AARP Hearing Center
Stage : In summer 2024, two in three boomers intended to travel, the most of any generation surveyed by the consulting group Deloitte. They voice a clear preference for learning about history and culture and stretching their dollar.
While travel shows no signs of slowing, according to the U.S. Travel Association, a thrifty mindset means more trips. The following are eight on-trend destinations for affordable vacations in 2025, most with lodging options under $200. Because rates fluctuate, Expedia says August is the cheapest month to travel, and the best budget strategy is to book early.
Bandera, Texas
The travel booking website Skyscanner cited “cowboy core” as 2025 inspiration, saluting the renewed popularity of cowboys on television and in music. Travelers can immerse in the lore and pageantry of the old West in Bandera, the self-proclaimed “Cowboy Capital of the World,” as the staging area for 19th-century cattle drives. Located an hour’s drive northwest of San Antonio in Texas Hill Country, Bandera offers simulated gunfights weekly (free). Local honky-tonks like the 11th Street Cowboy Bar host live music (admission varies), drawing dancers to the floor for the Texas Two-Step. Time your visit to catch skilled wranglers saddle up in professional rodeos over Memorial and Labor Day weekends (tickets from $12). Check into a one-room cedar cabin at the Flying L Ranch Resort & Golf Course to play pickleball, hurl horseshoes, and mingle with a resident singing cowboy.

Denver
In a 2024 survey of 31,000 global travelers by Booking.com, three-quarters of respondents said they wanted to travel more sustainably in the next year. Denver makes that goal easier to reach with a mix of urban renovations. On touchdown at the airport, the light-rail A Line train ($10) makes a 37-minute ride to Denver Union Station. Newly renovated, the 1881 landmark serves as a community hub with bus and train departures as well as many restaurants, including the new Press, serving tortas and tacos ($8-$13). A few blocks away, ogle the new nature-centric Populus Hotel, which aims to be carbon-positive, and new art installations on the mile-long 16th Street Mall. Free shuttles along the mall link to cultural highlights, including the theater district and the Denver Performing Arts Complex. Explore on foot from the Curtis Hotel with pop-culture-themed rooms based on knock-knock jokes and I Love Lucy.