All Destinations
97 of 576 guides match
Guilin
China
The karst-peak landscape that appears on China's 20-yuan banknote β the most photographed natural scenery in China, draped in mist along the Li River and the smaller Yulong tributary. The 4-5 hour Li River cruise from Guilin downstream to Yangshuo (83 km) passes the iconic Xianggong Hill viewpoint and the Ming-dynasty fishing village of Xingping; National Geographic ranked it among the world's top ten watery wonders. Add the 1,300-year-old cormorant fishing tradition, the 700-year-old Longji rice terraces (golden in September, mirror-flooded in May), the labyrinthine Reed Flute Cave, the Zhuang and Yao minority cultures, and the relaxed backpacker scene of Yangshuo's West Street, and Guilin is the most photogenic destination in southern China.

Gyeongju
South Korea
Korea's museum without walls β capital of the Silla Kingdom for nearly a thousand years (57 BC to 935 AD) and home to a UNESCO Historic Areas inscription that bundles together Bulguksa Temple, the Seokguram Grotto on the slopes of Toham Mountain, the royal tumuli rising like grass-covered hills in the city centre, and Cheomseongdae, the small bottle-shaped observatory built in the 7th century and considered the oldest surviving in East Asia. Anapji Pond mirrors its restored pavilions after dark, cherry blossoms line the tomb park in early April, and the Gyeongju National Museum houses the Silla gold crowns. Two hours by KTX from Seoul or one from Busan.
Hangzhou
China
The southern terminus of the Grand Canal and the city Marco Polo called the most beautiful in the world β West Lake (UNESCO 2011) is the cultural template every classical Chinese garden has imitated for a thousand years. The Su Causeway, Broken Bridge, Leifeng Pagoda, and the Tang-era Lingyin Temple anchor the lake. Longjing Village's tea terraces produce China's most prized green tea (Dragon Well, harvested before Qingming). Hangzhou is also Alibaba's home and the country's high-tech showpiece β the bullet train from Shanghai is just 45 minutes.
Hanoi
Vietnam
Hanoi is one of Asia's most atmospheric capitals β a thousand years of history layered into chaotic, charming streets. The Old Quarter buzzes with motorbikes and street food vendors, French colonial architecture stands alongside ancient temples, and Hoan Kiem Lake offers a tranquil escape. Pho for breakfast, egg coffee for lunch, bun cha for dinner.
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Harbin
China
Heilongjiang's northeastern capital, built up by Russian engineers around the Chinese Eastern Railway at the turn of the 20th century β the result is a Mandarin city with onion-domed cathedrals, Art Nouveau facades, and a Russian-bakery street culture you find nowhere else in China. Saint Sophia Cathedral anchors Daoli district, Central Avenue (Zhongyang Dajie) runs 1.4km of restored European stone storefronts to the Songhua River, and every January the Ice and Snow World turns the riverbank into 600,000 square metres of illuminated ice sculptures up to 50m tall. Pack a parka β January averages around -19C.
Hiroshima
Japan
A city of resilience and peace. The Peace Memorial and Museum are profound, while nearby Miyajima Island's floating torii gate is iconic. Famous for okonomiyaki and oysters.
Ho Chi Minh City
Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh City (still called Saigon by locals) is Vietnam's energetic southern hub β a city of roaring motorbikes, French colonial landmarks, and some of the best street food on earth. The War Remnants Museum is sobering, the Ben Thanh Market is overwhelming, and the coffee culture is addictive. Always evolving, always buzzing.
Hong Kong
China
A dazzling vertical city where bamboo-scaffolded skyscrapers meet ancient temples, dim sum parlors, and one of the world's most spectacular harbors. East meets West at every turn.

Hua Hin
Thailand
Hua Hin is the original Thai royal beach town, picked by King Rama VII for the Klai Kangwon summer palace in 1926 and treated ever since as Bangkokβs long-weekend coast. It sits 200 kilometres south of the capital on the Gulf of Thailand, a 3-hour drive or train ride that ends at a teakwood station with red and yellow gables. The five-kilometre town beach runs south to a clifftop temple at Khao Takiab, and the Cicada and Tamarind night markets on weekends draw the crowd that flies in for golf. Phraya Nakhon Cave, an hour south, hides the Kuha Karuhas pavilion built for King Rama V in 1890. Thailandβs golf capital, eight courses inside city limits.

