Working from home could be about to get a major upgrade, as Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley has said her government is considering letting visitors stay and work remotely from the island for a year.
Sara Nelson, international president of the Association of Flight Attendants, joins "Squawk Box" to discuss the coronavirus pandemic's impact on air travel.
A national mask mandate is critical for the large-scale resumption of business travel during the coronavirus pandemic, CNBC's Jim Cramer contended Monday.
Accor hotels in Beijing saw a "rapid reaction" from customers when news of a virus cluster emerged, says Michael Issenberg of Accor Asia-Pacific. He also weighs in on recovery for the travel industry and says it will be a "big step" to return to business travel while people are still working from home.
If eating at El Celler de Can Roca isn't reason enough to travel to Girona, Spain, now you can eat at the new chocolatier and stay in the boutique hotel opened by Jordi Roca, one of three brothers behind the world-famous restaurant.
Hiring your own plane is one answer to safe travel this summer amid the coronavirus pandemic. As more countries reopen to tourists, here's everything you need to know to charter your first flight.
Countries around the world are opening their borders to international travelers this summer. Here's where you can go now and what's scheduled to open before August.
Changes in corporate travel patterns due to the coronavirus could hit airlines hard, but it's "not all bad news" given that there are green shoots on the leisure side, said Mark Manduca of Citi.
Mark Manduca of Citi says corporate travel is set to get secularly impaired by as much as 25% and consolidation in the airline industry seems inevitable.
A new report identifies who will be traveling internationally first, and the decision is likely to be affected by your age, gender, marital status and employment expectations.
With U.S. passenger traffic down by 90%, airlines are desperate to fill seats and are offering big incentives to keep their most reliable customers loyal. But what happens to frequent flyer miles when almost no one is flying, and can an airline loyalty program survive if an airline goes bankrupt?
Here are four widely-read travel stories from the past two months where details were later clarified that made the original headlines substantially less impressive than they originally seemed.