confirmed it reflects genuine, sustained progress.

The projected recovery timeline, confirmed by UN-backed science: by approximately 2040 for most of the world, by 2045 over the Arctic, and by 2066 over the Antarctic.

The nuance worth knowing: The claim you’ll sometimes see that the ozone layer is recovering “faster than expected” is a slight overstatement – the recovery is broadly in line with scientific predictions, and the 2066 Antarctic timeline was actually pushed back slightly in the 2022 assessment compared to earlier estimates. The honest version is that recovery is steady, consistent, and directly attributable to international cooperation. It’s a remarkable story of what happens when the world agrees on a problem and actually does something about it. A new assessment is due in 2026, which may update the picture further.

The ozone layer is the proof of concept for global environmental action. And right now, it’s working.


3. Mexico Has Written Animal Welfare Into Its Constitution

In December 2024, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum signed a landmark reform that amended three articles of the Mexican Constitution to enshrine animal protection as a fundamental value for the first time in the country’s history.

The reforms passed unanimously in both houses of Congress – 450-0 in the Chamber of Deputies, 117-0 in the Senate, and were subsequently ratified by a majority of Mexico’s state legislatures.

The key changes: Article 4 now prohibits the mistreatment of animals and mandates their protection and care. Article 73 empowers Congress to create Mexico’s first nationwide animal welfare law, replacing a patchwork of inconsistent state-level protections. Article 3 requires animal welfare to be included in the national education curriculum, meaning future generations of Mexicans will grow up learning that other species matter.

Animal welfare experts noted that Mexico’s reforms are unusually specific and detailed by global standards. As animal law scholar Kristen Stilt told Vox: “Mexico is different. It’s longer, it’s more specific. It’s in several provisions.”

The nuance worth knowing: The constitutional amendment is the framework, the detailed federal animal welfare law has yet to be drafted and enacted, and campaigners acknowledge that Mexico’s intensive agricultural industry may push back on certain provisions. The reforms are the foundation, not the finished building. But what a foundation.


4. Japanese Scientists Have Created a Plastic That Dissolves in Seawater – Without Leaving Microplastics

This one genuinely stopped us in our tracks when we first read it.

Researchers led by Dr Takuzo Aida at the RIKEN Centre for Emergent Matter Science in Japan have developed a plant-based plastic made from carboxymethyl cellulose, a biodegradable wood-pulp derivative, that completely dissolves in seawater within approximately two hours, leaving zero microplastic fragments behind. The research was published in the peer-reviewed Journal of the American Chemical Society in late 2025.

The material is strong, flexible, transparent, and can be manufactured using affordable, FDA-approved ingredients mixed in water at room temperature. In lab demonstrations, a bag made from the material, filled with tomatoes, dissolved entirely in artificial seawater within hours. The breakdown products are nitrogen and phosphorus, which microbes can metabolise and plants can absorb.

The same team had developed an earlier version of the plastic last year, but this new iteration uses plant-based ingredients, making it far more practical for real-world manufacturing. The plastic can also be recycled, the dissolved components can be recovered and recombined into the same material.

The nuance worth knowing: This is currently a research breakthrough rather than a commercial product. The laboratory tests used artificial seawater in controlled conditions, and real-world performance at scale, including in open ocean environments, remains to be established. Scaling up production and building the infrastructure for collection and recycling would require significant investment. This is a genuinely exciting proof of concept, not yet a solution sitting on supermarket shelves. But the science is solid, the peer review is done, and the direction of travel is extremely encouraging.


5. Chile Is Completing One of the Largest Wildlife Corridors on Earth

This is a story of extraordinary vision, patient ambition, and what happens when conservation and government work together over decades.

Chile is in the process of establishing its 47th national park, Cape Froward National Park, which will complete a continuous protected wildlife corridor stretching 2,800 kilometres (approximately 1,700 miles) through Patagonia to the southernmost tip of South America. The corridor encompasses 17 national parks and protects more than 11 million hectares of wilderness.

The corridor is the result of a remarkable collaboration between Rewilding Chile (a foundation with roots in the philanthropic work of the late Tompkins Conservation), the Chilean government, and a network of conservation organisations. In one of the largest private land donations in history, Tompkins Conservation gifted nearly a million acres to the Chilean people, which the government matched with millions more acres of newly designated national park land.

The connected corridor allows species including the endangered huemul deer, pumas, and Andean condors to move freely across vast stretches of intact Patagonian wilderness – something that fragmented, isolated protected areas cannot achieve on their own.

The nuance worth knowing: “Building” is a slight overstatement – much of the corridor already exists, and the Cape Froward National Park completes the final piece of a puzzle that has been assembled over many years. The more precise description is that Chile is completing the corridor. The new park itself still awaits a formal decree, though the land donation has been made and the process is well advanced. Either way, the scale of what has been achieved here, and what is about to be finalised, is genuinely extraordinary.


Why We’re Sharing This

At Untravelled Paths, we believe that the world’s wild places are worth protecting, and that travel done well can be part of that protection rather than a threat to it.

That’s why we’re proud partners of the World Land Trust – one of the world’s most respected land conservation organisations, working to protect critically threatened habitats across the globe. With every Untravelled Paths booking, we plant a tree. It’s a small thing, but small things add up and we believe that travel and conservation should go hand in hand.

Stories like the five above remind us why it matters. Bears coming out of cages. An ozone layer healing. A country deciding that animals deserve constitutional protection. Scientists rethinking the very nature of plastic. A 2,800-kilometre corridor of wilderness, stitched together piece by piece.

The world isn’t broken. It’s being fixed – in many places, at once, by people who didn’t give up.

If you’d like to explore some of the wild places worth protecting, we’d love to help you plan the trip.


Sources: World Animal Protection, Euronews, UN Environment Programme, World Meteorological Organization, NASA, NOAA, Animal Legal Defense Fund, Mexico News Daily, Animal Equality, RIKEN Centre for Emergent Matter Science (Journal of the American Chemical Society), The Guardian, Rewilding Chile, Mongabay. All facts have been independently verified. Nuances and caveats are noted throughout.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Five Reasons to Feel Genuinely Hopeful About the World Right Now appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/positive-environmental-news-2026/

Forget the Egg Hunt! These Are the Best Places to Spend Easter Weekend in Europe

There is nothing wrong with a long weekend on the sofa with a tin of chocolate and a good box set. We’re not judging. But if a small part of you is wondering whether Easter weekend could be something more, something that involves actually going somewhere extraordinary, then you’ve come to the right place.

