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That’s what Time Out magazine wants you to remember about sober traveling. While some folks prefer booze-soaked debauchery or ayahuasca retreats, other vacationers like to experience a fantastic hiking trail, a world-class museum or a transformative yoga class, and remember everything just fine the next day.
Based on research from Missouri treatment center Sana Lake Recovery, which considers things like access to nature, gyms, music venues and even AA meetings, Time Out has named the “10 best cities for sober travel in the U.S.” Two places in California make the list, Oakland (2) and San Francisco (10), with their Bay Area perks like “more than 300 hiking trails, 120 fitness studios and 33 different museums to stimulate your travel.” Oh, and “five mocktail bars and two gorgeous, restored movie palaces (the Fox and the Paramount) where you can take tours or see live shows.”
Here is where else in America you might want to visit in 2025, should you love to be alert and living the sober life:
Time Out’s 10 best cities for sober travel in the U.S. in 2025:
1 St. Louis, Missouri
2 Oakland, California
3 Portland, Oregon
4 Minneapolis, Minnesota
5 Seattle, Washington
6 Colorado Springs, Colorado
Sun rays break through the redwoods during a hike along French Loop Trail at the Redwood Regional Park in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, April 21, 2023. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group)
During severe thunderstorms, rising air shoots icy pellets the size of Dippin’ Dots ice cream into the bitter cold of upper atmospheric layers. There, supercooled water freezes onto the small particles to form hail, which then falls when it gets too heavy for the storm’s upward draft.
As climate change warms average global temperatures, hailstones larger than pingpong or golf balls will become more frequent — likely worsening the weather hazard’s already billions of dollars in annual property damage across the country, according to a study published last year in the scientific journal npj Climate and Atmospheric Science.
“Climate change is obviously occurring,” said Victor Gensini, a meteorologist and professor of atmospheric science at Northern Illinois University who led the study. “The question, for scientists, is often: How does that manifest itself (in) these smaller-scale extreme weather perils?”
Insurance companies have reported rising hail damage claims from homeowners due to severe storms. In 2024, roof repair and replacement costs totaled nearly $31 billion across the country, up almost 30% from 2022, according to an April report from Verisk, a risk assessment and data analytics firm. Hail and wind accounted for more than half of all residential claims.
State Farm is raising homeowners insurance rates in Illinois by 27.2% beginning Aug. 15, according to a filing with the state last month. The rate hike, one of the largest in the state’s history, will affect nearly 1.5 million policyholders. In addition, State Farm is implementing a minimum 1% deductible on all wind and hail losses, raising the out-of-pocket costs for homeowners filing a related damage claim.
State Farm said its Illinois homeowners business has seen “unsustainable” losses in 13 of the last 15 years and cited more frequent extreme weather events such as wind, hail and tornadoes, insufficient premiums to cover claims and the rising cost of repairs due to inflation.
A hailstrom is visible from Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter vehicle during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Levelland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
An approaching storm is visible through the window of the moving Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, near Meadow, Texas. Project ICECHIP is made of teams from several universities observing storms from the inside and seeing how the hail forms. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Lightning illuminates the sky as Project ICECHIP members from Northern Illinois University, Evelynn Mantia, left, drives as Margo Andrews helps navigate through the two severe storms on a computer display, late June 4, 2025, near Adrian, Texas, as they travel to a hotel in Amarillo, Texas, during a Project ICECHIP operation. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Project ICECHIP members Ethan Mok, from left, Logan Bundy, Nathan Sonntag, Victor Gensini and Katie Wargowsky sit in chairs next to the command vehicle waiting for storms to develop, June 6, 2025, in Morton, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Tony Illenden, a member of Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter team, picks up hail during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, near Morton, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Tony Illenden crouches in a helmet and gloves outside Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter vehicle to scoop hail into a bag during a storm while on a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Levelland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Joey Toniolo, from left, Tim Marshall and Tony Illenden stand next to Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter as storm clouds gather during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Meadow, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Cars dive away from a storm during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 5, 2025, in Morton, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
A hailstorm is visible from Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter vehicle during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Levelland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter is silhouetted near Lubbock, Texas, June 6, 2025, during a Project ICECHIP operation. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Wind and dust-battered flowers are silhouetted by an approaching storm that darkens the sky during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, near Meadow, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Victor Gensini, Northern Illinois University meteorology professor and a lead scientist of Project ICECHIP, right, and Logan Bundy, PhD candidate at NIU and ICECHIP IOP assistant, stand at the command vehicle watching an approaching storm, June 3, 2025, in Scotland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Joey Toniolo ducks from falling hail as he moves back to Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter vehicle during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Morton, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Project ICECHIP members from Northern Illinois University Evelynn Mantia, left and Olivena Carlisle, take photos of approaching storms, June 4, 2025, near Grady, New Mexico. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Members of the Project ICECHIP and The Associated Press gather around the command vehicle watching an approaching storm Tuesday, June 3, 2025, in Scotland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
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A hailstrom is visible from Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter vehicle during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Levelland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Last year, State Farm customers in Illinois reported $638 million in hail damage, ranking the state second after Texas.
