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Mark Footer

Destinations known | Booking.com has named the world’s 10 most welcoming cities, places it says are iconic, stunning, enchanting etc. We’ll have to take their word for it

  • Rest assured you won’t find overcrowded Venice or Kyoto on Booking.com’s The 10 Most Welcoming Cities on Earth for 2024 list – most are off the beaten track
  • Its methodology is questionable and, from a ‘stunning’ gateway to Mount Fuji to a Swiss alpine ‘haven’, it goes overboard on the clichés to lend them appeal

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Fujikawaguchiko, a gateway to Japan’s Mount Fuji, features on Booking.com’s  list of the world’s most welcoming cities,  most of them towns and off the beaten track. Photo: Shutterstock

There are few things more appreciated by a stranger in a strange land than a warm welcome. And it’s unlikely you’ll get one from all quarters in Kyoto, Venice, Amsterdam, Seville (where the mayor is planning to introduce a fee to enter the iconic but worn out Plaza de España, the latest in a series of tourism-dampening measures across Europe) or other cities struggling with overtourism.

National capitals can appear coldly indifferent to the visiting tourist, too, so we were interested to see a recent survey from Booking.com revealing what the travel marketplace considers the “world’s most welcoming cities”.

And how does Booking.com assess such a quality? Well, we were a little disappointed to discover it simply sorted destinations by their share of Traveller Review Award 2024 recipients as a proportion of the number of accommodation options in that city. The list was then curated for geographic spread, to produce a Top 10 (which isn’t really).

Still, we can’t think of a better way of assessing something as nebulous as a welcome, and presumably many of the people who left positive reviews would have been happy with the overall vibe of the city as well as their digs – so perhaps there is some merit to the list.

Somewhere over the rainbow: Arraial d’Ajuda, Brazil, makes the list of most welcoming cities. Photo: Shutterstock
Somewhere over the rainbow: Arraial d’Ajuda, Brazil, makes the list of most welcoming cities. Photo: Shutterstock

Another plus is that Destinations Known hasn’t been to any of the cities – well, towns mostly – listed. None; and some, we’re ashamed to admit, we couldn’t even point to on a map. And that’s perhaps illustrative in itself; you have to go well off the beaten track to find the warmest of welcomes.

The nearest city on the list to Hong Kong is Japan’s Fujikawaguchiko, a resort town in, and a gateway to, the foothills of Mount Fuji – itself a super attractor that visitors will have to start paying 2,000 yen (US$13.50) to climb from this summer.
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Mark Footer joined the Post in 1999, having been the magazine and book buyer for Tower Records in Hong Kong. He started on the business desk before moving, in 2006, to Post Magazine, of which he was editor until 2019. He took on a secondary role as travel editor in 2009.
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