Europe at Easter is genuinely, quietly magical. Crowds haven’t fully arrived yet. Spring is just breaking. And across the continent, from the sun-drenched streets of Andalusia to the cobbled squares of the Balkans, Easter is celebrated with a depth of tradition, drama, and community warmth that makes Christmas look understated.

Here are four of the best Easter destinations in Europe, all of them places we know and love, and none of them the obvious choice.


1. Seville, Spain: Semana Santa

When: Palm Sunday to Easter Sunday (29 March – 5 April 2026) Why it’s special: The most spectacular Easter celebration in the Western world.

If you have never been to Seville for Semana Santa, it belongs on your list immediately. Not eventually. Immediately.

Huge statues representing various images from the Passion of Jesus Christ take to the streets in processions that last up to 12 hours. Schools shut, workplaces close, and the whole city bands together in appreciation of the spectacle. This has been happening, in more or less its current form, since the 16th century and it shows not the slightest sign of fading.

Over 50,000 cofradía members don traditional robes and solemnly traverse the city in over 116 processions from Palm Sunday to Easter morning. A cappella saetas, hauntingly beautiful religious songs, accompany some processions, brass bands others, while some are observed in complete silence.

The climax comes on the night of Holy Thursday into Good Friday, known as La Madrugá. La Madrugá is the most emotionally intense night of Semana Santa. Six major brotherhoods wind their way through Seville’s historic centre with enormous paso floats weighing up to a tonne, illuminated only by candlelight and accompanied by the sound of drums and saetas sung from the balconies above. The city turns off its streetlights as the oldest and most revered procession passes through in near-total darkness. Adults cry. Seasoned travellers are left speechless.

The city smells of orange blossom and incense and candle wax. Brass bands’ solemn marches echo off the walls of the old town. For a non-religious visitor, it remains one of the most viscerally moving cultural experiences in Europe.

Practical tips: Book accommodation months in advance – the city fills completely. Expect some bars and restaurants to close during the busiest nights so that locals can participate. Dress respectfully, particularly near the processions, and arrive early to claim a good spot. The seat sections closest to the cathedral require tickets, but standing along any of the routes is free and gives a perfectly good view.


2. Corfu, Greece: Orthodox Easter

When: Greek Orthodox Easter Sunday, 12 April 2026 Why it’s special: Europe’s most exuberant Easter celebration, with unique traditions unlike anything else in Greece

Greek Orthodox Easter is the most important holiday in the Greek calendar, and no part of Greece celebrates it quite like Corfu.

Easter in Corfu is a unique blend of Catholic and Orthodox Christian religious traditions, influenced by Venetian customs and local cultural elements. Since the period of Venetian rule, Easter has been jointly celebrated by both the Orthodox and Catholic Churches. The result is a celebration that is at once deeply devout and spectacularly, joyously alive.

The week builds through solemn Good Friday processions, there are 33 epitaphs, symbolising the 33 years of Christ’s life, each accompanied by a choir, philharmonic band, large candles, and towering banners, before Holy Saturday delivers one of the most gloriously eccentric traditions in all of Europe.

At around 11am, the town square fills with people who gather to witness the famous pot-throwing ceremony. Locals throw large ceramic pots filled with water from their balconies onto the streets below, accompanied by loud music and cheering. The noise is tremendous. The smashed pottery is everywhere. And it is absolutely brilliant.

At midnight, Corfu lights up as the Holy Flame is shared among worshippers. The Hymn of Christ’s Resurrection is sung, and thousands of candles illuminate the night sky. The night ends with a grand fireworks display, marking the most joyful moment of Easter in Corfu.

Easter Sunday brings lamb on the spit, red eggs, family gatherings, and a sense of communal joy that spills into every café and square on the island. The celebrations continue for several more days, with parades and processions, and a sense of joy and celebration that permeates the entire island.

Note that Greek Orthodox Easter falls on a different date to Western Easter in 2026, 12 April rather than 5 April, so you can, in theory, do both Seville and Corfu in the same season.

Practical tips: Corfu Town is the place to be, particularly around the Liston, the Spianada, and the old town. Book accommodation well in advance. Stand clear of the balconies on Holy Saturday morning unless you are happy to get wet.


3. Sarajevo, Bosnia & Herzegovina: Where Four Faiths Share the Season

When: Catholic Easter 5 April 2026; Orthodox Easter 12 April 2026 Why it’s special: The only city in Europe where you can walk from a mosque to a synagogue to a Catholic cathedral to an Orthodox church in under ten minutes

Sarajevo at Easter is something entirely its own. The city is a timeless tapestry where East meets West, observing both Catholic and Orthodox Easter dates, often creating a prolonged season of reflection and celebration. The cobblestone streets echo with the chatter of café patrons, the call to prayer, and the solemn, beautiful chants of Holy Week services. It is a season of contrasts: the solemnity of a candlelit procession and the joyous clinking of glasses in a kafana.

Bosnia is something in between. There are Catholics, Orthodox, Muslims and Jews. All holidays are celebrated according to local traditions. Another name for Sarajevo is European Jerusalem, within a radius of 600 metres you can see the religious buildings of all four major monotheistic world religions.

The most numerous ethnic group in the country are the Muslim Bosniaks, who naturally do not observe a Christian holiday. However, thanks to a long tradition of multi-ethnic coexistence, many Bosniaks join the Easter family feasts of their Christian friends and neighbours. There is something genuinely moving about seeing this in action, a reminder that shared humanity has always been more powerful than division, in a city that knows the full weight of that truth.

The Baščaršija old bazaar, one of the most atmospheric corners of Europe, is at its finest in spring – warm enough to sit outside, but not yet overrun with summer tourists. The smells of freshly ground coffee, grilled meat, and the Ottoman-era coppersmiths at work form a backdrop to the Easter season that you will not find anywhere else on the continent.

Beyond the city, the hills of Bosnia are still snowcapped in early April, the rivers are running high and glacially clear, and the countryside is erupting into green. It is, in short, an extraordinary place to be.

Practical tips: Sarajevo is compact and very walkable. Book a guesthouse in or near the old town rather than a chain hotel – the city’s independently run accommodation is excellent and puts you in the heart of everything. Day trips to Mostar and the surrounding countryside are easily arranged.


