Condé Nast Traveler says Boston is entering its 'next chapter'




Travel

“2026 is going to be a banner year for goings-on,” wrote the publication.

The Boston skyline in 2024. David L. Ryan/Globe Staff

The metropolis’s wealthy historical past, scrumptious meals, and epic occasions will make Boston the place to be in 2026, in accordance to Conde Nast Traveler.

The journey publication launched an inventory of the best places to go in North America and the Caribbean in 2026 on Tuesday and included Boston.

“Boston already wears its history proudly, but America’s 250th anniversary will shine a brighter spotlight on the historic capital,” wrote Conde Nast Traveler. “The city is experiencing a turning point, and the world is starting to see the version of Boston that its residents have always known: not a college town or a business-first destination but a vibrant and dynamic metropolis where past and future coexist.”  

Two epic occasions happening subsequent yr are 2026 Sail Boston, that includes historic tall ships from round the world, and the 2026 FIFA World Cup, famous the publication.

Two metropolis eating places are dazzling diners, wrote the publication: Comfort Kitchen, a James Beard Award finalist, and Row 34, which “continually ups the ante with best-in-class seafood, in a city home to what must be the highest number of seafood snobs in the world.”

What’s extra, “a new wave of artists and diverse entrepreneurs is drawing visitors to less-explored neighborhoods like Charlestown, Dorchester, and East Boston, and the forthcoming Atlas Hotel in Allston will further shift the city’s center of gravity away from its downtown core—contributing to a renewed sense that yes, in fact, what is old can be made new again,” wrote Conde Nast Traveler.

Check out Conde Nast Traveler‘s listing of the best places to go in North America and the Caribbean in 2026.

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Kristi Palma

Culture author

 

Kristi Palma is a tradition author for Boston.com, specializing in New England journey. She covers airways, resorts, and issues to do throughout Boston and New England. She is the creator of Scenic Six, a weekly journey publication.





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