If youβre flying through Frankfurt Airport for the first time, it helps to know what youβre walking into before you land. This airport is huge, busy, and honestly a little more intense than some people expect, especially if you have a short layover or international connection.
I arrived and departed through Frankfurt Airport on American Airlines using Terminal 2, and overall I found it fairly straightforward to navigate once I understood the layout. That said, there were definitely a few things that caught me off guard, particularly with security and the gate setup before boarding.
This Frankfurt Airport guide covers what the terminals are like, how easy it is to get around, what surprised me most, and what Iβd personally do differently next time.
If youβre planning an overnight layover or early international flight, I also stayed at the Hilton Frankfurt Airport Review (Best Airport Hotel for a Layover?) and it made the airport experience significantly easier.
Coming into Frankfurt Airport was actually pretty easy to navigate considering how massive it is. The signage throughout the airport was clear, and almost everything was written in both English and German, which helped a lot.
The airport itself felt very walkable despite its size. You do need to expect some walking, though. Comfortable shoes are good here, especially if you have a connection.
I also noticed there was plenty of seating throughout the terminal areas along with some wall charging stations for devices, which made waiting around a little easier.

Frankfurt Airport is split into two main terminals, and knowing which terminal your airline uses ahead of time makes the experience much smoother.
Terminal 1 is the larger main terminal and is primarily used by Lufthansa and other Star Alliance airlines like United, Air Canada, Singapore Airlines, and ANA.
Most long-haul Lufthansa flights and many U.S. international connections leave from Terminal 1. This is also the terminal directly connected to Hilton Frankfurt Airport and the larger The Squaire complex.
Terminal 1 has a pretty wide mix of restaurants, bakeries, coffee shops, quick breakfast spots, sandwiches, pizza, pasta, and traditional German snacks. There were definitely plenty of food options compared to a lot of airports Iβve been through.
Terminal 2 is mainly used by SkyTeam and Oneworld airlines including Delta, Air France, KLM, British Airways, American Airlines, Emirates, Qatar Airways, and Etihad.
Since I flew American Airlines, this was the terminal I used both arriving and departing.
Terminal 2 also had a solid food selection with international restaurants, cafΓ©s, noodle bars, fast food, and larger food hall-style dining areas. If youβre staying near the airport, there are also several sit-down restaurants and bars around The Squaire area outside the terminals.
The terminals are connected by both shuttle buses and the SkyLine train system.
Even though the airport is large, the transportation between terminals itself is not difficult once you understand where youβre going. I think the biggest thing is simply knowing ahead of time which terminal your airline usually operates from because it cuts down on a lot of unnecessary confusion.
If youβre connecting internationally, definitely leave yourself extra time here. Frankfurt is one of the busiest airports in Europe, and things can move slower than expected.
If you plan on renting a car directly from the airport, Iβd also recommend reading Driving in the Netherlands (What Itβs Really Like for Tourists) because the airport-to-road transition ended up being much easier than I expected.
This was honestly the most frustrating part of my experience.
It took about an hour to get through security when departing Frankfurt, and the process felt surprisingly inefficient for such a major international airport. There wasnβt much instruction being given, so a lot of people seemed confused about where to go or what line they were supposed to be in.
If youβre flying internationally out of Frankfurt Airport, especially during busy travel periods, I would absolutely give yourself extra time.

The thing that surprised me most at Frankfurt Airport was the gate setup after passport and ticket control.
Once I got to my gate area, there wasnβt an actual gate yet. Instead, there was a line where they checked passports and boarding passes first. Once you passed through that checkpoint, you were essentially trapped inside the gate waiting area until boarding started.
The problem was there were no bathrooms, no water fountains, and no food once you entered that section.
So if you take one thing from this Frankfurt Airport guide, let it be this: go to the bathroom and get food before entering your gate area. Seriously. Future you will appreciate the planning.
Save this for later on Pinterest so you donβt forget it.
I stayed at the airport hotel, so transportation for me was very easy. I simply walked from the airport to the hotel area.
One of the biggest advantages of Frankfurt Airport is how connected it is to Germanyβs rail system. The long-distance train station attached to The Squaire building makes it really easy to continue traveling throughout Germany directly from the airport.
I had a car during this trip, and with GPS I found it pretty easy to leave the airport and drive into the city.
If youβre continuing your trip through Germany after landing, my Otterbach Germany Guide (Things to Do + Local Tips) and Masons Kaiserslautern Review (What to Order + Honest Thoughts) might help if youβre heading outside Frankfurt once you finally escape the airport chaos.

