February 23, 2012

Three Common Travel Scams

Consulting The Guide Book

Image by Turkinator via Flickr

 

 

Travel scams are becoming increasingly popular and criminals are seeking excited vacationers to take advantage of and take their hard earned precious money. Three types of travel scams to look out for:

 

  1. Free Holiday Awards: a common scam that often results in the “You’ve won a free vacation” scratch-off trick.  There are a variety of angles, but typically the scam results in either having to pay a processing fee or attending a tedious presentation about timeshares or high priced vacation add-ons with persuasive sales strategies. Solution: nearly every scratch-off is a winner so trash them like an email stating you won the lottery.
  2. Paying for Paper Tickets: when you book a vacation online, you usually have the option of selecting an “e-ticket” or having a paper ticket mailed for a small fee, but some dishonest travel agents are charging up to four times the amount. Solution: Do not take paper and if you need to make sure you know the fee upfront and if the fee is high take your business somewhere else.
  3. Phony Travel Guides: at famous venues, a local resident may pose as agents for official guides and take your money and tell you to wait in particular area where the guide never shows. Solution: research guidebooks and online sites that tell you the official, paid tours.

 

When traveling it is essential to be on the lookout for potential scams and make sure to always be wary of anything deemed as free offers, because nine times out of ten there is a catch and may be a scam.

 

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France Reigns Supreme

When it comes to international travel, France remains the favorite destination of travellers from around the world. France continues to receive almost 20 million more international tourists each year than its closest competitor the United States. The battle for second, third and fourth is very close with the U.S. barely edging out Spain and China.

The World Tourism Organization also reports that France has the most popular city in the world for international travel. Over 15 million international visitors went to Paris last year. London, England was second in the statistics with just under 15 million visitors followed by New York City with just under 10 million international visitors in 2010. Singapore, Hong Kong, and Dubai also make the top ten. To learn more about the most popular destinations go to taktsang.org.

International travel is certainly big business. People in Germany spend the most on travelling outside of their own country, more than $80 billion per year. U.S expenditures on international travel totalled $73 billion and the United Kingdom was third with $50 billion in spending. The figures from the World Tourism Organization shows that the recession has hurt international travel with the numbers for 2009 down from spending levels in 2008.

Because international travel has been down, prices are more affordable than ever before. Hotels in the most popular cities are offering discounts to try and fill all of their rooms and the airlines have been slashing international fares as well. Tourism is vital to the economy of every country and everything possible is being done to encourage people to boost travel back to pre-recession levels.

 

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