The wedding is over, and the couple has already taken a quick trip away, a long weekend somewhere warm and close. The honeymoon itself is still to come. More American couples are splitting the tradition into two: a short getaway right after the wedding and a much bigger trip planned months or a year later, and the latter increasingly points toward Africa.
The wedding is over, and the couple has already taken a quick trip away, a long weekend somewhere warm and close. The honeymoon itself is still to come. More American couples are splitting the tradition into two: a short getaway right after the wedding and a much bigger trip planned months or a year later, and the latter increasingly points toward Africa.
The short trip has a name now, the "mini-moon," and couples take it while the exhaustion of the wedding is still fresh. Then they plan a far bigger trip for a year or so later, one that increasingly points toward Africa. The proper honeymoon waits until the bills have settled and there is room to disappear for two weeks.
Travel advisors have watched the vocabulary grow. Alongside the mini-moon, there is the "pre-moon," a romantic escape taken before the wedding, and the "elope-moon," which folds the ceremony itself into the getaway. One agency reports that 6 in 10 couples now book the short trip first and hold the big one for later.
Couples are willing to wait
A safari does not fit into the days right after a wedding. It runs 10 days to two weeks and costs enough that many couples would rather wait and do it properly than rush it while they are still recovering from their own wedding costs.
Tanzania is not a cheap country to honeymoon in. Safari lodges there run from about $450 per person a night at the comfortable end to $2,500, and well beyond at the top, before flights and park fees alone, add $700 to $900 per person through a week in the northern parks. Splitting the honeymoon does not shrink that. It buys the time to pay for it.
The couples who wait are also booking differently. Many now time their honeymoon for the off-season, when lodge rates drop and the best camps are easier to get into. The other pressure is time.A safari is hard to carve out of a working calendar, and for couples who expect to have children, it is far easier to do now than in the decade before kids are old enough to come along. Waiting is not indecision; it is how couples afford the trip they want and fit it into the only window they have.
The safari comes first, in Tanzania
The trip couples keep saving for tends to follow one pattern: several days on safari, then several more on an island doing nothing at all. The safari comes first while the energy for early mornings and long drives is still there, and the beach comes after, when it is gone.
Tanzania has become the safari anchor. The country had a record year in 2025, with total arrivals up nearly 11% on the year before, and the United States is its largest overseas market, with most visitors arriving for the first time.
The couple, after the classic version, can book a camp like Nomad Tanzania, a mobile tented operation of just six canvas rooms that follows the wildebeest migration across the Serengeti, packing up and moving several times a year to stay near the herds. Camps this small book out early, which is part of why advisors report couples planning the trip well in advance, often a year or more before they travel.
The safari is not without friction that's worth understanding. Tanzania's expansion of protected land has drawn sustained criticism from human rights organizations over the displacement of Maasai communities, a reminder that the scenery a honeymoon is built around is also contested ground. The better operators can speak to it, and couples increasingly ask them to.
The island does the rest
Then comes the island, where the pace finally drops. The Seychelles has been honeymoon shorthand for decades, and it had a record year in 2025, with arrivals up 12% as the country passed its previous full-year total a month before the year even ended. Part of the appeal of the delayed trip for couples is that it takes real effort to reach, which makes the arrival feel earned.
Six Senses Zil Pasyon sits on the private island of Felicite, 30 villas set among granite boulders, with most of the island left as a national park, reachable only by helicopter or speedboat. Each villa has its own pool and very little sound beyond the water. After a week of pre-dawn game drives, that quiet is what couples came for.
Where the 2-trip honeymoon goes next
The question is no longer whether couples take the big trip, but how long they are willing to wait for it. Once the mini-moon has absorbed the pressure to travel right away, the second trip can grow more ambitious and more expensive with every month it is delayed. For a rising number of American couples, the wedding has become the down payment on a honeymoon that has not happened yet.
Mandy is a luxury travel, fine dining and bucket-list-adventure journalist with expert insight from 47 countries. She uncovers unforgettable experiences around the world and brings them to life through immersive storytelling that blends indulgence, culture and discovery, and shares them with a global audience as co-founder of Food Drink Life. Her articles appear on MSN and through the Associated Press wire in major U.S. outlets, including NBC, the Daily News, Boston Herald, the Chicago Sun-Times and many more.
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Beyond the Golden Guitar: Tamworth’s Quiet Evolution into Australia’s Hidden Queer Sanctuary
The regional city of Tamworth, New South Wales, is successfully moving beyond its traditional country music identity to establish itself as a welcoming and emerging hub for LGBTQ+ travelers.
Tamworth, New South Wales, has long been synonymous with the strumming of acoustic guitars and the wide-brimmed hats of the annual Country Music Festival. However, the regional city is increasingly recognized for a different kind of vibrancy: its growing and resilient LGBTQ+ community. Traditionally viewed as a conservative rural stronghold, Tamworth is undergoing a quiet revolution, transforming into a lesser-known but deeply welcoming destination for queer travelers seeking an authentic regional Australian experience without the exclusion of the past.
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48 Hours in Greenville, South Carolina: Food, Trails and Art in a Walkable Downtown
For years, Greenville, South Carolina, was a city travelers flew over on the way to somewhere better known, but lately it has become a destination in its own right. Tucked into the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Upstate town has built a compact, walkable downtown around a waterfall park, a 28-mile rail trail and a cluster of museums, then added a food scene good enough to earn its first Michelin Star and host a season of "Top Chef."
