Anonymous wrote:Olympics is in Paris 2024. Something to think about
Anonymous wrote:LOTS of great cities in Europe with kids. TBH, I really, really love so many european cities with kids AND there are ways to do it on the more affordable side so you can go more often if you want.
With your restrictions in mind, I would also be leaning towards London-paris +1 other spot. Perhaps just break it up with a night or two in the ENglish countryside and a night or two in a small town outside of Paris so you can get a bit of the big city and smaller town feel but Amsterdam would be great too!
The only thing that gives me pause is that the 2024 Olympics will be in Paris and I think it will be a MESS and you will want to avoid it. If that's the case, perhaps go to Italy and you could do week 2 either in Switzerland, another area of France, Germany, ect so get a different cultural feel. I'm not sure if all of France will be more overloaded with tourists because of the Olympics....I'd do some digging into that!
I hear you on the limited PTO and the expense of such a trip. I have a much lower budget than most on here BUT I LOVE traveling. What I do is to plan FAR ahead and book budget flights (but only with layovers in smaller cities like in ICeland or copenhagen but NOT NYC) and then book lodging as far in advance as possible (apartment or family hostel if one exists with a private room) and pack ONLY carry-on. I've found travel to be MUCH more in our reach, the better I've gotten with planning budget travel. WE try to minimize how often/far we travel too and that helps. Ex: DC-Copenhagen with large personal items +2 carry-ons and a 10 day stay including buffet breakfast a nice family hostel with a play room, ect. total $3,500. That's over Christmas. Spring break DC-London $350 pp for flights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fly to London, stay 4 nights, train to Paris, stay 4-5 nights, overnight train to Venice, stay 3 nights. Could also do in reverse. Or so Spain and France only (flying between), or just Italy and France. It’s easy to get around but don’t try to fit too many cities in one trip over only 2 weeks. We also LOVE Copenhagen and Sweden but it’s less “iconic Europe”, very fun with kids though.
Yes, I would choose 3 destinations over 2 weeks. Otherwise you'll feel like you're constantly packing and unpacking.
Or if you really want to hit a lot of places, do a Disney cruise.
Anonymous wrote:Fly to London, stay 4 nights, train to Paris, stay 4-5 nights, overnight train to Venice, stay 3 nights. Could also do in reverse. Or so Spain and France only (flying between), or just Italy and France. It’s easy to get around but don’t try to fit too many cities in one trip over only 2 weeks. We also LOVE Copenhagen and Sweden but it’s less “iconic Europe”, very fun with kids though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are European cities really that great with kids ages 9 and 7? I think of these museum-heavy destinations with a lot of summer crowds and think it wouldn't be my kids favorite.
If you are an outdoorsy family, Switzerland/Southern Germany/northern Italy is so great. The infrastructure there is just different and much more kid-friendly. We hiked a trail in the Dolomites that had playgrounds sprinkled throughout: https://outdoorfamiliesonline.com/exploring-italys-alpine-playgrounds-family-adventure-dolomites/
We've also had an extended stay in Munich with little kids and found the biergartens (many with playgrounds) really fun with kids.
The Lake Garda region in Italy is also great for kids. Garda Land (theme park) along with lots of old castle ruins.
Yeah I'm not sure about this either. If you are only going to do 1-2 European trips with them, maybe it's better to wait til they're a bit older and can enjoy more museums and historical stuff. But then again a lot of the more off the beaten path/outdoorsy type stuff and theme parks people have listed in this thread sounds pretty fun for kids!
NP but I would lean towards a less city-heavy itinerary for this first trip and then do the big cities with the museums for trip #2 when they’re a bit older.