Frankfurt Airport honestly has more food choices than I expected.
Across both terminals there were bakeries, coffee shops, quick grab-and-go options, international restaurants, noodle bars, sandwiches, pastries, and sit-down restaurants. It felt more substantial than what I thought would be offered.
If youβre someone who likes having meal options during a long travel day, youβll probably be fine here.
I would still recommend checking where your gate actually is before stopping to eat because the airport is large enough that distances can take longer than expected.
Travelers who are already comfortable navigating larger international airports will probably adjust to Frankfurt fairly quickly.
The airport is organized, the signage is good, English is widely used on signs, and transportation connections are excellent. People with longer layovers, direct flights, or prior international travel experience will likely have a much easier time here.
I also think staying at an airport hotel helps significantly if you have an early flight or long layover.
If you have a very short layover, mobility concerns, or airport anxiety, Frankfurt can definitely feel overwhelming.
The terminals are large, there can be a lot of walking, and security and passport control lines can become extremely long during busy travel times. Gate changes and terminal transfers also add extra time that people do not always account for.
This is not the airport where I would test fate with a super tight international connection. Personally, I like a little less adrenaline with my travel days. If youβre debating connection times, I also wrote How Tight Is Too Tight for a Layover? because airports like this are exactly why I tend to leave myself more buffer time now.
Frankfurt Airport is not my favorite airport Iβve ever used, but it does have everything you realistically need for a layover.
There are plenty of restaurants, seating areas, shops, transportation connections, and hotel options nearby. The airport also functions really well as a jumping-off point for the rest of Germany because of the attached train system.
I think the experience mostly depends on how much time you give yourself. With enough time, it feels manageable. With a tight connection, I could absolutely see this airport becoming stressful very quickly.
Overall, I found Frankfurt Airport fairly straightforward once I understood the layout, especially flying through Terminal 2 with American Airlines.
The biggest things Iβd personally plan differently next time would be giving myself extra time for security and making sure I handled food and bathroom breaks before entering the final gate area.
If youβre prepared for the size of the airport and allow enough connection time, Frankfurt Airport works well for international travel. Just donβt assume everything will move quickly because this airport definitely keeps you humble a little.


The tulip fields in the Netherlands look exactly like the photos, except the photos donβt capture how massive the color blocks actually are stretching across the countryside. Or the windmills. Or the sheep randomly standing in the middle of everything like they donβt know theyβre in the most photogenic country on earth.
The honest caveat: tulip season moves fast, the fields rotate every year, and peak bloom is not a guarantee, it depends on the weather, the harvest schedule, and a little bit of luck. But thatβs also part of what makes it feel less like a tourist attraction and more like something you actually found.
Full driving route with towns, parking tips, and what to expect | linked in bio. π·
#netherlands #travelling #tulipfields #exploreeurope
Amsterdam has a way of making you feel like you need to see everything, and then rewarding you most when you slow down anyway. The museums and canal cruises are worth it, but so is just wandering neighborhoods, eating whatever looks good, and sitting along the canals with a grilled cheese and nowhere to be.
First-time visitor guide is on the blog. Link in bio. π·
#travelling #travel #amsterdam #visitamsterdam #traveleurope
10 stops. One very full day. Zero regrets. Amsterdam has one of the best food scenes Iβve experienced anywhere in Europe, but the honest caveat is that some of the viral spots come with lines that will genuinely test your character. I skipped a few. I regret nothing.
Hereβs what actually made the cut on my self-guided Amsterdam food tour:
Fresh stroopwafels at Hans Egstorf: made right in front of you, warm caramel, no line. This one won.
Lourens cookie croissant: flaky outside, gooey chocolate inside. Did not share.
CafΓ© Winkel 43 apple pie: one of the rare viral places that fully lives up to the hype.
Davieβs Amsterdam for the Lelie sandwich: pastrami, pickles, marbled bread. Deceptively simple. Absolutely excellent.
De Kaaskamer to end the day: 400+ cheeses, grilled cheese with what they call ketchup (itβs not ketchup, and itβs better), and bunker cheese aged in underground military bunkers.
The full route covers 10 stops through Jordaan, the 9 Streets, the canal district, and the flower market area with a Google Map included so you can just follow along.
Full guide with every stop, tips for beating the lines, and what Iβd skip vs. do again | link in bio.
#amsterdam #visitamsterdam #netherlands #travel #visitnetherlands #traveleurope
Thereβs a version of Gatlinburg thatβs all fudge shops and tourist crowds, and then thereβs the version that actually makes you want to come back.
Hereβs everything worth doing downtown, in the order Iβd do it: ποΈ
β¨ Start at @gatlinburgskypark before the crowds hit
β¨ Walk the strip mid-morning when itβs still manageable
β¨ @googooclusters stop (see my post from Tuesday: donβt skip it)
β¨ Dinner at one of the local spots off the main drag
β¨ Wander back out at night when the lights are on and it gets actually pretty
This isnβt your overscheduled Smoky Mountain itinerary. Itβs more of a βhereβs what Iβd actually do if I had one solid dayβ kind of list.
Full downtown Gatlinburg guide linked in bio. π
If someone told me Iβd spend five hours at SkyPark, I would not have believed them. And yet. π
Gatlinburg SkyPark sits above the strip and itβs one of those places that looks like a quick stop on paper and turns into most of your afternoon. The SkyBridge alone is worth it β longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America, and yes, you will look down.
β¨ SkyBridge (longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America)
β¨ SkyLift ride up with views of the Smokies
β¨ Walking trails with mountain views in every direction
β¨ Way less crowded than downtown
Fair warning: if heights genuinely freak you out, the bridge might not be your thing. The rest of the park is still 100% worth it. Full guide with tickets, tips, and what to skip linked in bio. π
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