Hualien
Taiwan
A 110,000-person Pacific-coast city wedged between the Central Mountain Range and the open ocean β the working gateway to Taroko Gorge 15 kilometres north. Qixingtan Beach is a long arc of black pebbles facing whale-shaped bays, the Dongdamen Night Market sprawls across a former harbour, and the morning fishing-port market sells the day's bonito within an hour of landing. Two to three hours from Taipei on the eastern TRA line, and the home base of the Tzu Chi Buddhist Foundation and its enormous hospital and university campus.
Hue
Vietnam
The imperial capital of Vietnam under the Nguyen Dynasty from 1802 to 1945 β UNESCO-inscribed in 1993 as a complex of palaces, royal tombs, pagodas, and citadel walls along the Perfume River (Song Huong, named for the autumnal scent of fruit-tree blossoms drifting from the upstream orchards). The Imperial Citadel covers 520 hectares enclosed by 10-kilometre stone walls and a moat, modelled on Beijing's Forbidden City but smaller, with the Forbidden Purple City reserved exclusively for the emperor and his immediate family at its heart. The 1968 Tet Offensive's 26-day Battle of Hue was one of the bloodiest urban battles of the Vietnam War β much of the citadel was destroyed and restoration is still ongoing. Seven royal tombs scatter through the hills south of the city; Tu Duc, Khai Dinh, and Minh Mang are the most architecturally exceptional. Hue cuisine is its own school of Vietnamese cooking β the iconic everyday dish is bun bo Hue (spicy beef noodle soup with lemongrass and fermented shrimp paste). The Eiffel-firm-designed Truong Tien Bridge connects the imperial north bank with the modern south.
Isfahan
Iran
"Isfahan is half the world" β Safavid-era capital whose Naqsh-e Jahan Square (UNESCO 1979) is one of the largest public squares on Earth, ringed by the blue-tiled Shah Mosque, the jewel-like Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque, Ali Qapu Palace, and the Grand Bazaar. Si-o-se-pol and Khaju bridges span the Zayandeh, the Armenian Vank Cathedral marks the Jolfa quarter, and Chehel Sotoun's reflected columns complete the Safavid tour. Visa reality is complicated for US/UK/Canadian passports β guided tours only; sanctions block foreign cards (carry USD/EUR cash).

Islamabad
Pakistan
Pakistan's purpose-built capital, planned in the 1960s on a Greek-architect's grid against the Margalla Hills β leafy, organized, and a complete reset from the Subcontinent's older megacities. Faisal Mosque rises like a Bedouin tent against the foothills, F-7 sector cafes spill onto wide boulevards, and the Margalla Trail-3 trailhead is a 15-minute drive from downtown. Most travellers' gateway to Hunza, Skardu, and the Karakoram.
Jaipur
India
The Pink City of Rajasthan dazzles with its terracotta-hued old town, hilltop forts, and opulent palaces. Part of India's famous Golden Triangle with Delhi and Agra.

Jakarta
Indonesia
Indonesia's 11-million-strong capital and the economic heart of ASEAN β a sprawling, traffic-choked, food-obsessed megacity layered over the Dutch East India Company's old port of Batavia. Kota Tua's whitewashed VOC warehouses face Sunda Kelapa harbour where pinisi schooners still load cargo by hand, the 132-metre National Monument (Monas) spikes the skyline at Merdeka Square, and Istiqlal β Southeast Asia's largest mosque β stands face-to-face with the neo-Gothic Jakarta Cathedral. Glodok Chinatown and the kerak telor and soto betawi stalls of Setu Babakan are ground zero for Indonesian street food. Most travellers transit through the CGK or HLP airports en route to Bali, Yogya, or Komodo, but a 48-hour stop reveals a city most Instagram itineraries miss.
Jeju
South Korea
Jeju Island sits 100 km off the southern tip of the Korean peninsula β a 1,850-square-kilometre volcanic island built around 1,947-metre Hallasan, South Korea's tallest mountain. UNESCO has triple-inscribed the island (Biosphere Reserve, Geopark, World Natural Heritage) for the volcano, the Geomunoreum lava-tube system (Manjanggul Cave is 7.4 km long), and Seongsan Ilchulbong, the 'Sunrise Peak' tuff cone on the east coast. The 425-km Olle Trail walking network rings the island in 27 numbered routes, the haenyeo (women free-divers, average age 70+) still harvest abalone off the coast, and Jeju black pork and abalone porridge are the local food obsessions.