For years, Greenville, South Carolina, was a city travelers flew over on the way to somewhere better known, but lately it has become a destination in its own right. Tucked into the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains, the Upstate town has built a compact, walkable downtown around a waterfall park, a 28-mile rail trail and a cluster of museums, then added a food scene good enough to earn its first Michelin Star and host a season of "Top Chef." Forty-eight hours is enough to eat well, get outside and take in the art, mostly without touching the car.
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Red County, Rainbow City: The Queer Renaissance of Lancaster, Pennsylvania
While often associated with its pastoral Amish heritage, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, has rapidly transformed into one of the most LGBTQ+ affirming small cities in North America.
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, is a city defined by its striking contrasts. For decades, travelers have flocked to the region for its rolling farmland and the traditional lifestyle of the Amish community. However, as of Monday, July 13, 2026, the city’s narrative is being rewritten by a vibrant, visible, and growing LGBTQ+ community that has turned this historic hub into a modern sanctuary. Located in a county that has historically leaned conservative, the city of Lancaster—with a population of approximately 58,000 residents—has emerged as a "shining beacon of hope" for LGBTQ+ individuals across the Mid-Atlantic .
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Ho, Ho, Hot: Santas Gather for a Summer Celebration
Santas, Mrs. Clauses, and elves from around the world have gathered in Aalborg, Denmark, for the annual World Santa Claus Congress
While Europe's still in the throes of summer heat, it’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas in the Danish city of Aalborg.
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Sip, Savor & Stay: An LGBTQ+ Escape to Santa Maria Valley
Psst! Can you keep a secret? There’s a hidden gem along California’s Central Coast that delivers everything travelers love about the Golden State—award-winning wine, scenic beaches, incredible food, and laid-back charm—without the sky-high prices or overwhelming crowds.
Psst! Can you keep a secret? There’s a hidden gem along California’s Central Coast that delivers everything travelers love about the Golden State—award-winning wine, scenic beaches, incredible food, and laid-back charm—without the sky-high prices or overwhelming crowds. Nestled between Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo, Santa Maria Valley is the kind of destination where LGBTQ+ travelers can truly unwind, connect, and explore at their own pace.
Whether you’re planning a romantic same-sex couples’ getaway, a fun trip with chosen family, or a solo recharge filled with wine and wellness, Santa Maria Valley offers a warm, welcoming vibe that feels refreshingly authentic.
Santa Maria Valley is one of the world’s most dynamic wine-growing regions, producing complex and beautifully balanced wines thanks to its unique coastal climate. The region is especially celebrated for Pinot Noir, Chardonnay, and Syrah, though adventurous wine lovers will find plenty of varietals worth sipping.
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The Azure Secret: Thessaloniki’s Rise as Europe’s Boldest Emerging Queer Haven
Following its successful 14th annual Pride celebration this June, Thessaloniki is solidifying its reputation as a premier, albeit lesser-known, LGBTQ+ destination in Southern Europe.
As the sun dipped below the horizon of the Thermaic Gulf on June 20, 2026, the historic White Tower of Thessaloniki was bathed not in its usual amber glow, but in the vibrant, defiant colors of the Progress Pride flag. This moment marked the climax of the 14th annual Thessaloniki Pride, an event that has transformed from a grassroots protest into one of the most significant LGBTQ+ gatherings in the Balkans. This year, the festival operated under the provocative and empowering theme "Break the Code" , a call to action for queer people and allies to dismantle the invisible social barriers and stereotypes that persist despite legislative gains.
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Hemingway’s Masterpiece on Spain's Bull Runs Turns 100 Years Old With Its Allure Intact
One hundred years ago a book was published that put Spain's biggest bull run festival on the map for millions of readers around the world
Bill Hillmann has been gored three times while running with the bulls in Spain, but he wouldn’t miss this year’s San Fermin festival for anything.
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Turkish Authorities Bar American-Chartered LGBTQ+ Cruise Ship, Citing Conflicts with ‘Moral Standards’
The Turkish government has officially blocked the "Scarlet Lady", an American-chartered cruise ship carrying approximately 2,000 LGBTQ+ passengers, from docking at national ports in Kuşadası and Istanbul.
On July 2, 2026, the Turkish government issued a formal prohibition preventing a high-profile LGBTQ+ cruise ship, largely populated by American citizens, from docking at its ports on the Aegean and Marmara seas [CNN]. The vessel, the Scarlet Lady, which is operated by Virgin Voyages and was chartered by the U.S.-based Atlantis Events, was scheduled to bring approximately 2,000 passengers to the country, including an estimated 1,100 travelers from the United States [CNN, The Washington Post]. Turkish officials justified the sudden cancellation of the docking permits by citing the protection of "family values" and "moral standards," asserting that the presence of the group was incompatible with the "societal fabric" of the nation [The Guardian].
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EDGE Interview: How Tristan Schukraft, the “CEO of Everything Gay,” Is Redefining Queer Luxury and Community
Through his ventures, Schukraft has positioned himself not only as a successful entrepreneur but also as a key figure shaping LGBTQ+ spaces, experiences, and community around the world. With that vision in mind, Schukraft spoke with us about the inspiration behind Tryst Hospitality, his personal journey, and how he’s helping shape the future of LGBTQ+ travel and nightlife.
Tristan Schukraft—often referred to as “The CEO of Everything Gay”—has built a career that blends entrepreneurship, investment, and cultural influence across multiple industries. A Los Angeles native now based in Puerto Rico, he has developed a far-reaching portfolio spanning technology, healthcare, media, airlines, hospitality, and real estate, which forms the backbone of his success.
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