If you’re planning your first trip, this Curaçao travel guide will save you from a few easy mistakes. Curaçao is one of my favorite Caribbean islands, but it is not the version of the Caribbean a lot of people picture in their head before they go.
It is drier, more spread out, and more European-influenced than I expected. There are cacti instead of that super lush jungle look, the towns feel different from a lot of other islands, and you get a lot more out of it when you plan even a little ahead. The payoff is worth it: the water is absurdly clear, the food is better than I could have dreamed, and the island gives you more variety than a lot of beach destinations do.
If you want a full day-by-day plan after this, check out my guide to spending one week in Curaçao.

The first thing that stood out was how dry it is.
This is not a lush, tropical, jungle-feeling island like St. Lucia or St. Kitts. You are going to see more cacti, shrubs, and rocky scenery than giant tropical greenery. I liked that, but it is different, and I think it is good to know that before you arrive expecting one thing and getting another.
The second surprise was how clear the water is.
I do not mean one pretty beach with good color. I mean the water is consistently bright blue and clear across the island. Beach after beach, it kept looking that good, which feels a little rude to everywhere else.
Then there is the European influence.
Curaçao is an autonomous country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, and you can feel that in the architecture, the food, and the overall setup of the island. It also did not feel overly Americanized, which I liked. Although it is not americanized English is widely spoken, along with Dutch, Papiamentu, and Spanish, so getting around is easy for most visitors.
And the food surprised me the most.
There are a lot of genuinely good restaurants here. Not “good for an island.” Just good.

This is the biggest one.
You pretty much need a car in Curaçao if you want to see the best beaches, snorkeling spots, and viewpoints without turning every day into a complicated taxi situation. The island is small enough that drives are manageable, but spread out enough that relying on one area limits what you can do. Renting a car makes this much easier, and this is the option I would use again without hesitation: renting a car makes this much easier.
Driving was easy overall. Willemstad gets a little busier, but nothing felt hard or stressful.
You do not need a rigid itinerary, but you do need a general one.
You should know which beaches make sense together, what side of the island you are heading to that day, and where you want dinner that night. Otherwise you spend half the day in the car making decisions when you should be in the water or ordering lunch.
Some of the best dinners book up, so do not wait until the last minute and then act surprised when your first choice is gone.
If you want places like MosaCaña Bar & Kitchen or Kome, make the reservation.
It is one of the most popular beaches, but I would not call it the best.
It felt more mainstream and more crowded than some of the other beaches we went to. If you want prettier water, a more relaxed setup, or a beach day that feels less busy, there are better options.

This Curaçao travel guide makes the most sense for travelers who want a mix of relaxing and exploring.
Curaçao works well if you like good food, do not mind driving, and want your trip to include more than just one beach or one resort. It is a great island for beach hopping, snorkeling, scenic viewpoints, and nights in Willemstad when you want something beyond resort dinner and bed.
It is also a good choice if you like variety. You can spend the morning snorkeling, the afternoon at a beach club, and the evening walking across the bridge in Willemstad with the buildings lit up. That is a solid day.

Curaçao may not be the best fit if you want everything close together or do not want to drive at all.
It is also not the island I would pick for someone who wants a super lush, tropical backdrop everywhere they turn. And if your ideal trip is staying at one resort while still seeing the whole destination, Curaçao is not that kind of place unless you are fine missing a lot of what makes it good.
If you are only there once, or you are short on time, these are the places and experiences I would prioritize in this Curaçao travel guide.
This was my favorite beach on the island.
It felt low-key, the water was insanely clear, and like the kind of place where a few hours quietly turn into most of the day. That is usually how I know a beach is doing its job.
If you want a full beach breakdown, see my guide to the best beaches in Curaçao.
This one is more popular, and for good reason.
The water color here is unreal. If you want that classic Curaçao blue that makes you stop and stare for a second before getting your stuff out of the car, this is one of the top places for it.
This was the best snorkeling spot on the island for me if you want to see a lot of wildlife.
There is a shipwreck and plenty to see underwater, so it is worth going out of your way for. I would bring water shoes for rocky entries like this because they make spots like Tugboat a lot less annoying. I would also throw your valuables in a small dry bag so you don't end up with a wet phone or car fab.

