by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
All-inclusive resorts sell the dream: one price, zero stress. In 2026, plenty of guests still love the format, but the same few frustrations keep showing up in reviews, comment threads, and group chats. Most complaints aren’t about the beach or the buffet; they’re...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Airline schedules look stable until they don’t. As carriers chase higher yields, trim costs, and redeploy aircraft, some nonstop city pairs quietly vanish, sometimes for a season, sometimes for good. These changes are usually about profitability, aircraft...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Overhead bins used to feel like a shared closet. Now they’re a high-stakes puzzle: more flyers board with rollaboards, and gate agents watch bin space like it’s seat inventory. Airlines aren’t always “shrinking” bins on purpose. They’re optimizing cabins for revenue,...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Cruise vacations feel all-inclusive until a visit to the ship’s medical center turns into a surprise bill. Passengers often complain that pricing isn’t posted, options are limited at sea, and charges can stack quickly once a chart is opened. Because onboard clinics...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Americans often assume “tourist mistakes” are about etiquette, but plenty of destinations have actual laws that can trigger fines, confiscation, or worse. Some rules are aimed at protecting historic sites, others at public order, privacy, or border security. This...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Long-haul flying is getting tighter, and the most noticeable change is seat pitch, the distance from one seatback point to the same point in the row ahead. Many economy cabins sit around 30–31 inches of pitch, while some configurations dip lower, and a one- or...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Short-term rentals are back in court in 2026, and this time, many U.S. cities are aiming higher than individual hosts. Instead of chasing one bad listing at a time, local governments are targeting the platforms that market, process bookings, and collect fees. Cities...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
Beach tourism keeps many local economies running, but crowd levels can rise faster than roads, water systems, and housing can handle. The gap shows up in traffic, noise, and rising service costs. When visitors flood in during a few peak weeks, trash pickup, parking...
by Elias Siegelman | Feb 22, 2026
American second-home demand has reshaped housing markets on many Caribbean islands. Small land areas, limited rentals, and high construction costs mean price jumps arrive fast when outside cash targets beach zones. Officials have answered with permits, licensing...