Best Places to Travel in November 2026: Where to Actually Go (and Where to Skip)
November is the month most travel articles get wrong. They list 20 countries with the same three sentences each, and you finish reading without knowing where to actually book your November vacation.
I want to do the opposite here. Below are the trips I’d take in November, ranked by how often they pay off. I’ll tell you when a destination is overrated, when the weather is patchy, and which week of the month matters most for your holiday.
One more thing before we start. November is a split month for international travel. The first half feels like late autumn. The second half is basically early winter in the northern hemisphere and full dry season in the tropics. The day you fly out changes the trip a lot.
November at a Glance: Quick Comparison
Skim this first. The deep notes on each destination start below.
| Destination | Weather | Best For | Avg Cost/Day | Crowd Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thailand | 28–32°C, dry | Beaches, food, festivals | $120 | Medium |
| Japan | 10–17°C, crisp | Autumn foliage | $220 | High |
| Maldives | 29–30°C, dry | Honeymoon, diving | $500+ | Low-Medium |
| Vietnam | 18–28°C, mixed | Value, food, culture | $80 | Low |
| India (Rajasthan) | 15–28°C, dry | Culture, palaces, Diwali | $90 | Medium |
| Morocco | 12–22°C, mild | Desert, souks | $130 | Low |
| Portugal | 14–18°C, mild | City + beach combo | $130 | Low |
| UAE | 22–29°C, dry | Luxury, shopping, F1 | $220 | Medium |
| Finland (Lapland) | -5 to -10°C, snow | Snow, Northern Lights | $400+ | Low |
When to Fly in November: Week-by-Week
Most articles miss this. The week you pick changes the whole trip.
| Week | What’s Happening | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Nov 1–7 | Diwali in India, Day of the Dead in Mexico, monsoon ends in Thailand | Culture, festivals, last cheap beach week |
| Nov 8–15 | Cheapest flights of the year on most routes | Budget travelers, flexible dates |
| Nov 16–22 | Kyoto foliage peaks, Loy Krathong in Thailand | Photography, Japan, lantern festivals |
| Nov 23–30 | Pre-Thanksgiving spike on US routes, Lapland opens fully | Snow trips, Northern Lights, ski preview |
If you have flexibility, book your travel between November 8 and 15. It’s the quietest, cheapest stretch of the entire month.
Thailand (but pick the right coast)
Thailand is the easy answer for warm places to visit in November, and for once the easy answer is right. The monsoon rain that drags through October finally clears, and Bangkok turns into one of the best cities in the world to walk around at night.
Here’s the catch nobody tells you. Phuket and Krabi on the Andaman coast are dry by early November. Koh Samui, Koh Phangan, and the Gulf coast are still wet until mid-December. If your photos look like turquoise water and yours don’t, you booked the wrong side of the country.
Loy Krathong, the famous lantern festival, usually lands in early or mid-November. Locals float candles on small banana-leaf rafts down rivers and canals. Chiang Mai does it bigger than anyone, with thousands of paper sky lanterns rising into the air on the same night.
Bangkok’s street food scene doesn’t slow down for the season. Get pad kra pao with a fried egg from any cart with a long line. Skip the rooftop bars in the tourist zone, go to Sky Bar at Lebua only if you actually want to pay $20 for one drink.
Flights into Suvarnabhumi Airport are cheap from across Asia and the Gulf. Thai Airways, Emirates, and Qatar Airways all run daily services. Thailand is also the top pick if you’re hunting cheap holidays in Asia in November. Daily budget: $40 backpacker, $120 mid-range, $400+ luxury beach resort.
Japan (and yes, you have to book Kyoto now)
If you’ve ever seen a photo of Japan in autumn, that’s November. The maples, called momiji in Japanese, peak in Kyoto roughly between November 15 and November 30. A few days earlier in the mountains around Nikko and Hakone.
Here’s the part the brochures hide. Kyoto is packed during foliage season. Tofuku-ji temple at 8am has a queue. Eikando after dark, when they light the trees, has a 90-minute wait. Book your hotel four to six months ahead or you’ll end up commuting from Osaka.
Tokyo is calmer and still beautiful. Shinjuku Gyoen, the gardens around the Imperial Palace, and Rikugien at night are full of color without the Kyoto crush. Hakone is the bonus stop if you want hot springs and Mount Fuji views in the same trip.
Eat seasonal. Hot ramen, oden from convenience stores (yes, really, 7-Eleven oden is good), and any small soba place where the owner is over 60. Avoid the chain restaurants in Shibuya, you came too far for that.
Fly into Narita or Haneda. ANA and Japan Airlines are the main carriers, but Qatar Airways and Singapore Airlines often come in cheaper. Daily budget: $100 budget traveler, $220 mid-range, $600+ luxury ryokan.
Maldives (the resort matters more than the country)
If you want the postcard beach holiday, this is the month. The rain ends in early November, the water clears up, and underwater visibility for snorkeling and scuba diving becomes the best of the year.
The honest part: the Maldives is the resort. You’re not seeing a country, you’re seeing one small island for a week. Pick badly and you’re stuck. South Ari Atoll is the call if you want a chance to swim with whale sharks. North Malé is closer and cheaper to reach.