In May, roughly 100 researchers — including Gensini and other NIU scientists — kicked off the world’s largest-ever coordinated effort to study hail in and around the Central Plains. But “we will go wherever the storms are,” he said in a previous interview.
The work is being supported with $11 million from the National Science Foundation and aims to improve forecasts of severe, damaging hail using data collected through technology such as drones, weather balloons, meteorological instruments that measure hailstone size and strike impact, and more. Better detection and prediction would allow people to protect themselves, their property and their livelihoods, preventing millions of dollars in losses.
Between mid-May and the end of June, scientists tracked 28 hail events across 11 states in the Midwest, South and Mountain West. They recorded hail bigger than 3 inches in Colorado, Texas, Montana and South Dakota.
Forensic engineer Tim Marshall measures a large hailstone in the front seats of Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Morton, Texas. Project ICECHIP is made of teams from several universities observing storms from the inside and seeing how the hail forms. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Tony Illenden crouches outside Northern Illinois University’s Husky Hail Hunter to scoop hail into a bag while in a hailstorm during a Project ICECHIP operation, June 6, 2025, in Levelland, Texas. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
Recent cuts to federal grants from the Trump administration have paused scientific endeavors in many areas, including weather forecasting, but organizers said the NIU-led study was not affected because funding was awarded last summer.
Northeast Illinois has had its share of big hail this year, too. An early spring thunderstorm produced tornadoes and dropped pea-size hail across the area in mid-March; the largest hailstones reported were as big as half dollars in central Cook County. On May 15, 3-inch hail was observed in Livingston County, and 2-inch hail was also reported in northeast Lake County. Batavia was pelted by hail as big as tennis balls during a June supercell.
According to the National Weather Service, for the last 30 years, the Chicago area has averaged 11 days of any size hail per year and two days of significant stones with diameters 2 inches or larger.
In their study, published in August 2024, NIU researchers found that days with severe hailstorms with larger stones will increase most significantly in the Midwest, Ohio Valley and Northeast by at least five days from mid- to late-century.
“Depending on how hard you press the gas pedal — the gas pedal being human emissions of CO2 — that has a really big impact on hail that we see and, ultimately, where it occurs,” Gensini said. “On average, we see bigger hail, more frequent bigger hail, and we actually see less small hail.”
Using a model with high-resolution mapping offered researchers new, more granular insights into the future of individual storms and their hazards compared with the data that traditional global models produce, which Gensini characterized as coarse and grainy.
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“It would be like the difference of a cellphone camera from back in the early 2000s compared to what we have now,” said Jeff Trapp, professor of climate, meteorology and atmospheric sciences at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
According to Gensini, a warmer climate concentrates more water vapor in the atmosphere, which in turn fuels thunderstorms and makes them more robust — with stronger updrafts that can suspend bigger hailstones.
“Take a hair dryer and turn it up on end, so it’s blowing air straight up,” he said. “It’s pretty easy to suspend a pingpong ball right above that hair dryer. But now, what if you wanted to suspend a grapefruit or a soccer ball? You’re going to need a much stronger updraft.”
Warmer temperatures in the lower atmosphere would also melt smaller hailstones that fall at a slower speed, while really big stones would remain relatively unaffected.
Project ICECHIP members from Northern Illinois University Evelynn Mantia, left, and Olivena Carlisle, lower right, inflate a weather balloon with a radiosonde attached to collect data, June 4, 2025, during a hail study in Tucumcari, New Mexico. (Carolyn Kaster/AP)
The model used in the study indicated a more than 25% increase in the frequency of large hailstones of at least 1.8 inches if planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions from human activities do not significantly reduce by mid-century. In that same scenario, stones larger than 2 inches could increase by over 75% by the end of the century, and there would be fewer hailstonessmaller than a golf ball, or 1.7 inches.
The National Weather Service considers severe any hail bigger than a quarter or with more than a 1-inch diameter. Anything larger than 2 inches can easily damage roads, dent cars and shred crops. Stones larger than 4 inches are called giant hail, and those larger than 6 inches are called gargantuan hail.
Theoretically, the maximum size could be over 9 inches in diameter, like a bowling ball. The largest recorded hailstone in the country fell on June 23, 2010, in Vivian, South Dakota. It had an 8-inch diameter and weighed 1 pound and 15 ounces. The largest hailstone reported in Illinois was about 4.75 inches, the size of a softball, and fell on June 10, 2015, near the village of Minooka, 50 miles southwest of Chicago.
Having researched severe storms, their hazards and their connection with climate change for decades, the U. of I.’s Trapp emphasized the need to study potential changes in hail’s seasonality, too — even though “there’s not really a hail season, but there are times of the year that are more conducive to (it).”