4. Transylvania, Romania: Orthodox Easter in the Villages

When: Orthodox Easter Sunday, 12 April 2026 Why it’s special: Ancient traditions, extraordinary landscapes, and an Easter experience that feels completely unchanged by time

Transylvania at Easter is one of Europe’s best-kept secrets. While the rest of the world has heard of Dracula and the medieval castles and yes, they’re genuinely spectacular – the Easter traditions of the Transylvanian countryside go largely unnoticed by outside visitors, which makes them all the more precious.

The celebrations begin with Palm Sunday, known locally as Duminica Floriilor, opening Holy Week – a time of spiritual preparation. Many Romanians observe Lent in the weeks leading up to Easter, abstaining from meat and dairy, making the eventual Easter meal both a reward and a spiritual milestone.

Transylvania has been inhabited over time by different communities including Romanians, Hungarians, Saxons, and other minorities, and their diversity has influenced local traditions and customs. The result is a fascinatingly layered Easter, where Orthodox Romanian traditions sit alongside Hungarian Catholic customs and the remnants of Saxon heritage – all within a few miles of each other.

In Transylvania, people strictly observe Lent and prepare the household: land is ploughed and sown, houses are whitewashed and cleaned, new clothes are made. Easter Sunday brings the family to the table for a feast centred on roast lamb, intricately hand-painted eggs, cozonac (a rich, sweet Easter bread), and the ancient custom of egg-tapping – family members tap their painted eggs together, competing to see whose shell is strongest, exchanging the traditional greeting: “Hristos a înviat!” (Christ has risen!) and the response: “Adevărat a înviat!” (Truly, He has risen!)

In Transylvania, young men go from house to house on Easter Monday sprinkling perfume on girls in a playful ritual meant to bring luck and beauty throughout the year. It’s the kind of tradition that makes you realise how much richness there is in the parts of Europe that most tourists simply never reach.

Pair an Easter stay with visits to the medieval walled city of Sighișoara, the fortified churches of the Saxon villages, or the extraordinary painted monasteries of nearby Bucovina and you have one of the finest Easter breaks imaginable.

Practical tips: Stay in one of the beautifully restored traditional guesthouses in the villages rather than in a larger town, Easter in Transylvania is a rural experience at heart. The villages around Sibiu, Sighișoara, and the Székely Land are particularly rewarding.


Easter 2026: When Are the Dates?

A quick note for those planning ahead:

Western/Catholic Easter: Sunday 5 April 2026 Greek/Serbian Orthodox Easter: Sunday 12 April 2026

This means that in 2026, the two Easters fall a week apart – giving the well-organised traveller the genuinely wonderful option of experiencing two completely different Easter traditions in one extended spring break.


Ready to Make Easter Unforgettable?

These are just four of the destinations across Europe and beyond where we love to take travellers at Easter. Whether you’re drawn to the theatrical grandeur of Seville, the joyous chaos of Corfu’s pot-throwing, the timeless village traditions of Transylvania, or the extraordinary cultural tapestry of Sarajevo, we can help you put together a trip that goes far beyond a standard long weekend break.

Get in touch with the Untravelled Paths team and let’s start planning your Easter adventure. We know these places personally, we know the best places to stay, and we know how to make sure you’re in exactly the right spot at exactly the right moment.

Because Easter only comes once a year and some years it deserves better than the sofa!

The post Forget the Egg Hunt! These Are the Best Places to Spend Easter Weekend in Europe appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/best-places-spend-easter-europe/

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Eastern Europe Is Safer Than You Think

The 2026 Crime Index Figures That Should Change How You Travel

There is a myth. It has been around for decades, passed down through cautious relatives, outdated travel guides, and the kind of well-meaning advice that begins with “are you sure that’s a good idea?”.

The myth goes something like this: Eastern Europe is dangerous. Stick to Western Europe if you want to be safe. Paris, London, Rome – those are the sensible choices.

Well. The 2026 Numbeo Crime Index for Europe has just published its latest figures, and if you’ve been operating on that assumption, it’s time for a rethink. A fairly significant one.


What the Numbers Actually Say

Numbeo’s Crime Index is one of the most widely referenced crowd-sourced databases of perceived crime and safety worldwide. A higher score means more crime. A lower score means safer streets. The 2026 European rankings make for genuinely eye-opening reading.

Before we dive in, one important note: Numbeo’s index is based on crowd-sourced perception data. that is, how safe residents and visitors feel in a given country, rather than official police statistics or recorded crime figures. Perception and reality don’t always align perfectly, and no single dataset tells the complete story. That said, perception data is arguably what matters most to a traveller deciding where to go, and the scale and consistency of Numbeo’s dataset, drawn from hundreds of thousands of contributors worldwide, makes it one of the most meaningful barometers of real-world travel safety available. The trends it reveals are striking, and they are consistent with what we and our guests experience on the ground year after year.

Here are the ten countries with the highest crime scores in Europe – in other words, the ones perceived as least safe:

Rank Country Crime Index
1 France 55.8
2 Belgium 49.2
3 Ireland 49.0
4 Belarus 48.5
5 United Kingdom 48.3
6 Sweden 47.9
7 Italy 47.3
8 Ukraine 46.9
9 Greece 46.2
10 Moldova 44.6

France – France! Tops the list as the country with the highest perceived crime rate in Europe. The United Kingdom comes in fifth. Sweden sixth. Italy seventh.

Now here are the ten safest countries in Europe according to the same data:

Rank Country Crime Index
34 Estonia 23.2
33 Isle of Man 20.9
32 Andorra 15.2
35 Croatia 24.3
36 Slovenia 24.5
37 Netherlands 25.5
38 Iceland 25.5
39 Denmark 26.2
40 Czech Republic 26.4
41 Finland 26.5

Estonia is safer than France by a margin of more than 30 points. Croatia and Slovenia, two of our favourite destinations, sit comfortably among the safest countries on the continent. Poland (28.7) and Romania (32.8) are both safer than Germany (38.4), Spain (37.6) and significantly safer than the UK (48.3).

Let that sink in for a moment.


