English · For Tourists

English for Tourists: Phrasebook and Travel Phrases

updated июнь 2026 reading 5 min level A1

English for tourists is not a course, but a compact set of words and ready-made phrases that will help you on your trip: at the airport, hotel, restaurant, and on the street. The goal is to be able to communicate confidently in typical situations, and surprisingly little is enough for this. And since English is understood almost everywhere, these phrases will be useful in any country.

What to learn before your trip

A basic set is enough: greetings and polite words, numbers and prices, questions like "where?", "how much does it cost?", "how do I get there?", phrases for the hotel, airport, and transport. It's better to memorize them as ready-made phrases rather than a list. If you have time, start with pronunciation so you are understood the first time.

Phrases for typical situations

Collect phrases by the situations you'll find yourself in: flight check-in, hotel check-in, ordering at a cafe, buying a ticket, asking for directions. A few dozen such phrases cover most of your trip. It's convenient to create a project with this set and go through repetition. Try flashcards:

Try the card
🇬🇧 EN → 🇬🇧 EN
trip, travel
A1
Space click to flip
trip
/trɪp/

English for your next trip.

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How to prepare quickly

If you have a week before your trip, don't try to "learn English"; focus on the tourist set and bring a few dozen phrases to an automatic level. And if your trip is a reason to get serious about the language, after it, move on to the plan from the guide English from Scratch or How to Learn English.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many phrases does a tourist need?

Usually, a few dozen ready-made phrases for the main situations are enough. This is feasible to learn in one or two weeks before the trip.

What phrases should I learn first?

Greetings and polite words, numbers and prices, questions "where?", "how much does it cost?", "how do I get there?", phrases for the hotel, airport, restaurant, and transport.

Do I need to learn grammar for a trip?

No. For travel, ready-made phrases and basic words are sufficient; the goal is to communicate, not to hold conversations.

Is English enough almost everywhere?

English is the international language of communication; it is understood in most tourist places around the world, so even basic phrases are usually enough.

How to prepare for a trip quickly?

Compile a tourist phrase set as a separate project and go through repetition one to two weeks before departure.

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