I’m going on my first overseas trip with my girlfriend since we started dating. I worked hard all last year to earn and save money for this trip. It will be our first international trip ever, and I want to make it perfect, memorable, and the best trip of our lives.

I’ve read countless articles online to ensure everything is perfect. It felt overwhelming to the point that my head started to hurt. Fortunately, I found an article that provided a detailed guideline, and it seemed like the perfect guide. My girlfriend and I have been following it, and it has been very helpful so far.

However, I decided to come to this community to seek additional guidance, advice, and tips from you all, just in case the article missed something important. My girlfriend and I would greatly appreciate any travel tips, advice, and guidance you have, as this is our first trip abroad together.

  • thericofactor@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Ehm, from where to where are you traveling exactly? Overseas can mean a lot of destinations depending on where you travel from.

  • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Wikipedia has a sister site which is full of travel information: http://wikivoyage.org/

    Cities and towns big and small are on there. Usually with helpful info about how to get around a the destination and how to access its attractions, as well as any local customs. It was a godsend for us on my recent trip to France with my dad

  • Rimu@piefed.social
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    2 months ago

    Bring earplugs. Multiple pairs.

    There’s always more noise than there should be.

  • ahornsirup@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    Where are you from? Where are you going? Can’t really give you advice without knowing those things.

    As a general rule: don’t expect perfection. Some things will suck, and if you go in expecting everything to be perfect you’ll be disappointed. Also, wherever you go is still a normal place, filled with normal people, living normal lives. Don’t be a nuisance to the locals, and don’t expect/demand anyone not working in hospitality to go out of their way on your behalf (and even people working in hospitality, the “the customer is always right” mentality isn’t a thing everywhere).

  • souperk@reddthat.com
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    2 months ago

    Make sure you will have internet access. You may need to buy a SIM card at the airport, or buy a plan/package from your provider that supports the country you will be visiting. It may be costly but it will be worth it.

    • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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      2 months ago

      For real. I recently traveled to Europe with my dad and I was going to buy a traveler’s SIM card in the airport when we landed, and he was like “nah those are a scam, we’ll get one from a phone carrier once we are in the city. The ones at the airport price gouge you”. Fast forward to us getting the wrong kind of sim card, blowing like 80 euros on something that doesn’t have mobile data, needing to go to an Orange place in every city we visited to find out why the SIM we bought stopped working after we used it for data for ten minutes (we had burned 50 euros of credits that quickly because it wasn’t meant to be used for data), and going most of the trip desperately attaching ourselves to anywhere with free wifi just to check in with our family back home.

      Eventually we gave up and bought the sort of traveler’s SIM they would have sold us in the airport from one of the street kiosks in Paris. The first 2/3 of our trip was other cities around France, which don’t have that sort of kiosk and don’t have as big of an international tourism industry. It worked perfectly.

      Just get the ones from the airport. They are specifically for travelers as opposed to just being the local carrier’s prepaid option.

  • Cheradenine@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Relax and don’t worry about itineraries. You will get to a place and love it, and get somewhere else and hate it. Be flexible.

  • Sasha@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 months ago

    My #1 tip is wear a mask on the plane if you’re flying. You don’t want to get sick, it’s an instant end to the holiday.

    The other tip would be to pack relatively light, you won’t need a lot of things you might want to bring, just keep it simple.

  • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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    2 months ago

    From experience: chill out. Do your homework in the background to ensure you understand train stations, airports, city centers. I’m that guy, I try to memorize maps for weeks before a trip. (I enjoy this).

    Then when you are there just go with the vibe. Try to make things seem casual and carefree.

    If the attraction is too crowded: oh well. Let’s just get coffee and stroll the city center.

    If the rental car gets a flat: oh well. Let’s just have a picnic while we handle this little tire thing. (Safety off the road of course)

    A little slow at a train station waiting for a connection? Let’s review our photos and pick some favorites.

    You can see my thread is: have a plan of how things should go, but then be ready to have a “zero-speed” alternative in your head that boils down to: “I’m spending time with my gf in a new place, and that’s enough”