The Eastern European Story Nobody Tells

Look at where the countries that are so often whispered about nervously actually sit in these rankings:

  • Romania: 32.8 — safer than Germany, Spain and Italy
  • Poland: 28.7 — safer than Germany, safer than Spain, safer than France by nearly 27 points
  • Czech Republic: 26.4 — one of the safest countries in Europe, full stop
  • Slovakia: 31.1 — safer than Germany
  • Bulgaria: 35.5 — safer than France, Belgium, the UK, Sweden and Italy
  • Serbia: 37.0 — safer than France, Belgium, the UK and Sweden
  • Croatia: 24.3 — among the safest countries on the entire continent
  • Slovenia: 24.5 — ditto
  • Hungary: 33.5 — safer than France by over 22 points
  • Estonia: 23.2 — one of the very safest countries in Europe

The pattern here is not subtle. Country after country in Eastern and Central Europe scores considerably better than the Western European nations that are routinely marketed as safe, sophisticated, must-visit destinations.

Meanwhile, France, the world’s most visited country, the dream destination of countless travellers, the one nobody ever questions, sits at the very top of the European crime index. Not because Paris is some kind of war zone, of course it isn’t, but because perceived safety and received wisdom are two very different things, and the data is telling us quite clearly that our assumptions need updating.


Why Does the Myth Persist?

It’s a fair question. If the numbers are this clear, why do so many people still hesitate about travelling east?

Part of it is legacy. The Cold War cast a long shadow, and for decades the countries behind the Iron Curtain were genuinely closed, mysterious, and associated in the Western imagination with grey austerity and suspicion. Those perceptions were baked into a generation of attitudes, and they have been slow to shift even as the reality on the ground changed beyond recognition.

Part of it is media representation. Crime stories from Western capitals get far more coverage in British and Irish newspapers than equivalent stories from Bucharest or Tallinn, which creates a skewed impression that one set of places is inherently more dangerous than another.

And part of it, frankly, is familiarity bias. We fear what we don’t know. Paris feels safe because we know what to expect. Warsaw feels riskier not because it is, but because it’s less familiar. The data tells us this is an illusion.


What This Means for Travellers

It means that the reasons to explore Eastern Europe, the extraordinary history, the wild landscapes, the intact old towns, the extraordinary food, the value for money, the warmth of the welcome, the sheer lack of tourist crowds, are not counterbalanced by any meaningful safety concern.

Romania’s Danube Delta is one of Europe’s last great wildernesses, and it is safer to visit than France. Albania’s Accursed Mountains, name notwithstanding, are safer than the UK, safer than Belgium, safer than Ireland. The cobbled medieval streets of Tallinn and Ljubljana are among the safest urban environments on the continent.

This is not to say that common sense doesn’t apply everywhere you travel, it always does. Be aware of your surroundings, look after your belongings, follow local advice. That’s true in Prague and it’s true in Paris. But the idea that Eastern Europe requires a different or heightened level of caution compared to Western Europe is simply not supported by the evidence.


The Destinations Waiting for You

At Untravelled Paths, Eastern Europe and the Balkans have always been close to our hearts precisely because they offer something the well-worn Western routes can’t: genuine discovery. Places where you can still feel like you’ve found something, rather than joined a queue to see it.

The Danube Delta in Romania, where Lipovan Russians and Ukrainians have lived side by side in harmony for centuries, accessible only by boat, surrounded by extraordinary wildlife. The Accursed Mountains of Albania, where the only road between two villages is a hiking trail over a 1,800-metre mountain pass. The wooden villages of the Transylvanian countryside. The ancient walled city of Dubrovnik’s less-visited Croatian hinterland. The wild karst landscapes of Slovenia.

All of them, according to the 2026 Numbeo Crime Index, safer than France. Safer than the UK. Safer than Sweden.


Ready to See Eastern Europe for Yourself?

If you’ve been putting off a trip to Romania, Albania, the Balkans, or the Baltic states because of a vague, unexamined concern about safety – we hope this post has given you the push you needed.

The numbers are clear. The welcome is warm. The paths are, delightfully, untravelled.

Get in touch with the Untravelled Paths team today and let us help you plan a trip to one of Europe’s most rewarding and most unfairly overlooked corners. We know these places personally and deeply, and we can’t wait to share them with you.

Data source: Numbeo Crime Index by Country 2026 – Europe. View the full dataset here.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Eastern Europe Is Safer Than You Think appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/eastern-europe-safe-travel-crime-index-2026/

Saturday, March 21, 2026

The Places That Really Earn the Name: Our Most Remote Destinations on Earth

We chose the name Untravelled Paths deliberately.

Not because every place we visit is completely uncharted – there are guesthouses, guides, and the very occasional Wi-Fi signal, but because the destinations that get us truly excited are the ones where the world hasn’t yet ironed everything smooth. Places where getting there is genuinely part of the story. Where the landscape feels wild in ways that make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. Where you arrive, take a breath, look around, and think: I cannot believe I’m here.

This is our round-up of the destinations we offer that most honestly, most completely, and most wonderfully earn the word remote. Seven places on seven different corners of the planet, each extraordinary in its own way and each one waiting for you.


1. The Accursed Mountains, Albania — Valbona & Theth

Why it’s remote: There are no roads between these two villages. The only connection is a mountain trail.

Let’s start with the name. The Accursed Mountains. You have to admire a mountain range that makes absolutely no attempt to flatter itself. Known also as the Albanian Alps, this extraordinary corner of northern Albania spent the better part of the 20th century completely sealed off from the outside world under communist rule. Since opening again, it has bewitched every adventurous traveller who makes their way here, which, by European standards, is still a refreshingly small number.

The journey begins with a ferry crossing of Koman Lake, a two-hour glide through a fjord-like landscape of emerald water and dramatic limestone gorges that immediately signals you’re somewhere different. From there, a mountain road (more of a suggestion, really) delivers you to Valbona: a tiny village of guesthouses and farmsteads tucked into a pine valley beneath peaks that wouldn’t look out of place in the Swiss Alps. You spend a night here, you eat well, you sleep the deep sleep of someone who has properly arrived somewhere.

Then you walk to Theth.

The hike covers roughly 16 kilometres over the Valbona Pass at 1,811 metres – a full day’s effort of lung-testing ascents, rocky ridges, and wildflower meadows that finally delivers you to one of the finest views in Europe. Below you on one side is the valley you started from. On the other is Theth: a scattering of stone farmhouses and hay barns in a wide green plateau, ringed by mountains so dramatic they seem deliberately arranged. That evening, you’ll sit on a guesthouse terrace with aching legs and a cold beer and think that you’ve earned this view entirely.

There are no ATMs in Theth or Valbona. The guesthouses take cash only. There are no chain hotels, no package tourists, and no crowds – just mountains, trails, genuine Albanian hospitality, and, if you’re lucky, the distant howl of a wolf as the sun goes down.

