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Mongolia: The stunning country named 2024’s top destination has made it even easier to visit

Simon Calder’s Travel

A country named the best to visit in 2024 has launched a new campaign to welcome even more tourists.

With its stunning landscapes with room to roam, reindeer sleigh rides amd camel racing, Mongolia is hoping to woo visitors looking to get away from it all.

Like most countries, its tourism industry was devastated by the COVID-19 pandemic, and it has launched a “Welcome to MonGOlia” campaign to win people back. The government has added flights and streamlined the visa process, offering visa-free visits for many countries.

Lonely Planet named Mongolia its top destination in its Best in Travel 2024 report.

At least 437,000 foreign tourists visited in the first seven months of this year, up 25% over the same period last year, including increasing numbers from Europe, the U.S. and Japan. Visitors from South Korea nearly doubled, thanks in part to the under-four-hour flight.

A vendor holds up an eagle as the waits for tourists to take photos with near the Terejl National Park outside Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
A vendor holds up an eagle as the waits for tourists to take photos with near the Terejl National Park outside Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

Despite the gains, Mongolia’s government is still short of its goal of 1 million visitors per year from 2023-2025 to the land of Genghis Khan, which encompassed much of Eurasia in its 13th-century heyday and is now a landlocked nation located between Russia and China.

With a population of 3.3 million people, about half of them living in the capital, Ulaanbaatar, there’s plenty of open space for the adventure tourist to explore, said Egjimaa Battsooj, who works for a tour company. Its customized itineraries include horseback trips and camping excursions with the possibility of staying in gers, the felt-covered dwellings still used by Mongolia’s herders.

There’s little chance of running across private property, so few places are off-limits, she said.

“You don’t need to open a gate, you don’t need to have permission from anyone,” she said, sitting in front of a map of Mongolia with routes marked out with pins and strands of yarn.

“We are kind of like the last truly nomad culture on the whole planet,” she added.

Tourists take photos near the 40-meter- (130-foot-) tall stainless steel statue of Genghis Khan
Tourists take photos near the 40-meter- (130-foot-) tall stainless steel statue of Genghis Khan (Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

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