These are the best places to travel this summer

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Road-tripping offers so much more than just reaching a planned destination. You can stop to swim in a sea cove or take a sunset soak in hot springs. You can pull over to purchase tiny wild strawberries, foraged mushrooms or dried buffalo meat from kids at a pop-up roadside stall. Maybe you'll get lucky and see a coyote pup between snow-covered trees. 

This adventure on wheels is about embracing the unexpected and finding wonder in the everyday. It is about getting giddy and acting on impulse. Turning left instead of right. Ditching asphalt for some bone-rattling washboard. It is about disconnecting your GPS and simply following your gut or an old-school crinkled paper map.

Some road trips are iconic: Iceland’s Golden CircleRoute 66 across eight US states; the Route des Grandes Alpes across the French Alps or the Riviera’s corkscrew corniches. And then there's South Africa’s Garden Route; Australia’s bucket-list Great Ocean Road; and Vietnam’s Ha Giang Loop spun from ethereal paddy fields and crashing waterfalls.

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But these six road-trip destinations bring you spectacular scenery, magnificent access to wildlife and side adventures to keep you busy for days. From short-and-sweet afternoon meanders to exhilarating multiday odysseys, these road trips have it all. 

As with any journey planning, you'll want to consider the season (shoulder is always best, with quieter roads and less extreme temperatures) and your own travel mood (romantic open-top cruise; white-knuckle safari). Make sure to check the weather conditions and phone connectivity on the road ahead before belting up. Bonne route!

The vast greenery of Loch Maree Viewpoint, Beinn Eighe and Loch Maree National Nature Reserve, within the Scottish Highlands
The vast greenery of Loch Maree Viewpoint, Beinn Eighe and Loch Maree National Nature Reserve, within the Scottish Highlands. LouieLea/Shutterstock

1. The Scottish Highlands

Best for moody landscape

There’s a feral beauty to the Highlands’ sensual landscape, which can render a road trip here as spellbinding as it is spectacular. Watch for wild deer and hairy ginger Highland coos straying onto the road; stick to the left (single-track roads included, of which there are plenty) and save the whisky drams for nightcaps.

Avoid busy July and August to enjoy sinuous roads beaded with silvery lochs, pristine glens and windswept sands in splendid isolation – perhaps bagging a Munro or kayaking at sea along the way. Scotland’s weather is famously capricious; always check road conditions.

The iconic North West 500, a 516-mile (830km) loop around the rugged northern coast from the highland capital Inverness, is the week-long classic trip, but there's more. The Great Glen Way, from Fort William to Inverness along the Caledonian Canal and storied Loch Ness, is the on-road version of the popular hike – same Ben Nevis views guaranteed. Thrill-seekers gravitate to the sinuous Snow Roads route in the mountainous Cairngorms National Park or the Applecross Peninsula’s heart-thumping Bealach na Bà – Britain’s steepest zigzag of a road.

A vineyard in Burgundy, France, on a sunny day
A lush vineyard in Burgundy. duchy/Shutterstock

2. Burgundy, France

Best for wine lovers

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Plotting routes around medieval villages and wine cellars, pairing playlists with pinot noir, breaking for a pee stop or lunch at a 16th-century chateau: motoring in France doesn’t get more belle than in rural Burgundy. Producing some of the world’s most prized French wines, Burgundy demands you roll back your vintage 2CV roof and ribbon through world-famous emerald vineyards, sunflower-yellow mustard fields and storybook forests.

Road-tripping here is French flânerie on wheels: whichever route you take, carefully honed or deliciously hapless, the wine-country ride is serene and elegantly picturesque. Regional capital Dijon is the place to pick up a hire car (classic or electric) and the 1930s motorist favorite Route des Grands Crus driving itinerary. Route de Crémant de Bourgogne is a 74.56-mile (120km)-long deep dive into Burgundy’s sparkling wines, and Route 71 has southern Burgundy covered. Santé (and remember to spit when tasting).

Locals and cyclists on a dirt road on Chile's Carretera Austral highway
Locals and cyclists on a dirt road on Chile's Carretera Austral highway. Guaxinim/Shutterstock

3. Chile

Best for epic wilderness

To head north or south – this is the eternal question for intrepid road explorers seeking South American adventure in long and skinny Chile. From the world’s driest, star-spangled desert and Pacific coastline in the desolate north, to Patagonian fjords and glaciers 2650-odd miles (4270km) south, landscapes here are colossal and exhilaratingly biblical.