Best time to visit: June or September to October. The pass is snowbound and inaccessible in winter.


2. Lapland — The Arctic Wilderness

Why it’s remote: Above the Arctic Circle, in the depths of winter, the sun doesn’t rise for weeks at a time.

Lapland is not a country. It’s a vast, loosely defined wilderness region that arcs across northern Finland, Sweden, Norway, and a corner of Russia – roughly 100,000 square kilometres of Arctic forest, frozen lake, and open tundra, much of it reachable only by snowmobile, dog sled, or your own two feet. The indigenous Sámi people, who have herded reindeer here for thousands of years, have a word for this kind of landscape: sápmi. It means, roughly, their place. And it is very much a place unlike any other.

In January, temperatures drop to -30°C and below. Mobile signals are patchy. Settlements are tiny, hours apart, and separated by forests so dense and so silent that the loudest sound is the snow falling from the branches. The polar night means that for weeks, the sun stays below the horizon entirely — which sounds bleak until you understand what it means for the sky. Because that darkness is precisely what makes the Northern Lights visible. And watching the aurora borealis ripple green and violet and occasionally crimson across the sky above a frozen lake is, without question, one of the great sights available to a human being on this planet.

In summer, the whole thing inverts: the midnight sun means it never gets dark, the forest comes alive in extraordinary colour, and the rivers run with fish. Both seasons are remarkable. Both seasons are remote in ways that genuinely recalibrate your sense of what “normal” means.

We take our guests out onto frozen lakes to fish through the ice. We follow wolf and wolverine tracks through fresh snow. We drive dog sleds through forests that look exactly as forests should – enormous, ancient, and utterly indifferent to human schedules.

Best time to visit: December to March for the Northern Lights and winter activities; June to July for the midnight sun.


3. The Sahara Desert

Why it’s remote: The largest hot desert on earth covers 9.2 million square kilometres. Roads are an afterthought.

The Sahara is not one place. It is a continent within a continent, an ocean of sand and stone and sky stretching from the Atlantic coast of Mauritania to the Red Sea shores of Sudan, swallowing eleven countries whole. Most travellers who say they’ve been to “the Sahara” have barely touched its hem. The deep desert, the Sahara it takes days of driving to reach, where the dunes rise 180 metres and the night sky blazes, is something else entirely.

To get there properly is to leave the world behind in a way that is increasingly difficult to do. The nearest town is a day’s drive away on roads that eventually become tracks, and then become nothing at all. Water is carried. Food is carried. Everything is carried. And the silence, when you finally stop and turn off the engine, is so complete that it feels almost solid.

But the deep Sahara is not inhospitable in spirit. The Tuareg guides who have navigated these sands for generations read the desert the way a sailor reads the sea, and their knowledge is quietly extraordinary. Camel caravans still cross the salt flats, as they have for centuries. At night, the fire becomes the entire world, and the stars above it are so thick and close that the Milky Way casts a faint shadow on the sand.

We arrange small group expeditions into the heart of the desert, sleeping under canvas or in the open, moving slowly and with intention. This is not a day trip. It is a journey, in the oldest sense of the word.

Best time to visit: October to April, when the heat becomes bearable.


4. The Amazon Rainforest

Why it’s remote: The world’s largest tropical rainforest covers 5.5 million square kilometres. Roads cover a tiny fraction of it.

The Amazon is alive in a way that nowhere else on earth quite matches. It is the planet’s greatest argument for abundance, a place of such staggering biological richness that scientists still regularly discover new species. More than 400 billion individual trees. Over 3,000 species of fish. Roughly one in ten of all the species on earth, packed into a single ecosystem so complex that we’re still only beginning to understand it.

And most of it is completely, genuinely, profoundly unreachable.

To get to the deep Amazon, you travel by river, for hours, then days, until the settlements thin out and the forest closes in on both sides of the water in a wall of impenetrable green. The river is the road. The river is the only road. And the river sets the pace.

What our guests consistently find, when they finally get there, surprises them. The Amazon is extraordinarily loud – a constant, layered, living soundscape of birds and frogs and insects that never stops, even at night, when it shifts into something stranger and more ancient. It is dark under the canopy, even at midday. It smells rich and earthy and sweet. And it has a quality of aliveness that you feel physically, as if the forest is breathing around you. Because it is.

We work with indigenous guides whose knowledge of the forest has been passed down over generations and is genuinely humbling. The deep Amazon is the most biodiverse place on the planet, and we approach it with the reverence that demands.

Best time to visit: June to November, the dry season, when river levels drop and wildlife is easier to spot.


5. The Okavango Delta, Botswana

Why it’s remote: Large areas are accessible only by small aircraft landing on bush airstrips, or by traditional dugout canoe.

Here is one of geography’s most glorious anomalies: a river that flows away from the sea. The Okavango travels 1,200 kilometres from the Angolan highlands, crosses Namibia, and then fans out across the Kalahari Desert into an inland delta of channels, islands, and floodplains that can swell to 20,000 square kilometres at peak flood – drawing wildlife in from hundreds of miles around and creating one of Africa’s greatest concentrations of animals. It has been called the river that never finds the sea. We prefer to think of it as the river that found something better.

Botswana has, wisely, chosen quality over quantity for its tourism. There are no minibus convoys here, no roads through the wilderness, no scrum of vehicles around every sighting. Many of the camps we stay in are reachable only by light aircraft, 20-minute flights from Maun in tiny bush planes that land on grass airstrips and feel, in the very best way, like arriving by magic.

From the camps, you explore by mokoro – the traditional dugout canoe, poled silently through papyrus-lined channels by guides of extraordinary skill and knowledge. You might glide past a hippo at five metres. You’ll definitely drift under trees full of carmine bee-eaters. And you’ll understand, very quickly, why a place where you are actively encouraged to switch off your phone, slow down, and let the wilderness set the agenda feels so extraordinarily restorative.

The Big Five are here. So are wild dogs, cheetahs, over 400 species of bird, and a star-filled sky that light pollution has never touched.

Best time to visit: June to October for peak wildlife viewing, when the annual flood brings animals in from across the Kalahari.


6. The Danube Delta, Romania

Why it’s remote: The only way in is by boat. There are no roads.

