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The U.S. State Department's travel advisories go from Level 1 to Level 4. Here's what to know about travel alerts, travel bans and travel warnings.
Homicide, kidnapping, carjacking and robbery are some of the biggest crimes of concern for U.S. travelers to Mexico.
The U.S. government has different warning levels for travel in Mexico, from Level 1 “Exercise Normal Precautions” (just be careful like you normally would) to Level 4 “Do Not Travel” (they ...
The U.S. State Department provides American citizens with regular notifications of events that may affect their safety and security. These notices come in the form of Travel Alerts or Travel Warnings.
While travel is generally safe, the State Department advises against travel to certain high-risk areas, including Iran, Israel, Ukraine, and Somalia.
The U.S. State Department reissued its travel warning for Belgium warning travelers to “exercise increased caution” due to the risk of “terrorism” in the European country. On Thursday, the ...
The U.S. State Department in early 2018 updated its travel advisory system, replacing the designations of "warnings" and "alerts" with country-by-country numerical rankings and more specific ...