A speedboat transfer beats a seaplane if you arrive after 4pm. Seaplanes don’t fly in the dark, so a late arrival at Velana International Airport means a hotel night in Malé first. Nobody warns you about this.
This is not a budget destination. Even the “cheap” overwater villas cost $300 a night. Local-island guesthouses on Maafushi or Thulusdhoo can drop that to $90, but you trade the overwater villa for a normal beach hotel.
Vietnam (north or south, not both unless you have two weeks)
Vietnam in November is two different countries. Hanoi and Ha Long Bay turn cool, maybe 18–22°C, with grey skies some days. Bring a light jacket. Central Vietnam, including Hoi An, can still get hit with rain and floods in early November, so check the forecast before you commit to a date.
The south is the safe bet. Ho Chi Minh City, the Mekong Delta, and Phu Quoc island are sunny and warm. Phu Quoc’s dry season just started, and the beaches are quieter than Phuket for half the price.
The food is where Vietnam wins. A bowl of pho on a plastic stool, banh mi from a cart, fresh spring rolls with peanut sauce. You can eat well for $3 a meal, and the $30 restaurant versions in tourist zones are almost always worse.
Vietnam’s e-visa is one of the easiest to get, usually approved within 3 working days. Daily budget: $30 backpacker, $80 mid-range, $250+ luxury resort.
India (Rajasthan, specifically)
Most of India is good in November, but Rajasthan is the trip. The monsoon is gone, the heat is gone, and the desert state turns into the postcard version of itself.
Jaipur, Jodhpur, and Udaipur all sit between 15 and 28°C in November. You can walk through Amer Fort in the morning, eat a long lunch at a rooftop place, and watch the sunset from Lake Pichola without sweating through your shirt.
Diwali, the festival of lights, falls in early November in 2026. The whole country lights up for a week. If you can handle big crowds and louder-than-expected fireworks, it’s one of the best cultural experiences anywhere. If you can’t, fly in a week after.
The Pushkar Camel Fair, also in November, is worth a detour. Thousands of camels, traders from all over the Thar Desert, and a vibe that hasn’t really changed in 50 years.
Skip Delhi in November if you can. Air quality after Diwali is brutal, sometimes hitting hazardous levels on the AQI. Land in Mumbai or fly direct to Jaipur. Daily budget: $30 backpacker, $90 mid-range, $400+ in a heritage palace hotel.
Morocco (the Sahara finally cools down)
July in the Sahara Desert will cook you. November is the opposite. Marrakech sits around 22°C in the day, drops to 10°C at night, and Merzouga in the dunes is actually pleasant.
Do not stay in a chain hotel here. Book a riad inside the medina. A riad is an old courtyard house turned into a small guesthouse. Riad Yasmine, Riad BE, Riad Jardin Secret. Most cost $80–200 a night and feel like a different world from the noisy souks outside the door.
The classic loop is Marrakech to Aït Benhaddou (the Game of Thrones backdrop), through the High Atlas Mountains, then two nights in a Berber desert camp near Merzouga. It’s a long drive, around eight hours each way, but it’s the trip you remember.
Eat the tagine slow-cooked, not the rushed tourist version. Try harira soup at sunset, and skip anything labelled “Berber pizza,” it’s a tourist invention. Royal Air Maroc and most European carriers fly into Marrakech Menara Airport.
Portugal (the underrated November pick in Europe)
Most of Europe is too cold by November. Portugal is the exception, and it’s the best mild city break on the continent this month. Lisbon sits around 17°C, with sun on most days and a softer light photographers love. Porto is a few degrees cooler and slightly wetter, but still walkable.
The summer crowds are gone. You can actually get a table at Time Out Market in Lisbon without queuing 40 minutes, and the Algarve beaches feel almost empty. Hotels drop prices by 30–50% compared to July.
Eat pastéis de nata at Pastéis de Belém in Lisbon. Yes, the queue moves fast. The imitations from chain cafés are not the same. Bacalhau (salt cod) shows up in 100 different forms here, and at least three of them are excellent.
If you have a week, do Lisbon for three nights, Porto for three nights, and one night in the Alentejo countryside. Trains between Lisbon and Porto take under three hours and cost $30 in second class. TAP Air Portugal connects directly from most of Europe, North America, and Brazil.
United Arab Emirates (November is when Dubai becomes livable)
Dubai in summer is unbearable. November is when locals stop hiding indoors. Daytime temperatures drop to 26–29°C, evenings cool down to 20°C, and the whole outdoor scene wakes up.
Desert safaris feel like an actual adventure instead of survival training. Beach clubs open back up. The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix happens in late November or early December and turns the city into a party for a week.
Dubai is not cheap, but it’s not as expensive as people think if you stay outside the Marina and Downtown zones. Deira is the old city, half the price, and has the best Indian and Pakistani food I’ve eaten outside the subcontinent.
If you’ve been to Dubai before and want something different, drive to Hatta or Liwa Oasis in Abu Dhabi emirate. The desert landscapes there look nothing like the city. Emirates and Etihad fly to almost every major city in the world.