Most people, if you showed them a map and asked them to find Europe’s greatest wilderness, wouldn’t point to Romania. But there it is, tucked into the far eastern corner of the continent where the Danube meets the Black Sea: a UNESCO World Heritage Site of 5,500 square kilometres of channels, floating reed islands, and mirror-still lakes – the best-preserved river delta on the continent and a place of such extraordinary beauty it almost doesn’t seem quite real.

The villages of the Danube Delta are boat-only settlements, connected to the rest of the world by scheduled ferry services that run once or twice a day. There are no cars and no roads. The loudest sounds are birds and frogs and the gentle creak of a wooden boat. And the birdlife – oh, the birdlife. The Delta is home to the world’s largest colony of Dalmatian pelicans, along with white-tailed eagles, pygmy cormorants, glossy ibis, and more than 300 other species. For birdwatchers, it is, very simply, one of the finest places on the planet.

At the heart of all of this sits Mila 23, a village of around 450 people – Russians, Ukrainians, and Turks who have lived side by side here for generations, their lives organised around the rhythm of the river rather than the noise of the wider world. The Lipovan Russians who founded the village in the early 19th century were Old Believers who fled religious persecution and found refuge in the Delta’s extraordinary remoteness. Their whitewashed, blue-painted houses still line the bank of the Old Danube today, and their fish-based cuisine, particularly the extraordinary fisherman’s borscht, simmered with a dozen species of fresh fish, is reason enough to make the journey.

Best time to visit: April to May for spectacular birdwatching; June to September for warm weather and full delta access.


7. The Danakil Depression, Ethiopia

Why it’s remote: It is the hottest place on earth. Temperatures regularly reach 50°C. The roads end before the interesting parts begin.

We have saved the most dramatic for last. The Danakil Depression in northern Ethiopia has been called many things: the gateway to hell, a land of death, the most hostile environment on the planet. National Geographic called it the cruellest place on earth. And yet, and this is the extraordinary thing, it is also one of the most visually astonishing places any of us have ever seen.

Lying more than 100 metres below sea level in the Afar region, where three tectonic plates are slowly tearing apart, the Danakil is a landscape of sulphur-yellow mounds, neon-green acid pools, active lava lakes, and vast crystalline salt flats shimmering in the heat. The colours are genuinely psychedelic, lurid oranges and yellows and greens produced by the minerals in the boiling hydrothermal springs, shifting and changing as you watch. It looks like a science fiction film set. Scientists actually use it to study the possibility of life on other planets.

Getting there requires a serious commitment. You access the Depression from the Tigrayan town of Mekele, and once you leave the paved road, you are in one of the most genuinely inhospitable environments on earth. Off-road driving in temperatures that climb past 50°C. No infrastructure. No comfort. And at night, you sleep in the open beside one of only a handful of active lava lakes in the world, the Erta Ale volcano (header image), its caldera glowing red against the black sky, which is quite possibly the single most dramatic thing we have seen in all our years of travelling.

The best time to go is between November and February, when the heat is merely extreme rather than life-threatening. And the Afar people who call this impossible landscape home, eking out a living through salt mining and camel herding, will give you an entirely new perspective on what human resilience looks like.

This is not a trip for the faint-hearted. It is absolutely, emphatically a trip for the curious.

Best time to visit: November to February, when daily temperatures drop to a mere 35°C.


So. Which One Is Calling You?

If you’ve made it this far, you’re our kind of traveller. You’re not looking for a sun lounger and a swim-up bar. You want the real thing, the places that take your breath away not because they’ve been polished and packaged, but because they’re genuinely, wonderfully wild.

All seven of these destinations are ones we know personally and deeply. We’ve walked that Valbona Pass. We’ve watched the aurora from a frozen lake in Lapland. We’ve followed wolf tracks in fresh snow, glided through Okavango channels by mokoro, and stood beside an active lava lake in the Ethiopian night, genuinely wondering what on earth we were doing there and being profoundly glad we came.

We’d love to take you to any of them.

Get in touch with the Untravelled Paths team today and let’s start planning your adventure. Whether you’ve got a specific destination in mind or you’re simply ready to go somewhere genuinely extraordinary, we’re here to help you find your path.

Because the best journeys don’t start at the airport. They start the moment you decide you’re ready for the real thing.


Explore our full range of remote adventures at untravelledpaths.com, or drop us a message – we’d love to hear from you.

Written by James Chisnall

The post The Places That Really Earn the Name: Our Most Remote Destinations on Earth appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/remote-travel-destinations/

Where Russians and Ukrainians Live in Perfect Harmony and What the World Could Learn From Them

There are places in this world where history has not been kind. Where borders drawn by politicians have torn communities apart, where conflict has displaced families, and where neighbourhoods that once laughed together have been silenced. If you’ve been watching the news lately, from Ukraine to the Middle East and beyond, you’ll know that the weight of the world can feel very heavy indeed.

So let us tell you about a place where something quietly extraordinary is happening. A place where Russians and Ukrainians have been living side by side, in peace, for generations.

No politics. No tension. Just the river, the reeds, and the morning catch.

Welcome to Mila 23 and to the Danube Delta.


Europe’s Last Great Wilderness

Before we reach the village, let us set the scene, because the Danube Delta itself is something most travellers have never heard of and that’s precisely why it belongs on the Untravelled Paths list.

Straddling the border between Romania and Ukraine on the shores of the Black Sea, the Danube Delta is the second-largest river delta in Europe and one of the best-preserved wetlands on the planet. It has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1990, and it is home to over 5,500 species of flora and fauna – including 300 species of birds, wild horses, otters, jackals, and the elusive European mink.

To travel through it is to feel genuinely far from the modern world. A labyrinth of canals, lakes, and floating reed islands stretches in every direction. Pelicans drift overhead in silent formations. Water lilies carpet the surface of still black water. The air smells clean in a way city air simply doesn’t.

This is one of Europe’s great untouched places and yet it sits just a few hours’ drive from Bucharest, or a short flight from most European capitals.


The Village at Mile 23

Deep in the heart of the Delta, accessible only by boat, lies Mila 23. The name is beautifully simple: it sits precisely 23 miles from Sulina, where the Danube meets the Black Sea. Before the Sulina Channel was straightened for navigation, this stretch of river was an all-day row, and boats travelling between Tulcea and the coast would stop here overnight. The village grew up around that pause in the journey.

