How to vet a destination (beyond the headlines)

13 March 2026
How to vet a destination (beyond the headlines)

When you see a Level 3: Reconsider Travel warning pop up for a country you’ve been dreaming about, your first instinct might be to hit the “cancel” button.

It’s a natural reaction. But in 2026, the news is a sea of red, and official advisories have become so broad that they often obscure the truth about what’s actually happening on the ground.

These advisories are designed to protect the average American traveler—someone who might land without a plan and wander into a restricted zone. But for us, the savvy travelers, a government warning is the beginning of the research, not the end. To decide whether to go or stay, you need to look past the “blanket” and build your own Safety Scorecard.

The Safe Travels Safety Scorecard

Before you make or cancel your travel plans, give your specific destination a “grade” using these three metrics:

  1. Use the Interactive Map. Is your specific city the same color as London or Tokyo? If the unrest is 500 miles away, give this a PASS.
  2. Check a local English news outlet (like The Local or Mexico News Daily). Is the “instability” a national crisis, or just a protest on one specific street in the capital? If it’s localized, give this a PASS.
  3. Ask a question in a “Living in [City]” Facebook group. If residents are still going to cafes and walking the dog at night, give this a PASS.

The Rule: If you get 3 out of 3 “PASS” grades, your personal risk is likely much lower than the national headline suggests.

Take Turkey, for example. As of March 9, 2026, the State Department issued a Do Not Travel order for the southeast region near the Syrian border due to safety risks and hostilities that flared up in late February. If you only read the headline, you’d think the entire country was off-limits. However, if you’re planning a week in the historic neighborhoods of Istanbul or a micro-retirement in a quiet villa along the Aegean coast, you are hundreds of miles away from the unrest.

The same applies to Saudi Arabia, where Level 4 zones exist along the Yemen border while the rest of the country remains at a Level 2. The key is to look for the Risk Indicators, those little letters like (C) for Crime or (T) for Terrorism, and read the specific Advisory Summary to see exactly where those risks are located.

Resource: Check the current US State Department Travel Advisories

Expert Tip: Always scroll past the big colored box at the top of the page. The real gold is in the “Risks in specific areas” section further down.

How to Find Your Local Safety Color

Don’t stop at the country page. To get the truth, you have to zoom in. The US State Department actually provides a tool most travelers overlook: the Interactive Color-Coded Map. While a country might be listed as Level 3 (Reconsider Travel), the map often shows that the vast majority of the nation is a Level 1 or 2, with only specific border regions or “hotspots” shaded in dark red.

When I’m vetting a destination for the newsletter, I look for parity. If the government map shows my destination is the same color as a place I already feel comfortable in, say, the rural areas of France or the UK, that’s a strong green light for me.

To go even deeper, look at Numbeo. This is a crowdsourced database where residents and expats report on topics like “Safety walking alone at night” and “Property crime.” It allows you to compare the safety index of a city like Lisbon or Tokyo directly with that of your hometown. Seeing that your vacation spot actually has a lower crime rate than where you live currently is the best way to quiet the what-if anxiety.

Resource: US State Department Interactive Travel Map

Comparison Tool: Numbeo Safety Index by City

Using Expat Forums and Local English News

The best safety data doesn’t come from a government building in D.C.; it comes from the person getting their morning coffee down the street from your rental. When a headline says a city is “in turmoil,” a local expat might tell you that the turmoil is actually limited to two blocks near the parliament building and the rest of the city is business as usual.

To get this perspective, I look for two things: local English-language news and active resident forums. These sources are far more nuanced than a broad travel advisory. For example, if you are eyeing a stay in Mexico City, you can check INEGI’s national urban safety survey (ENSU) for 2026, which often shows that specific neighborhoods like Polanco or Benito Juárez have extremely high safety ratings, even if the national headline is less than perfect.

The Expat Filter: Join Facebook groups like “Expats in [Your City]” or specialized groups for our demographic, such as “Over 60 Women Travel and Meetup.” Ask a direct question: “I am staying in [Neighborhood] next month; what is the vibe on the street right now?”

Local News: Skip the global networks and search for English-language outlets based in your destination.

  • Europe: The Local (with specific editions for Italy, France, Germany, and more).
  • Mexico: Mexico News Daily.
  • Global: Al Jazeera English often provides the most granular reporting on regional events in Asia and the Middle East that Western outlets might miss.

Understanding the Travel Insurance Safety Window

Standard travel insurance is designed to cover specific “named perils,” things like a sudden heart attack, a natural disaster, or a documented terrorist attack. It does not cover “the news is making me anxious” or “a government advisory just changed to Level 3.” 

If you cancel for those reasons under a standard policy, you will likely lose 100% of your investment.

This is where the Cancel for Any Reason (CFAR) upgrade becomes your ultimate safety valve. In 2026, it is the only way to pull the plug on a trip simply because your personal “Safety Scorecard” has hit the red zone.

  • The 14-to-21-Day Rule: This is the most critical technical detail. You cannot decide to add CFAR months after booking. Most providers require you to purchase this upgrade within 14 to 21 days of making your very first trip deposit. If you missed that window for your summer trip, you are limited to standard covered reasons for cancellation, which may not include the risks your trip could be affected by.
  • The 75% Rule: CFAR typically reimburses between 50% and 75% of your nonrefundable costs. While you won’t get every penny back, it turns a total $10,000 loss into a $2,500 “change of mind” fee, and that’s a much easier pill to swallow.
  • The “48-Hour” Kill Switch: To use CFAR, you must officially cancel with your airline and hotel at least 48 to 72 hours before your scheduled departure. You can’t wake up on the morning of your flight and decide to stay home.


Resource: Compare 2026 CFAR Plans and Purchase Windows

Pro Tip: When you buy CFAR, you must insure 100% of your prepaid, nonrefundable costs. If you only insure the flight but not the villa, the entire CFAR benefit could be voided.

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Damian Tysdal
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DamianTysdal

Damian Tysdal is the founder of CoverTrip, and is a licensed agent for travel insurance (MA 1883287). He believes travel insurance should be easier to understand, and started the first travel insurance blog in 2006.

Damian Tysdal is the founder of CoverTrip, and is a licensed agent for travel insurance (MA 1883287). He believes travel insurance should be easier to understand, and started the first travel insurance blog in 2006.