Driving can be desolate and off-grid. The multiday Carretera Austral is an unforgettable journey along every road surface known to mankind – paved, gravel and earth; pot-holed to death-defyingly precipitous – through out-of-this-world scenery including several nature reserves and national parks. You'll find natural splendor galore, from Puerto Montt in the Chilean lake district to Patagonian backwater Villa O’Higgins, 760 miles (1223km) south. Compass pointing north, buckle up in San Pedro de Atacama to blaze 4WD dust trails through Mars-red desert to smoldering volcanoes, steaming geyser fields, shimmering white salt flats and flamingo-pink lagoons.

A man in a white car with a tent on the roof on a dusty road in Namibia
Driving on a dusty road in Namibia with a tent on the roof. Getty Images/Westend61

4. Namibia

Best for rare wildlife and family adventure

After being off-bounds for almost a century, driving across certain parts of the Namib dune fields – the oldest desert on earth – is still only possible by guided 4WD expedition. Yet this jaw-droppingly beautiful country of dramatic red sands, canyons and crashing Atlantic waves on Africa’s southwest coast also delivers some of the continent’s safest, easiest and most accessible self-driving.

Many roads are unpaved, but they compensate by being laser-straight and panorama-heavy – this is the open road at its thrilling extreme. Bag 4WD wheels (and a rooftop tent to camp under star-studded dark skies) in Windhoek and drive north on the left to the Etosha National Park.

Park by a waterhole to watch the finest of African wildlife – cheetahs, elephants, endangered black rhinos, dozens more mammal species – amble by. Or hit the ocean to spot sand-mad gemsboks in Sossusvlei in the Namib-Naukluft National Park and sand-ski in Swakopmund. Fish River Canyon, with scenic hikes and hot springs to stretch and spoil stiff legs, is the road-trip star of the far south.

A car drives between the cypress trees of rural Tuscany during sunset
Roads curve and curl around the countryside in Tuscany, Italy. valio84sl/Getty Images

5. Tuscany, Italy

Best for food and art

Forested truffle estate to third-generation winery, frescoed Renaissance palazzo to medieval monastery, sea-splashed vineyard to sun-toasted sands: whichever Tuscan road you wind along, dolce vita joins the dots. Spun from cypress-tree alleys, centurion olive groves and honey-gold hilltop hamlets, this green ‘n graceful region in central Italy is tasty slow-travel terrain – by car, camper-van, e-bike, or glamorous Harley.

Key towns Florence, Siena and unsung Arezzo brim with Renaissance art and architectural masterpieces. Romanesque abbeys, illustrious wine towns Montepulciano and Montalcino, and lazy Brunello-fueled lunches seduce in the rolling hills of UNESCO World Heritage-listed Val d’Orcia. Chianti is a ludicrously good-looking wine country. If tangy olive oil is more your cup of tea, take your pick of 20 themed Strade del Vino, dell’Olio e dei Sapori di Toscana (Wine, Oil and Flavor Routes of Tuscany) driving itineraries.

The sun rises over Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park, California
The sun rises over Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park, California. Brester Irina/Shutterstock

6. California, USA

Best for mind-blowing variety

As predictable a choice as it might be, little beats a Golden State road trip. Crank up the volume, hit cruise control and savor the magnificence in front of you: seamless vistas of sun-soaked sand beaches and crashing surf, snow-capped mountains and desert spotted with palms, wild canyons and rushing rivers, burnt-red Sequoia groves and forests of wizened old cacti.

Whether you’re after a celebrity city like San Francisco or Santa Monica, a historic trail following 19th-century gold prospectors, or rare marvels of nature ­protected by a flush of national parks (whimsical Joshua Tree and Yosemite crossed by the famous 64-mile Tioga Road), it is honestly all here.

The coastal San Diego-to-San Francisco Pacific Coast Highway via glitzy LA is California’s iconic classic-car drive – preferably done in a convertible. But America’s third-largest state sports enough memorable drives (63 designated scenic byways for starters – only North Carolina has as many) to keep open-road aficionados California-dreaming for weeks. Rattling along rock, dirt and sand by rental jeep out of Furnace Creek in the hottest place on earth (aka Death Valley) is the ultimate off-roader.

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