When we think about international travel, our brains often play tricks on us. We suffer from what risk analysts call “perception lag.” We anchor our ideas of a country to old movies, decades-old news cycles, or generational trauma, and we assume those places are still active war zones or ganglands.
Truthfully, the global security map has completely flipped over the last decade. Some of the most notorious countries from the 1990s and 2000s have executed massive, radical security overhauls.
If you look at the actual data from the U.S. State Department for 2026, the 5 countries on this list aren’t just safe—in many cases, their violent crime rates are mathematically lower than what you will find in major American or Western European cities.
Here are 5 incredible destinations that have totally shed their dark histories, but haven’t been completely overrun by mainstream tourists yet.
PLUS: I’ve built a quiz for you at the end of this article to find the perfect match for your next trip, so stick around!
1. El Salvador

The Latin American Turnaround
If you grew up in the 90s or 2000s, El Salvador was synonymous with being the murder capital of the world. But between 2019 and 2026, the country executed the most dramatic security turnaround in modern history.
President Nayib Bukele implemented a controversial “State of Exception,” locking up over 100,000 gang affiliates. The result? The homicide rate plummeted by 98%. The U.S. State Department now ranks El Salvador as a Level 1: Exercise Normal Precautions—giving it the exact same safety rating as Switzerland and Japan, and our own safety index based on traveler votes ranks it at a strong 89/100!
When I visited the first time, it was still in transition, but all the locals I talked to emphasized how much safer daily life was, and tourists were beginning to come in droves. And for good reason, it’s gorgeous! I highly recommend checking out Mizata, the coast there is gorgeous and there is even a Treehouse Resort with fantastic views of the ocean and cliffs nearby.
The Vibe: The government has pivoted the entire national identity toward “Surf City.” The Pacific coast is booming with digital nomads, high-end surf camps, and a seamless U.S. dollar and Bitcoin economy.
The Strategy: The tourist police (POLITUR) heavily patrol safe zones like El Tunco and El Zonte. Your biggest concern here isn’t crime; it’s making sure you cover up any tattoos that could accidentally be mistaken for gang symbols to avoid hassle at military checkpoints.
2. Vietnam

The Southeast Asian Powerhouse
For older generations of Americans, the word “Vietnam” is a time capsule of 1970s jungle warfare and ideological hostility. The cinematic memory of the Vietnam War makes a lot of Americans think they will be met with anti-American sentiment.
The reality on the ground is the exact opposite. Vietnam has enjoyed unbroken domestic peace for decades. It is a Level 1 safety destination. The population is incredibly young, deeply integrated into the global digital economy, and highly welcoming to American capital and culture.
Our own safety index ranks it at 85/100. Been recently? Vote below!
The Vibe: Vietnam completely shattered its tourism records, bringing in over 21 million visitors in 2025. It is an energetic, culinary paradise where violent crime against foreigners is statistically microscopic.
The Strategy: The country recently expanded its e-visa program to allow 90-day, multiple-entry stays. Go to Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City. Your only real physical threat is figuring out how to successfully cross the street through the chaotic, massive swarms of motorbikes.
3. Rwanda

The “Singapore of Africa”
When Americans hear “Rwanda,” they immediately think of 1994 and the horrific genocide. It is tragic, but keeping the country frozen in that year ignores the fact that modern Rwanda is empirically one of the safest, cleanest nations on the entire African continent.
The capital, Kigali, is spotless and operates with a level of strict, centralized order that earns it constant comparisons to Singapore. The U.S. State Department holds it at Level 2, but read the fine print: that caution is only because of the volatile border it shares with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The interior of Rwanda is meticulously secured.
The Vibe: Rwanda doesn’t want cheap, mass-market tourism. They have engineered a highly lucrative, luxury eco-tourism model centered around conservation.
The Strategy: You come here for one primary reason: to trek with endangered mountain gorillas in Volcanoes National Park. It is a highly regulated, exclusive, and profoundly safe bucket-list experience.
4. Georgia

The Caucasus Gem
Situated at the crossroads of Eastern Europe and Western Asia, Georgia carries the stigma of a turbulent post-Soviet collapse and a brief 2008 war with Russia.
But back in 2003, the Georgian government did something radical: they fired the entire, deeply corrupt traffic police force overnight and rebuilt a Western-style law enforcement agency from scratch. Today, Georgia routinely ranks in the top 20 safest countries in the world. It is a Level 1 destination (just stay away from the Russian-occupied breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia).
The Vibe: Georgians culturally consider guests to be “gifts from God,” and the hospitality is famously intense. Even when there are localized political protests in the capital of Tbilisi, they are strictly domestic and pose zero threat to tourists.
The Strategy: Drink the wine (they claim to have invented viticulture), hike the spectacular Caucasus Mountains, and enjoy world-class European safety at a fraction of the cost.
5. Aruba

The Dutch Fortress
Whenever I suggest Aruba to travelers, I almost inevitably hear someone bring up a highly publicized kidnapping case from 2005. It was a genuinely terrible, heartbreaking tragedy, and I completely empathize with why that specific event is burned into the American memory.
However, anchoring an entire island’s security profile to a single, isolated incident from two decades ago paints a wildly inaccurate picture of the destination today. The empirical reality is that Aruba is literally one of the safest Caribbean islands you can visit in 2026.
I have been multiple times and every time I visit feel totally comfortable walking around at 2AM alone. It really is ‘One Happy Island’, and you’ll feel like you can totally relax here.
The Vibe: Aruba operates under a strict Dutch legal framework with a highly professionalized police force and zero tolerance for systemic crime. The U.S. State Department consistently ranks it as a Level 1 destination. It feels incredibly organized, and because it sits completely outside the hurricane belt, it is meteorologically safe as well.
The Strategy: You do not need to stay locked inside an all-inclusive resort here. Rent a car, navigate the European-style roundabouts, and drive yourself up to the rugged northern coast or down to Eagle Beach. Your biggest risk is forgetting to reapply sunscreen (trust me).
