GET STARTED

Five Journeys Beyond the Map

 

The World’s Most Compelling Overseas Destinations for 2026

Some years, the travel map redraws itself quietly: a coastline gains a new harbor, a mountain village finishes a renovation a decade in the making, a ship is born. This is one of those years.

Drawing from this season’s most credible editorial best-of lists, here are five overseas destinations defining what a discerning journey looks like in 2026, each chosen not for noise, but for the quality of what waits at the end of the trip.

01. Bodrum, Turkey

The Aegean’s Quiet Reinvention

Once a fishing village, Bodrum has become the coast the rest of the Mediterranean watches. Whitewashed hills fold into turquoise water; centuries old harbors sit minutes from some of the region’s most considered new hotels. Bvlgari’s resort there carries the brand’s restraint into stone and sea, with floor to ceiling views, private terraces, and a hush that feels earned rather than staged.

Interest in the destination has grown sharply over the past year, and the momentum is structural, not seasonal: better flight access from the UK, a widening calendar of openings, and a built environment finally catching up to the scenery. Spring through autumn remains the window. After that, the coast goes quiet again, which is, in its own way, part of the appeal.

Photos courtesy of @gobodrum_
 on Instagram.

02. Andermatt, Switzerland

An Alpine Outpost Rebuilt for Design

Andermatt spent decades as a remote military post tucked into the Swiss Alps. It has spent the last several years becoming one of the most architecturally serious resort towns in Europe. New lifts ease access to terrain that used to demand patience; residences designed by Patricia Urquiola sit beside a concert hall built for acoustics, not spectacle.

What distinguishes Andermatt isn’t scale. It’s restraint. Sleek alpine forms, wide unhurried slopes, and a direct rail line from Zurich that turns a once difficult outpost into an afternoon’s journey. Winters bring the skiing; the cooler, quieter summers are reason enough to return.

Photos courtesy of @andermattswissalps
 on Instagram.

03. The Dolomites, Italy

Where the Mountains Host the World

Cortina d’Ampezzo and the surrounding peaks take their turn on the global stage this year, but the Dolomites have always rewarded those willing to look past the headline event. Rosa Alpina, a family run chalet in San Cassiano for generations, now carries Aman’s name and a spa built into the mountainside, the kind of evolution that adds without erasing.

Beyond the slopes, the range reveals itself slowly: glacial valleys, centuries old refugios, and trails that climb toward jagged limestone towers. It rewards those who stay past the obvious season. Summer here is its own quiet argument for the trip.

Photos courtesy of @amanrosaalpina
 on Instagram.

04. The Okavango Delta, Botswana

Safari, Reconsidered

The Delta has always been one of the world’s great wildlife landscapes, a labyrinth of islands and waterways where wild dogs move largely undisturbed. What’s changed is the architecture around the experience. Lodges that once leaned spare and utilitarian now hold real design ambition: Xigera Safari Lodge houses one of Africa’s most significant private art collections beneath a sky bed suite open to the stars.

The Moremi Game Reserve, in particular, has become a proving ground for a more considered kind of safari, one where the craft of the stay matches the scale of the landscape. Game drives remain the draw, but the hours between are no longer an afterthought.

Photos courtesy of @xigeralodge
 on Instagram.

05. The Mediterranean, by Private Yacht

A New Way to Cross the Sea

Four Seasons’ first ship at sea reframes what a Mediterranean crossing can be: fewer than a hundred suites, a marina deck for swimming straight from anchor, and ports most larger vessels can’t reach, including Folegandros, Gozo, Ischia, and Vis. The itinerary favors depth over distance, trading a long list of stops for a shorter one, chosen well.

It’s less a cruise than a private island that happens to move, piloted, this inaugural season, by one of the most recognized captains at sea. The appeal isn’t the size of the ship. It’s everywhere it can quietly disappear to.

Photos courtesy of @fourseasonsyachts
 on Instagram.

Experience These with CTS

Curious where one of these journeys could take you? Cassis Travel Services designs each itinerary around the destination, not the other way around.

share this story with someone who loves luxury travel.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
ctsstackedlogo