Travel
You're Invited: Celebrate Washington D.C.'s Capital Pride
Capital Pride returns June 10 - 13 with a plethora of events celebrating our out, proud, and patriotic community, including the city's historic Pride Parade. And you're invited!
Flight Cancellations Pile Up on Busy Memorial Day Weekend
Hundreds of flights worldwide were cancelled by midday Sunday, adding to the mounting number of scrubbed flights during the busy Memorial Day holiday weekend in the U.S.
Air Travelers Face Cancellations over Memorial Day Weekend
Airline travelers are not only facing sticker shock this Memorial Day weekend, the kickoff to the summer travel season. They're also dealing with a pileup of flight cancellations.
Japan to Resume Tourism in June; Only Packaged Tour for Now
Japan will open its borders to foreign tourists in June for the first time since imposing tight pandemic travel restrictions about two years ago, but only for package tours for now, the prime minister said Thursday.
Prepare for Sticker Shock if You are Traveling this Summer
Airlines and tourist destinations are expecting monster crowds this summer as travel restrictions ease and pandemic fatigue overcomes lingering fear of contracting COVID-19 during travel.
Administration Opposes Airlines in Lawsuit over Crew Breaks
The Biden administration has sided against the airline industry and urged the U.S. Supreme Court on Wednesday to uphold a California law that would provide more rest and meal breaks for airline crews.
Pandemic-Weary Americans Plan for Summer Despite COVID Surge
A COVID-19 surge is underway that is starting to cause disruptions as the school year wraps up and Americans prepare for summer vacations.
Airbnb Ends Rentals in China to Focus on Outbound Tourists
Airbnb Inc. announced Tuesday it will stop representing short-term rental properties in China and focus its business in the country on serving Chinese tourists looking for lodgings abroad.
Seeing a Country with the Most High-Ranking Tour Guide
The veteran travel journalist, and by extension his viewers, are shown a nation's points of interest by the country's leader.
Davos Diary: Train, Not Plane Means Scenery, Carbon Cutting
If I had flown, my 870-kilometer trip would have emitted up to 197 kilograms (434 pounds) of carbon dioxide per passenger into the atmosphere. By train? 12.2 kilograms.
Cinespia Returns With Pride!
LA's most popular and longest-running Outdoor Screening Series "Cinespia" returns to two famous Hollywood locations this summer: the Hollywood Forever Cemetery and LA Historic Park. And in June celebrates Pride.
2022 is the Year of All-Inclusive Travel, and Here's Why
The image of all-inclusive travel is changing, as hotel companies expand their offerings, while redefining what all-inclusive means.
White House Moves to Loosen Remittance, Flight Rules on Cuba
The Biden administration says it will expand flights to Cuba, take steps to loosen restrictions on U.S. travelers to the island, and lift Trump-era restrictions on remittances.
Beyond the Canal, There's Plenty More to Find in Romantic Panama
While it is most famous for its canal, it is the least interesting attraction in this Central America country that has Manhattan-lie skyscrapers, beautiful beaches and great amenities.
EU Lifts Mask Requirement for Air Travel as Pandemic Ebbs
The European Union will no longer require masks to be worn at airports and on planes starting next week amid the easing of coronavirus restrictions across the bloc, authorities said Wednesday.
Drivers Bemoan High Gasoline Prices with No Relief in Sight
Just as Americans gear up for summer road trips, the price of oil remains stubbornly high, pushing prices at the gas pump to painful heights.
TSA is Expanding Use of Screeners to Help at Busy Airports
The chief of the Transportation Security Administration said Tuesday that his agency has quadrupled the number of employees who could bolster screening operations at airports.
Millennial Money: Save on Family Travel without Stressing
Planning and packing for travel with kids requires accounting for naps, snacks, tantrums, and blowouts.
Tourism and Economic Agencies Join Forces to Market Orlando
The idea: Take the tens of millions of tourists who are thinking about visiting central Florida's theme parks each year and sell them on the virtues of moving their companies or businesses to the region.
FAA Offers Fix for Snarled Florida Air Travel This Summer
Federal officials are promising to add air traffic controllers and take other steps to improve the flow of planes in Florida, which airlines say has become a weak link in the national airspace.