Uncover the 13 Shocking Tourist Blunders in Europe That Could Ruin Your Trip!

Uncover the 13 Shocking Tourist Blunders in Europe That Could Ruin Your Trip!

– Don’t speak loudly in public spaces, only if you really have to. Otherwise, again, you’re a creep. (This is more a city thing.)

– Don’t interrupt other people (unless, again, you have to, or the other personis REALLY rambling on and you have limited time to speak). This is actually a significant difference between Finns and aforementioned Italians: interrupting or more like “elbowing” in conversations in Italy is normal “traffic rule” and implies active engagement and listening (assuming that both parties are “elbowing”), while interrupting in Finland implies that you aren’t valuing what the other person is telling. (Source: I’m a Finn that worked a bit with Italians, I kinda needed to learn new “traffic rules” with them, it went fine after that!)

– Don’t take schedules lightly. A Finn says 2 PM? They MEAN 2 PM sharp.

AavaMeri_247 , Snufflebox Report

Tourists exchanging red roses at a busy European train station, illustrating common mistakes tourists make in Europe. In major cities don’t let anyone hand you anything such as flowers or whatever. Once it is in your hands they start asking for money. They even gave a flower to one my kids and then wouldn’t take it back. Just set it on the ground and walk away.

darkhelmet03 , ctyt Report

Business hours sign in German showing opening times and common mistakes tourists make while visiting Europe. Don’t assume that everything will be open during the hours you’d expect in your home country–this is true no matter where you’re going. It varies by country and region, but in my experience, grocery stores, banks, post offices, etc., had much more restricted hours than they do in the US. In the US, it’s rare for a grocery store to close before 9 PM, if it’s not open 24 hours. In Europe, it’s normal for grocery stores to close quite early, and for things to be closed on weekends, though this varies by country.

Also, mind your manners. In America, you can often skip over the formalities without being seen as rude. In Europe, this is much harder. Be more direct about what you want, and more polite about requesting it. Part of what perpetuates the unfortunate “rude American” stereotype is that Americans tend to find European manners blunt, and Europeans tend to find American manners invasive.

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