Discover Some of the Best YouTube Channels
✈️ Travel

Best Travel Channels

From street-food journeys and couple vlogs to off-the-beaten-track destinations, full-time family travel, sailing and honest destination guides — a guide to the best travel channels, who each suits, and where each falls short.

By the BestTubeChannels editorial team · Updated February 2026 · 10 channels reviewed

Travel YouTube can do everything from planning your next trip to taking you somewhere you’ll never go yourself — and “best” depends entirely on which of those you want. The ten channels below are among the most rewarding in the space, spanning food travel, couple and family vlogs, hard-to-reach destinations, the sailing life and practical, honest destination guides. We’ve grouped them by what each is actually good for, with an honest note on the limitations of each.

Two things worth keeping in mind. First, a lot of travel content is aspirational — beautifully shot trips that are expensive and not always replicable — so it’s useful to separate ‘inspiration’ from ‘practical planning’ when you watch. Second, some of these creators visit genuinely sensitive or higher-risk regions; their access and experience don’t necessarily transfer to a casual traveller, so always check current, official travel advice before planning a trip somewhere out of the ordinary. With that in mind, here’s how the landscape breaks down.

On this page

How the landscape breaks down

Travel YouTube sorts into a few clear lanes. The food-travel camp — Mark Wiens, Best Ever Food Review Show — explores the world through what people eat. Couple and family vlogs — Kara and Nate, The Bucket List Family — follow ongoing journeys with real chemistry and an ongoing story. Off-the-beaten-track creators — Drew Binsky, Eva zu Beck, Gabriel Traveler — head to places mainstream channels avoid, offering perspective over polish. Cinematic and aspirational travel is Lost LeBlanc’s territory. The sailing and slow-travel lane belongs to Sailing La Vagabonde. And practical destination guides are Wolters World’s specialty — honest ‘loves and hates’ for trips you’re actually planning.

A good way to use them together: turn to Wolters World and Kara and Nate when you’re actually planning a trip, the food and off-the-beaten-track channels when you want perspective on a culture or region, and Lost LeBlanc, The Bucket List Family and Sailing La Vagabonde purely for inspiration and beautiful footage. The practical channels help you go; the aspirational ones help you dream.

Quick comparison

ChannelBest forFocusStyleFormat
Mark WiensStreet food & food cultureFood travelEnthusiasticFood vlogs
Kara and NatePractical trip inspirationCouple travelHonestDaily-style vlogs
Drew BinskyHard-to-reach countriesEvery-country travelHigh-energyShort docs
Best Ever Food Review ShowExtreme & unusual foodFood travelAdventurousProduced episodes
Lost LeBlancCinematic inspirationTravel filmmakingPolishedCinematic vlogs
The Bucket List FamilyFamily travel dreamsFamily travelAspirationalFamily vlogs
Sailing La VagabondeThe sailing lifeSailing / slow travelImmersiveOngoing series
Wolters WorldHonest trip planningDestination guidesPracticalLoves & hates
Eva zu BeckSolo off-grid adventureRemote regionsCinematicAdventure vlogs
Gabriel TravelerRaw, authentic travelOverlooked placesUnpolishedWalk-along vlogs

The 10 channels

01
Mark Wiens
11M+ SubsFood TravelStreet FoodAsia

Mark Wiens has spent over a decade eating his way around the world — from Bangkok street stalls to remote mountain villages — and his genuine love for local food comes through in every video. With over 11 million subscribers, he is one of the most well-established food travel creators on YouTube. His enthusiasm is completely unforced and his ability to find the most interesting food in any city makes the channel endlessly watchable.

Worth knowing

His facial expressions when tasting food have become something of a meme, which some viewers find amusing and others find distracting. It is worth knowing going in — the content underneath is solid regardless.

Common criticism

The exaggerated tasting expressions that became his trademark are divisive — endearing to some viewers, distracting to others. The channel is also firmly food-first, so it’s less useful as a general destination or trip-planning resource, and the relentlessly positive framing means you rarely hear about a meal that wasn’t great.

Mark WiensWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
02
Kara and Nate
4M+ Subs100 CountriesCouple TravelAll Budgets

Kara and Nate started their channel with a single goal: visit 100 countries. They hit it, then kept going. From budget backpacking to luxury train journeys, their channel covers an unusually wide range of travel styles and does it with an honesty and genuine chemistry that most couple travel channels lack. One of the more consistently reliable travel channels on YouTube for practical trip inspiration.

