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The five best-value holiday destinations right now — and how to see them

The five best-value holiday destinations right now — and how to see them

Times22-06-2025
With summer holidays on the horizon, there's good news for most people planning to get away this year. The Post Office's latest Holiday Spending Report, released this week, has found that the British pound is stronger than a year ago against 25 of the 30 bestselling currencies. Those visiting Turkey can feel particularly smug as they'll reap the biggest rewards, getting almost a third more for their money compared with last June.
Other countries that offer Brits significantly extra currency for their sterling compared with a year ago include Mexico (12.8 per cent more, which is about an extra £57 for £500), Brazil (12.5 per cent, or an extra £55), Egypt (11.3 per cent, or an extra £51) and Jamaica (9.8 per cent, or an extra £45). Beware travelling to Thailand, Malaysia, Sweden, Switzerland or Japan, however, as all of their currencies have risen in value against the pound, although Thailand and Malaysia still offer good value overall.
Instead, consider the report's top five destinations where the UK's pound is strongest. We've picked three holidays in each that will make your money go even further this year.
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No need to splurge on spendy flights to Orlando. Antalya's mammoth The Land of Legends is Turkey's biggest theme park, with a 40-slide waterpark, nightly parades, a string of white-knuckle rollercoasters and, for little ones, a Nickelodeon Land that opened earlier this year. One of three hotels onsite is the all-inclusive Kingdom hotel, which has an extensive, child-friendly buffet, mini discos, an indoor pool and cartoon-coloured rooms that come with games consoles. Details Seven nights' all-inclusive from £892pp, including flights and luggage (tui.co.uk)
• Read our full guide to Turkey
Turkey's Mediterranean coastline has the same brilliant blue waters, seafront restaurants and long sunny days as nearby Greece, but often for a fraction of the cost. The five-star adults-only Supreme Beach Icmeler hotel is next to the sand and surrounded by pine forests, and less than a mile from Marmaris with its open-air nightclubs, marina and bustling bazaar. The all-inclusive hotel has 68 simple, modern rooms with tiled bathrooms, two pools, a fitness centre and a spa with a Turkish bath and sauna.Details Seven nights' all-inclusive from £386pp, including flights (thomascook.com)
With its historical landmarks, gourmet restaurants and cultural attractions, Istanbul has all the charm of other major European cities for friendlier prices. Visit the Blue Mosque with its colourful tiled interior, sail along the Strait of Bosphorus which divides Europe and Asia, or pick up (even more) bargains in the 15th-century bazaar. Stay in Hagia Sofia Mansions Istanbul Curio Collection by Hilton, which is close to the major sights and has extravagantly decorated rooms, a garden restaurant offering shisha, and a spa built around a 1,500-year-old cistern.Details Five nights' room only from £614pp, including flights and checked luggage (britishairways.com)
• 23 of the best things to do in Istanbul
Next to the bath-warm Caribbean Sea but better value than islands like Barbados or Antigua, Cancun has white-sand beaches, a buzzy nightlife, spectacular coral reefs and nearby Maya ruins to explore. The Oleo Cancun Playa resort simplifies its rates by including everything from 24-hour room service to art workshops and meals in five restaurants. Rooms are all-white and minimalist, and some have sunset sea views. There are restaurants and shops within walking distance and the El Rey Archaeological Zone is less than two miles away. Details Seven nights' all-inclusive from £1,186pp, including flights (virginatlantic.com)
Take advantage of cut-price currency and see even more of Mexico on this nine-night self-guided tour. You'll spend three nights in a Mexico City hotel, including a visit to the Teotihuacan pyramids, before flying to the arty Yucatan capital of Merida for three nights in order to visit cenotes on the inner rim of an asteroid crater and the ancient Maya complex of Chichen Itza. Finally unwind with three nights in an all-inclusive beachfront resort on the Riviera Maya.Details Nine nights' B&B from £2,559pp, including flights, transport, some excursions and some extra meals (haystravel.co.uk)
• Read our full guide to Mexico
Decent exchange rates mean it's even possible to visit Mexico during one of its most famous festivals. This small-group tour, departing on October 28, includes six nights in Oaxaca during El Dia de los Muertos, otherwise known as Day of the Dead, when the southern Mexican city thrums with street parades and candlelit vigils. You'll view several, as well as joining an orientation walk round the city and taking a tortilla-making workshop in a local family's home. Details Six nights' B&B from £1,599pp, including activities and some extra meals (trailfinders.com). Fly to Oaxaca
• 10 of the best places to visit in Mexico (and how to see them)
Escape the British weather without blowing the budget by jetting to Rio de Janeiro for its endless stretches of sandy beach, rainforest trails, lively nightlife and the towering Christ the Redeemer statue. The Windsor Florida hotel is in a residential district within strolling distance of Flamengo beach but also two minutes' walk from the nearest metro station for easy access to the sights without paying city-centre prices. It has an outdoor pool with loungers, a gym and a lavish buffet restaurant.Details Five nights' B&B from £1,099pp, including flights and luggage (britishairways.com)
