Americans are choosing Portugal in record numbers, and the trips they are booking are nowhere near Lisbon or the Algarve

Portugal’s interior has something its coastline does not: space. East of Évora the cork oaks take over, the wheat plains stretch without interruption and the whitewashed villages sit far enough from the main roads that most visitors never reach them.
Reported by 1 outlet — Seattle Times. See all sources ↓
Portugal’s interior has something its coastline does not: space. East of Évora the cork oaks take over, the wheat plains stretch without interruption and the whitewashed villages sit far enough from the main roads that most visitors never reach them. For most of the past decade, American travelers arrived in Lisbon and headed south, but […]
Read the full report at Seattle Times ↗
Why it matters
A world story we're tracking; its significance and source trust firm up as more outlets confirm it.
- What's the story?
- Portugal’s interior has something its coastline does not: space. East of Évora the cork oaks take over, the wheat plains stretch without interruption and the whitewashed villages sit far enough from the main roads that most visitors never reach them.
- How widely is it covered?
- 1 outlet, average source rating 6.0/10.
- When was it last updated?
- just now ago.
How outlets are framing the same story
Here's how each outlet is covering the story — compare their headlines and timing at a glance.
- Coverage card1 outlet1CoverageScouting report
Americans are choosing Portugal in record numbers, and the trips they are booking are nowhere near Lisbon or the Algarve
Sources1TypeCoverageSeattle Times