Finland’s Lapland (but manage your Northern Lights expectations)
I’ll be honest. November is not peak Northern Lights season. The sky is dark enough, but the weather is often cloudy. February and March are statistically better for aurora hunting.
What November does give you is the start of the snow season without the deepest cold. Rovaniemi, often called the home of Santa Claus, opens its full winter operation around mid-November. Husky sledding, reindeer sleigh rides, ice fishing, snowmobile tours. By December everything triples in price for Christmas holiday demand.
Glass igloo hotels like Kakslauttanen and Levin Iglut are the famous stay. Worth it once, but a normal cabin with a private sauna at half the price is honestly more comfortable.
Pack better than you think. Real thermal layers, not your normal winter coat. Tour operators usually provide an outer snowsuit, but everything underneath is on you. Finnair connects Helsinki to Rovaniemi in 80 minutes.
Honorable Mentions I Cut From the Main List
Egypt is great in November for visiting the Pyramids of Giza and a Nile cruise from Luxor to Aswan, but I’d put it just behind Morocco for first-timers. Mexico’s Yucatán is good if you missed Day of the Dead in early November. South Africa works if you’re after safari in Kruger National Park and wine in the Cape Winelands, but the rains start in some regions late in the month. Bhutan is unreal but expensive to enter (mandatory daily fee). Sri Lanka’s south coast is fine but the weather is more reliable in January.
Best November Destination by Who You’re Traveling With
The right country changes depending on who’s in your group. Here’s the honest match-up:
Best for couples (honeymoon, anniversary, romantic break) Maldives wins on water and privacy. Kyoto wins on atmosphere if you visit in foliage week. Marrakech wins for couples who want something less obvious, especially if you book a small riad with a rooftop.
Best for families with kids Portugal is the easiest. Short flights from most of Europe, mild weather, kid-friendly food, and beaches that are still warm enough in the Algarve. Dubai works for families who want theme parks and zero hassle. Thailand is great too if your kids are over six and can handle long-haul flights.
Best for solo travelers Vietnam is the friendliest, safest, and cheapest. Japan is the most comfortable if you’ve never traveled solo before. Portugal works for first-time solo travelers who want Europe without the high prices.
Best for groups of friends Bangkok if you want food, nightlife, and cheap rooms. Lisbon if you want a mix of beach days and bars. Dubai if your group has a higher budget and wants brunches and beach clubs.
Best for retirees and slower travelers The Algarve in Portugal, Cape Town in South Africa, and Goa in India all offer warm weather, easy walking, good healthcare, and reasonable prices.
Visa, Currency, and Money Quick Reference
| Country | Visa (most travelers) | Currency | Tipping Norm |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thailand | Visa-free 60 days | THB | Not expected, round up |
| Japan | Visa-free 90 days | JPY | Never tip |
| Maldives | Visa on arrival 30 days | MVR / USD | 10% at resorts |
| Vietnam | e-visa, 3 working days | VND | Small tip OK |
| India | e-visa, 3–5 days | INR | 10% at restaurants |
| Morocco | Visa-free 90 days (many) | MAD | 10% at cafés |
| Portugal | Schengen rules | EUR | 5–10% optional |
| UAE | Visa on arrival (many) | AED | 10–15% at restaurants |
| Finland | Schengen rules | EUR | Not expected |
Always check the official embassy site for your specific passport. Rules shift every year.
What to Actually Book First
In this order:
- Flights if you’re going to Japan, Maldives, or Lapland. These three sell out and prices spike inside 60 days.
- Hotels in Kyoto, Jaipur during festival weeks, and any Maldives resort.
- Trains for Japan (JR Pass, but check if it’s still cost-effective for your route in 2026) and Portugal.
- Visas if your passport needs them. India e-visa takes 3–5 days. Vietnam e-visa is fast. UAE is on arrival for many nationalities.
Travel insurance last. World Nomads or SafetyWing for most trips. Don’t skip it, especially for India or the Maldives.
Mistakes I’ve Watched People Make
Booking Koh Samui in early November thinking it’s like Phuket. Different coast, different weather.
Trying to see Kyoto and Tokyo and Osaka and Hokkaido in seven days. You’ll spend half the trip on the shinkansen. Pick two cities.
Going to the Maldives without checking which atoll. South Ari for whale sharks, Baa Atoll for manta rays. The brand of the resort matters less than the water around it.
Flying into Delhi during Diwali week and being shocked by the air quality. Check the AQI before you book.
Believing that the Northern Lights are guaranteed. They are not. Three clear nights in a row is unusual in November.
Quick Budget Comparison
| Destination | Per person, per day (mid-range) |
|---|---|
| Vietnam | $80 |
| India | $90 |
| Thailand | $120 |
| Portugal | $130 |
| Morocco | $130 |
| UAE | $220 |
| Japan | $220 |
| Maldives | $500+ |
| Finland (Lapland) | $400+ |
Flights are on top of this. From Europe or the Gulf, most of these are reachable for under $700 return if you book six weeks ahead.