Common criticism

The daily-vlog volume and couple-travel format mean a fair amount of lifestyle and personal content around the actual destination information, which not everyone wants. As long-running full-time creators, their travel is also more frequent and resourced than a typical viewer’s, so some trips are less directly replicable than they appear.

Kara and NateWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
03
Drew Binsky
4M+ SubsEvery CountryCultureStorytelling

Drew Binsky has visited every country on Earth, and much of his best content comes from places the international media tends to portray negatively. His videos from Iran, North Korea, Somalia and similar destinations are worth watching specifically because they offer a perspective that is hard to find elsewhere — focused on real people rather than political narratives. A good channel if you are curious about parts of the world you are unlikely to visit yourself.

Worth knowing

Some of his content leans toward the superficial side — short, high-energy clips that skim the surface of a place rather than going deep. Worth pairing with more immersive content if you want genuine cultural understanding.

Common criticism

By his own framing some content skims the surface — short, high-energy clips that capture a place quickly rather than going deep — so it’s best paired with more immersive channels for real cultural understanding. The ‘every country’ angle can also prioritise novelty and the unusual over practical, useful travel insight.

Drew BinskyWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
04
Best Ever Food Review Show
9M+ SubsStreet FoodExtreme EatsAsia

Sonny Side built Best Ever Food Review Show into one of the most entertaining food travel channels on YouTube by leaning into the extreme and the unusual — insect markets, century eggs, fermented everything. The production is genuinely high quality and the hosting is confident and funny. If you want to understand food cultures that feel genuinely foreign, this channel does it better than most.

Common criticism

The lean into extreme and shock-value food — insects, fermented dishes, the deliberately unusual — is entertaining but can feel sensationalised and isn’t reflective of how people in those places mostly eat. The produced, host-driven format is more entertainment than a practical food guide for your own travels.

Best Ever Food Review ShowWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
05
Lost LeBlanc
2M+ SubsCinematicSolo TravelDigital Nomad

Christian LeBlanc quit his corporate job to travel the world and film it, and the results are genuinely cinematic. Lost LeBlanc sits at the intersection of travel vlogging and travel filmmaking — the production quality is noticeably above average, and his storytelling gives the videos a shape that most vlogs lack. He also puts out content on how to build a career as a travel filmmaker, which has built him a second audience of aspiring creators.

Worth knowing

The channel skews toward aspirational and picturesque destinations. If you are looking for off-the-beaten-track or budget travel content, this is probably not the best fit — but for inspiration and beautiful visuals, it delivers.

Common criticism

The cinematic polish comes with a strong skew toward aspirational, picturesque destinations, so there’s little here for budget or off-the-beaten-track travellers. A growing share of content aimed at aspiring travel filmmakers also pulls the channel away from pure destination coverage.

Lost LeBlancWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
06
The Bucket List Family
2M+ SubsFamily TravelLuxury AdventuresInspiring

Garrett and Jessica Gee sold everything, pulled their kids out of school and committed to full-time family travel — and they have been documenting it ever since. The adventures are genuinely extraordinary: remote islands, underwater hotels, once-in-a-lifetime experiences that most people only dream about. For families who want travel inspiration beyond the obvious destinations, The Bucket List Family is a compelling watch.

Worth knowing

The content is aspirational to the point of being unrelatable for many viewers — the trips are expensive and the lifestyle is not replicable for most families. Worth watching for inspiration rather than practical advice.

Common criticism

The content is aspirational to the point of being unrelatable for most viewers — the trips are expensive and the full-time, sponsor-supported family-travel lifestyle isn’t replicable for the vast majority of families. It’s best treated as inspiration rather than practical advice.

The Bucket List FamilyWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
07
Sailing La Vagabonde
1M+ SubsSailingOcean LifeOff Grid

Riley and Elayna have been documenting their life sailing around the world since 2014, and have built one of the most loyal communities in travel YouTube along the way. The footage of remote oceans, island anchorages and open-water crossings is genuinely beautiful, and the series format — with a real ongoing story including their children growing up on board — gives it a depth that one-off travel vlogs cannot match. For anyone curious about the sailing life, this is the place to start.

Common criticism

The ongoing-series format rewards committed viewers but means dropping in casually can feel like arriving mid-story. The sailing lifestyle it documents is also highly specialised and resource-intensive, so for most people it’s aspirational viewing rather than anything actionable, and the slow pace won’t suit everyone.

Sailing La VagabondeWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
08
Wolters World
1M+ SubsHonest TravelLoves and HatesAll Budgets

Mark Wolters built his channel around a format that stands out in travel content: the Loves and Hates series, which gives you an honest assessment of a destination — what is genuinely great, what is overhyped, what locals find annoying about tourists and what to avoid. It is practical, unsentimental and refreshingly free of the breathless enthusiasm that dominates most travel content. A good first stop when researching somewhere you are actually planning to visit.

