Anonymous wrote:Bermuda, breakfast was $95 per person. Iceland didn't even make my top 5
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve been to Geneva, Stockholm and Copenhagen and thought Geneva was the most expensive but... $60 cheeseburger? What? Where are you people eating? There are plenty of affordable options to be found in the city. I never paid $10 for a coffee in Stockholm. Maybe 4$? A 10$ beer was for sure not out of the realm of possibility in Stockholm though.
I think a lot of this varies depending on what you’re talking about. Hotels were most expensive in Tokyo, food is pricy in Scandinavia, etc.
My vote is for London. Not a county obviously but I got used to seeing numbers that looked roughly like US prices but essentially having to double the true cost due to the exchange rate.
There are bars in DC that charge $15 for a beer.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve been to Geneva, Stockholm and Copenhagen and thought Geneva was the most expensive but... $60 cheeseburger? What? Where are you people eating? There are plenty of affordable options to be found in the city. I never paid $10 for a coffee in Stockholm. Maybe 4$? A 10$ beer was for sure not out of the realm of possibility in Stockholm though.
I think a lot of this varies depending on what you’re talking about. Hotels were most expensive in Tokyo, food is pricy in Scandinavia, etc.
My vote is for London. Not a county obviously but I got used to seeing numbers that looked roughly like US prices but essentially having to double the true cost due to the exchange rate.
That was the London airport - LHR.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:London when the pound was strong...
Also, it's not a foreign country but Hawaii is expensive.
This. Paid over $20 for four chicken nuggets at the airport McDonald’s. It was the cheapest food item on the menu.
This was many years ago.
Anonymous wrote:London when the pound was strong...
Also, it's not a foreign country but Hawaii is expensive.