Jeonju
South Korea
Korea's culinary capital and the birthplace of bibimbap β the proper version, layered with raw beef tartare, served in a bronze bowl, paired with a dozen banchan side dishes. Jeonju Hanok Village preserves more than 700 traditional Korean houses inside the central downtown, with tiled roofs sloping in tight rows and most homes still operating as hanok-stay guesthouses where you sleep on a heated ondol floor. Pungnammun Gate, the last surviving gate of the old city wall, anchors the southern edge, and the Jeonju Bibimbap Festival turns the village into one open kitchen each October. Ninety minutes by KTX from Seoul.

Kamakura
Japan
An hour south of Tokyo on the JR Yokosuka Line, Kamakura was Japan's de facto capital from 1185 to 1333 β the seat of the country's first samurai government. The Great Buddha at Kotokuin (a 13.4 m bronze cast in 1252, now sitting open-air after the temple hall was washed away) is the icon. Tsurugaoka Hachimangu Shrine anchors the town's main approach; Hasedera adds an 11-headed Kannon and a hydrangea garden. Yuigahama beach gives Tokyoites a summer surfing weekend, and Komachi-dori is the snack street running back toward Kamakura Station.

Kampot
Cambodia
A drowsy riverside town on Cambodia's south coast where the Praek Tuek Chhu river curls past faded French shophouses and the Elephant Mountains rise abruptly inland. Kampot is the world capital of one specific thing: Kampot Pepper, a Protected Geographical Indication crop whose long-pepper, black, red, and white varieties end up on Michelin tables in Paris and Tokyo. Days are spent on plantation tours, kayaking the river, riding up to the abandoned French hill station and casino at Bokor National Park, or taking the 30-minute hop east to Kep for crab market lunches. The slowest, friendliest base in Cambodia.
Kanazawa
Japan
Japan's best-kept secret β the only major Japanese city never bombed in World War II, meaning 99% of pre-war Edo-period architecture survives. Kenroku-en is one of Japan's Three Great Gardens; the Higashi Chaya geisha district, unchanged since 1820, is the finest preserved teahouse quarter outside Kyoto. The Maeda clan ruled for 300 years and spent lavishly on arts β Kanazawa has more registered National Treasures per capita than any Japanese city outside Kyoto and Nara.
Kandy
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka's highland capital and the last kingdom to fall to the British (1815) β the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic is Buddhism's most important pilgrimage site, housing a tooth of the Buddha in a golden reliquary. The Esala Perahera festival in July/August is one of Asia's greatest spectacles β 100 elephants, 10,000 participants, and 10 days of nightly processions. The scenic KandyβElla train journey through tea plantations is among the world's most beautiful rail routes.
Kaohsiung
Taiwan
Taiwan's sunny port city features the stunning Lotus Pond temples, revitalized Pier-2 Art Center, and some of the island's best night markets. A more laid-back alternative to Taipei with easy access to Kenting beaches and Fo Guang Shan monastery.

Karachi
Pakistan
Pakistan's port megacity of 16 million on the Arabian Sea β a sprawling, restless capital of commerce, culture, and contradiction. Mughal-era shrines sit beside colonial Bunder Road, Mohatta Palace's pink Jodhpur sandstone glows at sunset, and Clifton Beach draws families on Friday evenings. The country's most diverse food city: Bohra, Memon, Sindhi, Pashtun, Punjabi, Hyderabadi cuisines all served within blocks of each other.
Kathmandu
Nepal
Kathmandu is the spiritual heart of the Himalayas β a chaotic, colorful valley of ancient temples, prayer flags, and stunning mountain views. Durbar Square, Boudhanath Stupa, and Swayambhunath (the Monkey Temple) are highlights. The city is the staging ground for Everest treks and Annapurna circuits, with Thamel's backpacker district providing gear and guides.