Common criticism

The straightforward, talking-to-camera ‘loves and hates’ format is genuinely practical but visually plain next to the cinematic channels — you watch it to plan, not to be wowed. The advice is also broad and general by design, so it’s a strong starting point rather than a deep, local-level guide.

Wolters WorldWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
09
Eva zu Beck
700K+ SubsAdventureRemote PlacesSolo Female

Eva zu Beck travels to places that rarely appear on mainstream travel channels — Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asia, remote mountain regions — and does it as a solo female creator, which makes her perspective both unusual and valuable. Her cinematography is strong and her curiosity about local life feels genuine rather than performative. One of the more interesting travel channels on YouTube if you want to go beyond the well-documented destinations.

Common criticism

The focus on remote and sometimes sensitive regions makes for distinctive content, but her access, experience and logistics don’t transfer to a casual traveller, so it shouldn’t be taken as a how-to for visiting those places. The adventure-vlog style is also more about the journey and perspective than practical destination detail.

Eva zu BeckWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →
10
Gabriel Traveler
700K+ SubsOff the Beaten PathSoloAuthentic

Gabriel Morris travels to places most creators avoid — conflict zones, isolated communities, overlooked corners of the world — and films it in a raw, minimally edited style that feels very different from the polished productions that dominate the space. The focus is on real human connection rather than beautiful landscapes or bucket-list experiences. Not for everyone, but for viewers who want authenticity over aesthetics, Gabriel Traveler is genuinely distinctive.

Common criticism

The raw, minimally-edited style that some viewers value for authenticity comes across as low production quality to others, and the focus on overlooked or higher-risk places means little conventional travel guidance. As with the other remote-region creators, his experience doesn’t make those destinations a safe default for everyone.

Gabriel TravelerWatch on YouTubeVisit channel →

How to choose for your situation

Match the channel to whether you’re planning a real trip or just want to be taken somewhere — and check official travel advice before committing to anywhere out of the ordinary.

Actually planning a trip

Wolters World for honest ‘loves and hates’ on a specific destination and Kara and Nate for practical, wide-ranging trip inspiration that stays grounded.

Travelling through food

Mark Wiens for warm, street-food-led journeys and Best Ever Food Review Show for the more extreme and unusual end of global food culture.

Seeing places you’ll never go

Drew Binsky, Eva zu Beck and Gabriel Traveler for perspective on remote, sensitive or overlooked regions — worth pairing for both polish and depth.

Pure inspiration and beautiful footage

Lost LeBlanc for cinematic vlogs, The Bucket List Family for aspirational family adventures, and Sailing La Vagabonde for the slow, immersive sailing life.

Frequently asked questions

Which channel is best if I’m actually planning a trip?
Wolters World is the most practical — its ‘loves and hates’ format gives you an honest read on what’s great, what’s overhyped and what to avoid at a specific destination. Kara and Nate are also genuinely useful for trip inspiration across a wide range of styles and budgets. Pair them with current official travel advice for anywhere out of the ordinary.
Is the travel on these channels realistic for an average budget?
It varies a lot. Kara and Nate cover a wide range including budget travel, and Wolters World is grounded and practical. Others — Lost LeBlanc, The Bucket List Family, much of the sailing content — are aspirational and often expensive, so they’re better treated as inspiration than as a literal template for your own trip.
Some creators visit dangerous or sensitive regions — should I do the same?
Not on the strength of a video. Creators like Drew Binsky, Eva zu Beck and Gabriel Traveler often have experience, local contacts and logistics that a casual traveller doesn’t, and conditions can change quickly. Their content is valuable for perspective, but always check your government’s current travel advisories and do proper research before planning anything to a higher-risk area.
What’s the difference between the food-travel channels?
Mark Wiens is warm and enthusiastic, focused on street food and the joy of eating across cultures; Best Ever Food Review Show is more produced and leans into the extreme and unusual — insects, fermented dishes, things designed to feel genuinely foreign. Both are excellent; the difference is tone and how adventurous the food gets.
I want authentic, off-the-beaten-track content — where do I go?
Eva zu Beck for cinematic solo adventures in remote regions, Gabriel Traveler for raw, minimally-edited authenticity, and Drew Binsky for accessible takes on countries the mainstream media tends to portray negatively. Each offers perspective you won’t get from polished destination vlogs — pairing a couple of them gives you both depth and watchability.