Nab a bucket-list adventure for less with this eight-night small-group tour of Brazil's highlights (plus a brief foray into Argentina). After a first night in Buenos Aires, you'll fly to Iguazu for three nights exploring both the Brazilian and Argentinian side of these humongous falls, before a night in the Unesco-listed Portuguese colonial-era town of Paraty. Afterwards, a van and ferry will whisk you to Ilha Grande for two nights of hiking, snorkelling and fresh seafood before a final night exploring Rio de Janeiro. Details Eight nights' B&B from £1,612pp, including transport and excursions (gadventures.com). Fly to Buenos Aires
Even a five-star all-inclusive represents a bargain in Bahia, known for its clear waters, historical sites and the waterfall-filled Chapada Diamantina National Park. The Iberostar Waves Bahia is close to the village of Praia do Forte and lies directly on its white-sand beach, though the hotel also has three pools in its gardens. There's also a golf course, a large spa with Roman and Turkish baths, a two-storey fitness centre with a spinning room, a sea-turtle monitoring station and museum, and six restaurants including a poolside food truck.Details All-inclusive doubles from £218 (iberostar.com). Fly to Salvador
• 21 of the best affordable holiday destinations for 2025
Hectic Cairo can be exhausting to fit into a weekend, so take advantage of the exchange rate and go for longer. Stay outside the centre in the residential Fifth Settlement neighbourhood for some breathing space between sights, with the Pyramids and Grand Egyptian Museum half an hour's drive away. Local restaurants and shops are within walking distance of the Triumph Luxury hotel and there's an outdoor pool with a bar, padel court, kids' playground and spa for relaxing. Details Seven nights' B&B from £915pp, including flights, transfers and luggage (easyjet.com)
• Egypt travel advice: is it safe to visit right now?
Once the sole preserve of the wealthy, voyages down the Nile became more affordable late last year when Tui's Marella Cruises brand launched its first itineraries on Africa's longest river. On a round trip from Luxor you'll visit Edfu (for excursions to the Temple of Horus and the double temple of Kom Ombo) and Aswan, with all the on-board food, drink and entertainment included. The decent exchange rate means you can splurge on extra shore excursions, including a tour of the rock-cut Abu Simbel temples or a hot-air balloon trip over Luxor's Valley of the Kings. Details Seven nights' all-inclusive from £1,824pp, including flights and transfers (tui.co.uk)
• 18 of the best Egypt tours
You'll get near-guaranteed sunshine and wonderfully low prices if booking a beach break in Sharm el-Sheikh, on the southeastern coast of the Sinai peninsula. Stella di Mare Beach hotel and spa ticks every fly-and-flop box, with a large pool right next to its own beach, a jetty from which to jump straight into the Red Sea, a Padi centre for diving, a spa and three restaurants. Naama Bay's shops, nightclubs and cafés are less than a ten-minute taxi ride away. Details Seven nights' B&B from £571pp, including flights (firstchoice.co.uk)
Beaches don't get much more exclusive than the one at Catalonia Montego Bay on Jamaica's northwest coast. As well as the 1.5-mile stretch of white sand right beside its pool, the hotel has its own palm-tree-ringed private island, reached by walking across the clear shallow water. A spa, tennis courts, a diving centre and a mini-golf course might also tempt you from your lounger, and there are three à la carte restaurants including Japanese and Italian options, plus a jerk bar and beach grill.Details Seven nights' all-inclusive from £1,160pp, including flights (thomascook.com)
• 12 of the best all-inclusive hotels in Jamaica
There'll be plenty of opportunities to spend that holiday money during this small-group island tour of Jamaica's highlights. Travelling by coach between five comfortable hotels, the itinerary includes a trip to a coffee plantation in the Blue Mountains, a visit to the Bob Marley Museum in Kingston, swimming on the sheltered Blue Lagoon beach, a guided tour of the Rose Hall Great House and rum tasting at the Appleton Estate distillery. Splurge on optional excursions such as local cooking classes or rafting on the Rio Grande.Details Nine nights' B&B from £2,349pp, including transport, most excursions and some extra meals (explore.co.uk). Fly to Kingston
Spend the extra you'll claw back with that favourable exchange rate on a stay at GoldenEye, Jamaica's most famous hotel, and the former home of the James Bond creator Ian Fleming. This tranquil resort has just 18 cottages and villas within 52 acres of tropical gardens around a 150m stretch of white sand and a large lagoon. Spend your days snorkelling, paddleboarding or exploring the area on mountain bikes before dining by candlelight on the beach or in the Gazebo, a fine-dining treehouse restaurant. Details Seven nights' room-only from £2,215pp, including flights (bestattravel.co.uk)
• 21 of the best luxury villas in Jamaica
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‘Trump slump' blamed as fewer tourists visit Las Vegas