Today, around 450 people call Mila 23 home. There are no roads in or out. There are no cars. A leisurely 20-minute stroll takes you from one end of the village to the other, past whitewashed houses painted in a vivid shade of ultramarine blue, a colour the locals call siniliu, said to represent the colour of the sky and closeness to God (and, more practically, to deter mosquitoes).

The houses are built from natural materials. Reed roofs catch the light. Wooden boats are moored at garden gates. Old men sit on porches watching the river. Children row themselves to school.

It is, without question, one of the most beautiful and peaceful places we have ever encountered.


The Lipovans: Refugees Who Found Their Home

The story of Mila 23 is inseparable from the story of the Lipovans — and it is a story that begins, fittingly, with people fleeing conflict and persecution.

In the early 18th century, a group of Russian Orthodox Christians refused to accept sweeping reforms being imposed on the Russian Church by Patriarch Nikon. These Old Believers, known as Starovers or Staroobradtsy, were persecuted for their faith and driven from their homeland. They fled south, following river routes into the remotest corners of the Danube Delta, where the marshes and waterways offered the one thing they desperately needed: somewhere to be left alone.

They settled. They fished. They built their blue-painted houses and maintained their ancient liturgical traditions. And in the isolation of the Delta, they thrived.

Today, the Lipovan Russians of Romania number around 50,000 people, primarily in Tulcea County. In Mila 23, they make up roughly two-thirds of the population – alongside Ukrainian neighbours, Turkish families, and a handful of Romanians. They are among the most skilled fishermen in the Delta, keepers of centuries-old recipes, and the proud custodians of a way of life that the rest of the world largely forgot to interfere with.


Side by Side

Here is the thing that stops us in our tracks when we think about Mila 23.

Beyond the village’s borders, the relationship between Russia and Ukraine is one of the defining tragedies of our time. The suffering inflicted on the Ukrainian people since 2022 has been immense — lives lost, families separated, cities reduced to rubble. It is a conflict with deep historical roots and devastating human consequences, and the pain of it echoes around the world.

And yet, in this tiny village at the end of a river, Russian Lipovans and Ukrainians have been waking up next to each other every morning for generations. They fish the same waters. They eat at the same tables. They repair each other’s boats and celebrate each other’s feasts. The Delta’s ethnic mosaic — Russians, Ukrainians, Turks, Romanians, all living in what locals and visitors alike describe as genuine harmony — has held together for centuries.

Why? Because here, life is organised around something older and simpler than politics. It is organised around the river. Around the season. Around the fish.

When your days are shaped by the tides and the catch, by the shared work of survival and the shared beauty of an extraordinary landscape, the abstractions of nationalism and ideology seem to lose their grip. There is no room for an enemy when your neighbour just helped you pull in your nets.

We are not naive enough to suggest that the answer to the world’s conflicts is simply “go fishing.” The forces that drive war and persecution are complex and deeply human. But we do believe, and Mila 23 is evidence, that when people live in genuine proximity, sharing the rhythms of daily life, something remarkable and natural tends to emerge. Kinship. Respect. Peace.


A Day in the Delta

If you’re beginning to feel the pull of this place, let us paint the picture a little more vividly.

You arrive by boat from Tulcea, the gateway city to the Delta. The journey itself is part of the experience — gliding through channels lined with towering reeds, past floating islands and mirror-still lakes. Keep your eyes on the sky: you may spot Dalmatian pelicans (the largest pelican in the world), white-tailed eagles, pygmy cormorants, or the rare red-breasted goose.

In Mila 23, you step off the boat onto a wooden pier in the centre of the village. From here you wander, slowly, because there is no reason to hurry. You visit the Canoe Museum, a beautiful open-air tribute to the village’s extraordinary sporting heritage. Mila 23 has produced more Olympic medallists in kayak and canoe than almost anywhere on earth, most famously Ivan Patzaichin, a four-time Olympic gold medallist who grew up here among the fishing boats and is still revered as a living legend.

You eat. Oh, you eat. The Lipovan fish-based cuisine is a revelation, fresh carp, pike, and perch cooked with generations of knowledge behind every recipe. Try the fisherman’s borscht: a rich broth of ten or fifteen small fish, strained and then finished with chunks of sturgeon or carp, spiced simply and served steaming. Try the storceag, a sturgeon soup enriched with egg yolk and sour cream that will haunt you pleasantly for weeks.

In the evening, the Delta does something astonishing. It goes quiet. Truly quiet, in a way that you realise you have not experienced in a very long time. And then the frogs begin their concert, and the stars come out, and the river turns silver, and you understand exactly why people who came here as refugees decided never to leave.


Come. Breathe. Remember What Matters.

We know the world feels heavy right now. Many of us are carrying grief for places we love, for people we’ll never meet, for a state of affairs that seems impossibly tangled. If you are one of those people, and most of us are, then perhaps what you need is not a distraction, but a reminder.

A reminder that human beings, left to their own devices and the rhythms of nature, are remarkably good at getting along. That simple lives, lived close to the earth and the water, have a way of dissolving the divisions we’ve been taught to believe are permanent.

Mila 23 won’t solve anything. But it might restore something.

If you feel called to a place where the news cannot reach you, where the river sets the agenda, and where Russians and Ukrainians sit at the same table sharing the same soup, then the Danube Delta is waiting.

And honestly? It’s one of the most beautiful places on earth to remember what peace actually feels like.


Have you visited the Danube Delta or Mila 23? We’d love to hear your story in the comments below. And if you’re dreaming of making the journey, get in touch, we’re always happy to help you plan the trip of a lifetime.

Share this post if it moved you. Some stories deserve to travel further.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Where Russians and Ukrainians Live in Perfect Harmony and What the World Could Learn From Them appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/russians-ukrainians-harmony-danube-delta/

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Why Smart Travellers Are Booking Their Flights Right Now

The world feels a little unpredictable right now and if there’s one industry that feels the effects of global uncertainty faster than almost any other, it’s aviation. Fuel markets shift. Flight routes change. Airlines recalculate. And passengers, almost always, end up paying more. The good news? There’s a very simple way to insulate yourself from all of it and it involves doing something you were probably going to do anyway. Book your flights. Here’s why right now is genuinely the best moment to do it.


How Global Uncertainty Affects Your Flight Prices

You don’t need to follow the financial markets closely to feel their effects on your travel budget. When the world is unsettled — whether due to geopolitical tensions, energy market volatility, or economic uncertainty, the ripple effects reach into areas of everyday life that can feel surprisingly distant from the source. Flight prices are one of them.

