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How to avoid looking like a tourist – Metro US

How to avoid looking like a tourist

Taking a selfie in front of a monument definitely makes you look like a tourist. / Digital Vision Taking a selfie in front of a monument definitely makes you look like a tourist. / Digital Vision

Layering a large lensed Nikon over your Hawaiian shirt is a dead giveaway you’re not from around these parts — but it’s not the only sign you’re a tourist. Even if you think you’re blending in, the locals know better. Priceline.com took a look at what lets everyone know you’re just visiting via a study conducted by Edelman Berland research. The study surveyed travelers as well as locals who’ve lived in a major U.S. city for at least five years, from New York to San Francisco. Here are the highlights of Priceline.com’s first Tourist Report Card.

What to wear

• The biggest tourist giveaway, according to the more than half of locals, is somebody wearing a camera around their neck and taking pictures of everything.
• Locals voted that the ugliest tourist accessory is socks and sandals (42 percent), followed by the fanny pack (21 percent).
• But almost 60 percent of tourists say they try to avoid wearing typical tourist gear.

Eating out

• Ordering local dishes and drinks, according to 65 percent of tourists, is one of the top ways they try to blend in with the culture.
• The majority of tourists prefer eating at local restaurants — where there are few tourists.
• But 54 percent of tourists admit to eating at chain franchises.

Getting around

• One in four tourists prefers to use a pocket foldout map when traveling and about three in seven still use a printout map from an Internet source like Mapquest.
• More than half of tourists equate blending in successfully with learning to navigate public transportation.
• About 63 percent of tourists have asked a local for directions.

Sex

• More one in three single tourists say they would love to have a fling with a local while on vacation.
• Nearly one in five would put those thoughts into action, actually trying to find a one-night hook-up.
• More than one in three tourists have become smitten over a foreigner with an accent.

Locals in major U.S. cities, including Chicago, weighed in on what makes you stand out as a tourist. / Getty Images Locals in major U.S. cities, including Chicago, weighed in on what makes you stand out as a tourist. / Getty Images

Top 5 ways to blend in a new city

1. Order local dishes and drinks.

2.Travel by public transportation.

3. Avoid tourist gear, such as fanny packs, water bottle holsters and local city T-shirts.

4. Learn and use local phrases and expressions.

5. Befriend 
the locals.

Top 3 tourist cliches

• 63% ask a local for directions.

• 54% eat at a chain franchise.

• 49% stop in the middle of the street to take a picture.