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An eclipse expert's guide to next year's solar blackout
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'It's the first total eclipse in Spain since 1905, and there won't be another one in Iceland this century.' So says Dr John Mason, describing the next occasion on which the moon will fully obscure the sun: 12 August 2026. He told The Independent 's daily travel podcast: 'We have a total eclipse that starts in the high Arctic, goes over the North Pole, down the east coast of Greenland, far northwest corner of Iceland, over the ocean, and then down to Spain and the Balearic Islands.' Only a tiny proportion of the planet's population has ever witnessed a total solar eclipse. The fact that the celestial phenomenon will sweep across northern Spain and reach the island of Mallorca at sunset is exciting for the millions who will be on holiday in the region during the peak summer month for travel. But Dr Mason cautions: 'This is one of the trickiest solar eclipses in terms of weather that I've seen for a long time.' As many people who witnessed the last such event in the UK – Cornwall, 1999 – will remember, cloud cover takes away the magic of a total solar eclipse. The Sussex astronomer has been chasing the darkness for almost four decades. His expertise enables him to select the optimum location to view each eclipse – and to rule out long stretches of the 'path of totality'. Dr Mason says: 'In the high Arctic, Greenland and Iceland, cloud cover is at least 80 per cent and, in many places, over 90 per cent.' The latter represents less than a one-in-10 chance of witnessing the eclipse without overcast skies. The figure improves "up on the high frozen ice cap in the middle of Greenland'. He rates the chance of clear skies as 60 per cent, 'which is not bad'. The other Greenland option is the middle of Scoresby Sound on the east coast – one of the world's largest fjords. 'You could get between 45 and 50 per cent clear, which would be quite good for that area. But as soon as you get to the ocean, then the cloud cover becomes 80, 90 per cent or more.' 'Even in the far northwest of Iceland, where the prospects are just a little bit better, it's still not great. Inland in Iceland, the prospects are slightly better, but the roads there are extremely narrow. I think the Iceland authorities will look very carefully at how many people are going to go there.' The greatest duration for the 2026 total solar eclipse – a relatively short two minutes and 18 seconds – will be just off the coast of northwest Iceland. The track of totality will then sweep southeast across the Atlantic, to the west of Ireland. Dr Mason predicts that many eclipse chasers will be on board cruise or expedition ships in the North Atlantic. But, he warns: 'It's going to be tricky for the captains to find a spot where there is clear weather. Even though the sun is reasonably high in the sky, you've still got the problem of 80-90 per cent-plus cloud cover. 'It next makes landfall in northern Spain, and here the weather prospects increase dramatically.' The centre of the path of totality will first strike Spain over the port of Luarca in Asturias. It will then traverse southeast – passing just south, in turn, of the cities of Oviedo and Burgos. 'Although you have cloud cover, to maybe 50 or 60 per cent along the northern coast of Spain, as soon as you come inland a bit the weather prospects increase dramatically,' Dr Mason says. 'I'm going to be in central northern Spain, where the cloud prospects are much better, but the sun is getting lower and lower in the sky. 'When the sun is low in the sky, you've got a very long path through the atmosphere, and you only need cloud somewhere along that path to thwart your view. 'Where I'm going to be, which is southwest of Burgos, the sun is going to be about nine degrees high at totality. 'That's not too bad. As you go nearer towards the Mediterranean coast, and obviously the sun gets lower and lower, the chances of cloud being in the way increase.' The eclipse track leaves mainland Spain just north of Castellon airport on the Mediterranean coast. But by then the sun will be very low on the horizon – even more so, when it strikes the southwest coast of Mallorca just north of the port of Andratx. Dr Mason holds out the tantalising prospect of 'an amazing view of a totally eclipsed sun hanging above the horizon, looking really large.' 'For a place to view it, you've got to make sure that you're up high and you don't have anything in the way on the land.' If there is to be a Mallorca miracle, it will be best viewed from a location on the sparsely populated southwest coast of Mallorca, rather than a bar in Magaluf – also on the line of totality, but where many obstructions will block the view. Except during the brief spell of totality, viewers of eclipses must use special glasses to protect their eyes. The US National Solar Observatory says: 'During totality, you may view the sun without proper eye protection. 'But during all other phases of the eclipse, you should only look at the sun when your eyes are protected.' Eclipse viewing glasses will be widely available at the key locations on the line of totality. Dr Mason is much sought after by travel firms as a tour leader; Queen guitarist Sir Brian May is among his celebrity clients. The astronomer will be leading his 2026 trip on behalf of New Scientist.

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