by Elias Siegelman | Mar 3, 2026
Hotel rooms can feel tighter than they used to, especially in U.S. cities where land prices, labor costs, and demand stay high year-round. Many hotels have shifted toward smaller footprints paired with upgraded bedding, smart layouts, and more public spaces like...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 3, 2026
Lake shorelines don’t just erode on ocean coasts. Around big and small U.S. lakes, waves, storms, water-level swings, and boat wakes can chew through beaches, dunes, bluffs, and wetlands. In some towns, the “usable” edge of the lake is shrinking faster than residents...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 3, 2026
Quiet zones are showing up in more terminals: sensory rooms, calm rooms, prayer/meditation spaces, and even “quiet airport” policies that cut down loud announcements. Fans say they reduce stress, help neurodivergent travelers, and make long delays more tolerable,...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 3, 2026
Sleeping in your car is rarely a single “yes/no” question in the U.S. Rules come from state statutes, DOT policies for rest areas, and local parking codes that can change fast. Since 2024, several states have rewritten or proposed new public camping and roadside-use...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 3, 2026
Vacation days shouldn’t come with a side of second-guessing your evening plans, but plenty of U.S. travelers say some popular spots feel sketchier after dark than they remember. That doesn’t automatically mean a place is “unsafe” overall; most trips go fine, but...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 2, 2026
Airline loyalty programs used to feel like a cheat code: fly a bit, stack miles, and cash them in for a solid trip. Many travelers now say that the math is harder, the awards cost more, and the “free” perks come with extra hoops. Devaluations, dynamic award pricing,...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 2, 2026
Border lines can feel like the most unpredictable part of a road trip: one day it’s a quick scan, the next it’s a parking lot with passports. Over the past year, several high-traffic crossings have seen sharper, more frequent spikes tied to staffing, construction,...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 2, 2026
Facial matching has moved from trials to regular checks at many U.S. gateways. Customs and Border Protection uses facial comparison to confirm identity for international arrivals and some departures, and airlines connect gate cameras to that service. A second track is...
by Elias Siegelman | Mar 2, 2026
Security lines in the U.S. have started stretching out again, and it’s not always because you showed up late. Higher passenger volumes, checkpoint construction, and uneven staffing can turn a normal morning into a slow shuffle. Crowds also bunch up when flight banks...