The Coming-Out Trip: A Solo Travel Category The Mainstream Misses
Coming out is a moment. The trip after is infrastructure. Here's how Dandy plans the coming-out trip.
Lisbon: Príncipe Real and the Soft Queer Welcome
Not Madrid's scale. Not Berlin's edge. Lisbon is the quiet queer city where you can just be. Year-round.
The Queer Honeymoon Timeline (When the Wedding Wasn't on the Default Calendar)
Married five years legally before we had the wedding. Eloped with zero fanfare. Doing a vow renewal. The honeymoon timeline is yours to write.
Three Models, The Math on Each
Eight friends, one trip, no drama. Here's how the math works and why Dandy does the booking.
A Dandy's Mykonos: Where the Mediterranean Stops Pretending
Mykonos has been ours for sixty years. Here's the island Dandy knows — the beaches, the bars, where to anchor, what the season means.
Capri: The Original Queer Resort Town
Capri is where queer travelers invented the resort town. For over 140 years. Here's what that history built.
Puerto Vallarta: Latin America's Gay Beach Done Right
Puerto Vallarta's queer infrastructure is better than most Caribbean alternatives. Here's where Dandy anchors and why.
A Dandy's Tel Aviv: Pride in the Middle East
Tel Aviv is the Mediterranean's most openly queer city. 250,000 at Pride. The cultural integration year-round. The political honesty about the context.
A Dandy's Berlin: The Queer Capital of Europe
Berlin's queer history is written into the streets. The 1920s cabarets. The Nazi erasure. The contemporary scene. This is the Dandy version.
Provincetown: The American Queer Sanctuary
Provincetown has held the queer cultural archive since the 1900s. It's not just a beach town — it's American queer home.
What Queer Travelers Need That Mainstream Luxury Advisors Miss
There's no industry vocabulary for what queer travelers need. So we wrote one. Here are five things mainstream advisors miss.
How Dandy Vets a Hotel for Queer Travelers (The Conversation Most Advisors Don't Have)
A hotel that calls itself "LGBTQ-friendly" on its website is the start of the conversation, not the end. Here's what comes next.
