
United States
Everything you need to plan a great trip as an international visitor — from Manhattan's skyline to the Grand Canyon — without the guesswork.
The US rewards picking one region well rather than trying to cover the whole country. New York City (4-5 days) is the classic first stop — walkable, transit-based, icon-dense. Los Angeles (4-5 days) needs a rental car but unlocks beaches and easy desert road trips. Miami (3-4 days) is the warm-weather, Latin-influenced alternative. Citizens of 41 countries get ESTA visa-free entry for up to 90 days as of mid-2026; everyone else needs a B1/B2 visa. Budget $150-300/day including hotels.
The United States is less a single country than a continent wearing a trench coat, and figuring out where to actually go is the hardest part of planning a trip here. Ten days isn't enough to "see America" — it's barely enough to properly see one coast — so the real skill is picking a slice and doing it well, instead of turning your vacation into a check-the-box tour of an entire landmass.
This guide covers the destinations, sights, food, and the practical stuff that actually trips people up: the visa and ESTA rules for your specific passport, how tipping (a genuinely confusing ritual for most of the world) actually works, what things really cost once tax and tips are added, and how to get connected the moment you land. Written for a global reader, not an American one — no assumptions about where you're flying from or what currency you think in.
Destinations
All Destinations ←
New York City
4-5 days minimum — the city that never sleeps also never stops costing money.

Los Angeles
4-5 days, and yes, you need a rental car.

Miami
3-4 days of beach, Art Deco and genuinely great Cuban food.
Attractions
All Attractions ←
Iconic US Landmarks — What's Actually Worth It
The must-photograph list, with the honest version of what to expect.

Grand Canyon & National Parks
One of the most genuinely humbling sights on Earth — and easier to reach than you'd think.
Food
All Food ←Practical Info
All Practical Info ←
USA Visa & ESTA Requirements (2026)
The real answer, broken down by passport — ESTA is not the same thing as a visa.

Money, Safety, Tipping & eSIM in the USA
Cards, sales tax, tipping by situation, real safety context, staying connected.













