This was the best dinner of the trip.
If you only make one dinner reservation in Curaçao, I would make it this one.
Walking across the Queen Emma Bridge at night with the colorful buildings lit up was one of my favorite moments of the trip.
It is simple, but it is one of those things that sticks with you. No planning stress, no big production, just a good walk in a beautiful part of town.
This is one of the easiest high-reward stops on the island.
It is simple to reach, quick to do, and the view is one of the best on Curaçao. I am always in favor of a viewpoint that does not require me to earn it too aggressively. Highly recommend this view at sunset!
Save this blog for later on Pinterest so you don’t forget it.
If you like hiking, this is the best view.
If you do not like hiking, this might become a character-building experience.
Christoffel Mountain is one of the island’s more advanced hikes, and the park advises starting the climb before 10 a.m. because of heat and trail conditions. The trail usually takes about two to three hours, so go early, bring plenty of water, and do not underestimate it.

Yes, I am saying it again because it matters that much.
This Curaçao travel guide would be incomplete without stressing how much easier the trip is with your own car. You can reach most parts of the island within about an hour to an hour and a half, which makes day planning simple once you have a route in mind.
The local currency is now the Caribbean guilder, which replaced the former Netherlands Antillean guilder in 2025. U.S. dollars are also widely accepted, and in my experience credit cards worked in most places. I would still keep some cash on hand for beach entrance fees and smaller spots.
Dutch, Papiamentu, and English are official languages in Curaçao, and Spanish is also widely spoken. For travelers, that means communication is usually easy. We had no trouble getting around, ordering food, or asking questions anywhere we went.
I always felt safe in Curaçao.
Use common sense like you would anywhere, but overall this felt like an easy destination to drive around and explore.

One reason Curaçao works so well for a lot of travelers is that it sits outside the hurricane belt, so it is often considered a good year-round Caribbean option. The weather stays warm throughout the year, and even during the broader Caribbean hurricane season, Curaçao is typically less affected than many other islands.
I would still plan around what kind of trip you want, but if hurricane season usually makes you hesitate, Curaçao is one of the easier islands to consider.
A few practical things I would pack for this kind of trip: a good sunscreen, because you are going to be outside a lot, and a hotel base that makes your first and last nights easier if you are flying in and out of Willemstad. You can look at where to stay near Willemstad here.
Curaçao gives you a mix of relaxing, exploring, and eating well, which is a combination I am always going to support.
You can spend your trip beach hopping, snorkeling, driving to viewpoints, and walking around Willemstad at night, or you can take it slower and focus on one area at a time. But this is not the island I would show up to with zero plan and hope it all magically lines up.
A little planning goes a long way here, and that is exactly why this Curaçao travel guide matters for first-time visitors. Know where you want to beach hop, book the dinners you care about, rent the car, and give yourself room to move around the island. You will get more out of Curaçao that way.
And if snorkeling is high on your list, learn more in my post about the best snorkeling in Curaçao.


The tulip fields in the Netherlands are one of those things that looks exactly like the photos, except the photos don’t 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 don’t know they’re 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 that’s 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. 🌷
#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. 🌷
#travelling #travel #amsterdam #visitamsterdam #traveleurope
10 stops. One very full day. Zero regrets. Amsterdam has one of the best food scenes I’ve 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.
Here’s 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.
Café Winkel 43 apple pie: one of the rare viral places that fully lives up to the hype.
Davie’s 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 (it’s not ketchup, and it’s 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 I’d skip vs. do again | link in bio.
#amsterdam #visitamsterdam #netherlands #travel #visitnetherlands #traveleurope
There’s a version of Gatlinburg that’s all fudge shops and tourist crowds, and then there’s the version that actually makes you want to come back.
Here’s everything worth doing downtown, in the order I’d do it: 🏔️
✨ Start at @gatlinburgskypark before the crowds hit
✨ Walk the strip mid-morning when it’s still manageable
✨ @googooclusters stop (see my post from Tuesday: don’t skip it)
✨ Dinner at one of the local spots off the main drag
✨ Wander back out at night when the lights are on and it gets actually pretty
This isn’t your overscheduled Smoky Mountain itinerary. It’s more of a “here’s what I’d actually do if I had one solid day” kind of list.
Full downtown Gatlinburg guide linked in bio. 🔗
If someone told me I’d spend five hours at SkyPark, I would not have believed them. And yet. 😅
Gatlinburg SkyPark sits above the strip and it’s 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 — longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America, and yes, you will look down.
✨ SkyBridge (longest pedestrian suspension bridge in North America)
✨ SkyLift ride up with views of the Smokies
✨ Walking trails with mountain views in every direction
✨ 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. 🔗
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