What I love about it: If I want to plan something adventurous, I always visit Expert Vagabond. Mathew is a great adventure photographer and an excellent writer. His travel blog is designed for optimum information consumption with a simple layout, clean and content-centric.
Expert Vagabond always succeeded to get concise information quickly without sacrificing the ability to dive deeper into a place if I wanted to. His article about Hawaii is a great example of his excellent writing and inspiring photography.
Sidetracked Magazine
What I love about it: Sidetracked travel blog is an excellent example of a travel blog that excels at everything from unique adventure stories to a beautiful layout that doesn’t dilute the content.
An article like “Paragliding off the Alaskan Mountain Range” shows their ways of getting first-hand stories from adventurers. It accompanies it with adventure photography in between to give you a sense of scale. You will feel the rush of adrenaline by just reading through their articles.
Classe Touriste
What I love about it: Classe Touriste takes you off the beaten path further than most travel blogs do. The travel blog is designed to feel like you are reading a newspaper full of adventure stories with big typography, photography in a grid, and a clean layout.
For example, Classe Touriste will take you to places like North Korea and convince you to do the same with its stunning photography.
Our Wild Abandon
What I love about it: Our Wild Abandon is a creative and quirky travel blog by Kyla and Jill with stories that make you want to run away with them and make long road trips worldwide forever. It’s like On the Road book by Jack Kerouac, envisioned in the 21st century and split into smaller stories for internet consumption.
Their layout design, for example, on their Yosemite story, is almost invisible, making ways for the stories and photography to shine and take over.
Asiyami Gold
What I love about it: Asiyami Gold is a travel blog run by Asiyami Gold. It focuses on blending stunning photography with design and travels professionally yet personally.
Her photography is almost as if it came from a travel and fashion magazine. The muted color scheme, sharp detail, and old-school grain effect give her content a unique blend between magazine-like fashion and travel that you don’t often find on a travel blog.
Instead of having a travel blog design competing for attention, the creation of her travel blog stayed aside with a minimal black & white design allowing her unique style of photography to stand out front and center.
That is a great design choice right there. Asiyami Gold travel blog design is functional, yet it stays out of the way and lets the content shine independently. This strike of balance is not easy to accomplish, yet her travel blog was able to do it.
It’s Time To Start Your Travel Blog
Are you feeling inspired? Want to start a travel blog of your own? WordPress is still one of the best ways to start for most, but to do that, you must first find a hosting company.
Hosting is simply a rented storage (server) that stores all your website data from the WordPress program to your travel blog’s content, including images, text, etc. With this rented hosting server, you can serve (get it?) your website to anyone in the world 24/7.
The hosting server is the foundation on which your travel blog will be built, so picking the right one at the beginning of your journey will save you many headaches, trust me.
If you are starting and need more budget, the cheapest and great place to start is SiteGround or Hostgator. They are beginner-friendly, very affordable, starting at less than 3 USD, easy to install WordPress, and you can scale up whenever you want.
Since you are starting, I recommend you go with Hostgator’s Shared Hatchling Plan, which costs only 2.75 USD per month, or if you want something more plug-and-play with WordPress, SiteGround’s WordPress StartUp Hosting Plan, which starts as low as 5 USD per month is a great option too. From there, you can scale these packages up to meet the growing demand of your travel blog.
That said, if you are looking for the best option, no matter the cost, I recommend you go with BigScoots instead. Many big names in the blogging world use them, and they are well-known for their top-notch customer service.
BigScoots’s Starter Plan is a great place to start. It is a little pricier than SiteGround and Hostgator, but the customer service is much better, and you will be reassured that your travel blog is in good hands.
With the hosting sorted out, you now have a living, breathing (not literally) travel blog that you can shape however you like, and all that is left for you to do is create kick-ass travel content for all.
And there you have it; the top 20 travel blogs have the best design. What do you think of the list? If you have any recommendations or you want me to add to the list, please don’t hesitate to let me know in the comments below.
Further Reading For Inspiration
Looking for more articles to help inspire you to travel more? Here is a collection of essays you might like: