What do you get when you take a 4,028-passenger Norwegian cruise ship, slather it in Bud Light logos and sail it into the New York Harbor?
Are millions of people around the world really traveling abroad for medical reasons? A new study begs to differ.
What’s a “PANK”? How about a “microstay”? These are but two of many new travel trends you can expect in 2014.
Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman's giant inflatable duck may just be the kick China's economy needs.
The U.S. has its Kentucky Derby and U.K. its Royal Ascot, but what happens at Australia's Melbourne Cup Carnival is of another caliber altogether.
Troubles in paradise? Several tourists were killed Sunday when a ferry with more than 200 passengers capsized.
India is building the world's tallest statue at a cost of almost $340 million, honoring one of the country's founding fathers.
When you hurry around the globe in five and a half days, you find strange things -- and let go of what you thought you were looking for.
What do Betty White, Richard Simmons and several "American Idol" alums have in common? They've all starred in recent airline safety videos.
The FAA finally eased its strict rules on in-flight electronics, but what exactly does that mean for passengers and when will it happen?
"The pumpkins seemed heavy, so we decided to run them through an X-ray machine and the drugs were found in bags inside the pumpkins," a CBSA spokeswoman said.
A short documentary exposes China's illegal practice of manufacturing "gutter oil."
Rjukan, Norway, has spent six months of every year without direct sunlight, but new mountaintop mirrors herald a brighter future.
Only one U.S. city made Lonely Planet’s 2014 watch list, and it’s not one of North America’s coastal charmers.
The haunted house is a staple of Halloween. Here are the seven most haunted places in the United States.
In the worst storm to hit the UK since 1987, hurricane-force winds did heavy damage to the island nation and mainland Europe.
Keenan Draughon, a 23-year-old man from Tennessee, was arrested for carrying guns and ammo in his checked luggage.
“The show will be transmitted to the audience via headphones with no amplification... a real first for us!” the group wrote on its website.
15-year-old Sofia Petrova was shipped off to her father's hometown in Siberia by her mother for her rebellious behavior.
So are the 'bad ole days' over for the rarely-profitable airline industry?
U.S. airlines earned nearly $3.5 billion in fees from checked-in bags in 2012, up from $464 million in 2007.
Thailand is considering a 500 baht ($16.04) fee starting in January.
Could North Korean tourism help disarm the secretive state?
Halloween haunted houses and themed attractions may seem ubiquitous today, but that wasn’t the case a decade ago.
An American Airlines plane safely made an emergency landing after the pilot reported a smoking engine and a fire in the cockpit.
“This will be as bad as it gets,” the fire chief warned, asking visitors and residents to flee from bush fires raging near Sydney.
The agency is gearing up for yet more intrusive pre-screening, with access to private databases.
Closed by the sequester, reopened with funds in the new budget bill, tours of the White House will resume -- but not like before.
Europe received 20 million more arrivals in the first eight months of 2013 than it did in 2012. Here's where they're coming from.
The resort town on Mexico's southwestern coast is bracing for its second cyclone in a month. But this one is much more powerful than the last.