Jet fuel accounts for anywhere between 20% and 30% of an airline’s total operating costs, making it one of the single biggest variables in how airlines price their tickets. When global oil markets are volatile, as they have been with considerable regularity in recent years, airlines respond by adjusting fares to protect their margins. Those adjustments rarely favour the passenger. Fuel surcharges creep upwards, promotional fares disappear more quickly, and the window of genuinely competitive pricing on popular routes becomes shorter and more unpredictable.

Beyond fuel, global instability can affect aviation in subtler but equally significant ways. Flight routes that were once direct become indirect as airspace restrictions shift. Aircraft that were serving one region get redeployed to another. Capacity on popular routes tightens, and when capacity tightens, prices climb. None of this is scaremongering, it’s simply how the industry responds to a world that doesn’t always behave predictably. And right now, by most reasonable assessments, the world is behaving less predictably than usual.


The Window Is Open — But It Won’t Stay That Way

Here’s the encouraging part of this story: despite everything, flight prices at the start of 2026 remain competitive on many routes. Airlines are keen to fill their planes, booking patterns are still settling after several years of post-pandemic volatility, and there are genuinely good fares available right now for travellers who move quickly.

The key phrase there is “right now.” Because the other thing we know with a fair degree of certainty is that this window will not remain open indefinitely. As spring builds towards summer, as holiday booking patterns accelerate, and as the broader economic picture continues to evolve, those competitive fares will become harder to find. Airlines use sophisticated real-time pricing algorithms that respond to demand almost instantaneously and as demand increases, so do prices, with very little ceremony or advance warning.

For European summer travel in particular, the advice from flight industry experts is consistent and clear: for peak summer travel to popular destinations, booking by March or April at the absolute latest gives you the best chance of securing reasonable prices. For long-haul destinations, the sweet spot is even earlier, three to six months before departure is the window where prices are genuinely at their most competitive. Beyond that window, you are increasingly at the mercy of algorithms designed to extract maximum value from passengers who’ve left it too late.

The current moment, right now, in early 2026, sits squarely within that optimal booking window for summer travel. It is, in the most literal sense, the right time.


Why This Year Feels Different

Every year brings its own version of “book early” advice, and every year a certain number of travellers ignore it and get away with it. So why does 2026 feel like a year where that gamble is riskier than usual?

The honest answer is that the combination of factors currently affecting the aviation industry is unusually broad. Energy market volatility, shifting geopolitical landscapes affecting airspace and route planning, continued inflationary pressure on airline operating costs, and a strong post-pandemic appetite for travel that has kept demand at historically high levels, these are not the conditions in which last-minute bargains tend to flourish.

Airlines are also, it’s worth noting, considerably more sophisticated than they were even five years ago at managing their inventory to maximise revenue. The days of stumbling across a mysteriously cheap last-minute fare on a popular summer route are largely behind us. What replaces them is a pricing environment in which the early booker is consistently, meaningfully rewarded and the late booker is consistently, meaningfully penalised.

There is also the simple matter of peace of mind, which, in uncertain times, has a value all of its own. Knowing your flights are booked, your dates are confirmed, and your holiday is happening regardless of what the news cycle decides to do next is genuinely worth something. Travel, now more than ever, is one of the most restorative and perspective-giving things we can do. Having it locked in and secured feels, right now, like a particularly good idea.


A Few Smart Tips to Get the Best Deal Today

If we’ve convinced you that now is the time to act – brilliant. Here are a few straightforward tips to make sure you get the best possible fare when you do.

Be flexible on dates if you can. Flying midweek – Tuesday, Wednesday, or Saturday is consistently cheaper than flying at the weekend, with savings of around 13% compared to peak weekend travel. Shifting a departure by even a day or two can make a meaningful difference on longer routes.

Set a price alert before you book. Google Flights, Skyscanner, and several other comparison tools allow you to monitor prices on specific routes and alert you when fares change. Use these to identify the right moment, but use them as a tool to act, not as an excuse to delay indefinitely.

Consider shoulder season travel. May, early June, September, and October offer a brilliant combination of competitive flight prices, smaller crowds, and genuinely wonderful weather across most of our favourite destinations. The Albanian Riviera in September, Slovenia in May, Montenegro in October, all of them are as beautiful as their peak-season equivalents, at a fraction of the cost and with considerably more space to breathe.

Book long-haul earlier than you think you need to. For destinations like South Africa, Georgia, or Ethiopia, the three to six month booking window is not a guideline – it is genuinely the difference between a competitive fare and a significantly more expensive one. If you’re planning a long-haul adventure this year, the time to book is now, not in a few months’ time when the window has narrowed considerably.

When you see a good price, book it. Airfare is volatile. It can change at any given moment. A fare that looks reasonable today can look considerably less reasonable by tomorrow morning and in the current climate, those upward movements are happening more frequently and more sharply than travellers are accustomed to. If the price works for you, trust that instinct and book.


The Best Antidote to an Uncertain World? A Confirmed Holiday.

There is something quietly radical about booking a holiday in uncertain times. It is, in its own small way, an act of optimism, a decision to invest in experience, in adventure, in the restorative power of seeing somewhere new and coming home with a head full of memories rather than a head full of headlines.

The world will always have its complications. The news will always find something to worry about. But the Albanian mountains will still be extraordinary in July. The Slovenian rivers will still be that impossible shade of turquoise in June. The Swiss Alps will still take your breath away in August. And the African sunset will still be the most magnificent thing you’ve ever seen, whenever you choose to go and see it.

Book the flights. Sort the holiday. Give yourself something genuinely brilliant to look forward to and do it now, while the prices are still on your side.

Browse our full collection of Untravelled Paths experiences and let us help you plan the adventure you deserve. Whether you’re dreaming of European mountains, African wildlife, or something altogether more unexpected, our team is ready to help you make it happen. Get in touch today.

👉 Explore Untravelled Paths Experiences Here


Have you already got your summer flights sorted or are you still in the planning stages? We’d love to hear where you’re heading in 2026. Drop us a comment below, and if this post has nudged you into action, do share it with a fellow traveller who’s still sitting on the fence. They’ll thank you for it later.

Written by James Chisnall

The post Why Smart Travellers Are Booking Their Flights Right Now appeared first on Untravelled Paths.



from Untravelled Paths https://blog.untravelledpaths.com/blog/why-book-holiday-flights-now/