In Illinois, that’s typically during the spring and early summer.
“This is an important question, I think, ultimately, to address,” he said. “For people who do emergency management, as an example, so that they know that in the coming years, maybe the coming decades, there might be an expectation that their activity will be enhanced during an earlier or different time of the year. And we’re seeing that with severe weather in general.”
No matter the changes in hail size and frequency, the NIU researchers noted that the effects of this weather hazard — mainly in the form of losses and damages — will only grow as an increasingly urbanized landscape leaves more people and their property vulnerable to the pelting stones.
Gensini called hail an understudied, “underappreciated” storm peril. According to Verisk, noncatastrophic wind and hail roof claims increased from 17% to 25% between 2022 and 2024, which the company says highlights the growing impact of these perils despite the greater focus often placed on catastrophic events.
“Tornadoes are incredibly dramatic; they can produce casualties and fatalities. You generally just don’t see that with hail; (stones have) impacts (on) assets and structures, and not necessarily people or their livelihood. But the trade-off of that is hail is way more frequent, way more common,” Gensini said. “And because of that frequency, we see way more damage and way more impact, in terms of insured losses from hail, every single year.”
When Jennifer Hughes’ son was in a mountain biking accident last year, she was prepared to go into full “mama bear” mode, overseeing his medical care and insurance details.
But the Chicago-area mom ran into repeated roadblocks — federal privacy laws — that turned an already stressful time into a nightmare.
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Her son, Vance Hughes, had recently turned 18, meaning she no longer had unfettered access to his medical records or his health insurance and financial information.
“It really got me thinking, ‘Gosh, what are we going to do if something happens when he’s at college and he needs our support? Will we be able to give it to him legally?’” Jennifer Hughes said. “I know it sounds crazy, but that was a concern.”
Hughes’ fears were quelled by a company with a name that resonated: Mama Bear Legal Forms. For under $100, college-bound kids can sign privacy waivers, granting their parents access to their medical records and educational information, including grades.
Technological advances have increasingly given parents the ability to track their children’s locations and technology usage. Mama Bear taps into a market of parents accustomed to this vigilance who realize their access changes when their kids turn 18 and are subject to medical- and student-privacy laws.
Mama Bear’s website provides a bundle of health and financial power-of-attorney forms, a release waiving the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, or FERPA, which prevents parents from accessing their child’s educational records once they turn 18, and a release waiving the student’s federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, medical-privacy rights.
Representatives of the Nebraska-based company did not respond to interview requests.
Mama Bear, which is not a law firm and doesn’t offer legal advice, markets itself as a solution for anxious parents to “feel confident knowing you can support your college-bound child.”
“It’s a small price to pay for peace of mind,” said Ruth Epps, a Littleton mom whose son at the University of Colorado Boulder signed Mama Bear legal forms.
Chatter about Mama Bear’s services pops up every few weeks in CU-related Facebook groups, where parents crowdsource questions about their children’s dorm-room assignments, ask where they can order soup for a sick kid, and find out which classes are best.
Parents on Facebook wrote that their social media feeds were filled with Mama Bear ads and posts wanting to know more from families who have used the services. Others replied that the company’s offerings felt like the answer to a problem they didn’t know they had yet.
It was a problem Hughes knew intimately. The professional blogger at mommyevolution.com said her son’s mountain biking accident opened her eyes to an issue that hadn’t been on her radar.
Vance Hughes is headed to CU Boulder this fall to study psychology — and ski in his downtime.
When his mom approached him about signing the Mama Bear documents to give her access to his health, financial and educational records, he said it was a no-brainer.
He knew the trouble his mom had been through dealing with his insurance after his biking accident and wanted to prevent that headache while allowing his parents more control over his medical decisions should an emergency happen again.
“The biggest thing for me is my mom can still hold my hand and help me through my formative years of becoming an adult as long as I need help in the future,” Vance Hughes said. “I don’t see the harm in it.”
Vance Hughes said he has a great relationship with his mom. He couldn’t imagine her using her new legal access to pry into his life willy-nilly.
“She’ll probably only look if I’m really, really struggling, and that will allow her to be like, ‘What can I do to help you?’” he said.
Jennifer Hughes agreed. Her son knows she wouldn’t misuse her new power, she said, and she knows he would willingly discuss his grades without her having to snoop.
“You think about your kid being an adult, but he’s still your kid, and they may need your assistance,” she said. “It’s not about making sure you keep a thumb on them. It’s that in case of an emergency, you can support them in the best way they need. He’s going to college to be his own person, and this is a great place for him to start learning how to adult.”
‘A one-size-fits-all approach’
Jennifer Hendricks, a CU Boulder law professor and co-director of the Juvenile and Family Law Program, wasn’t as sold on Mama Bear Legal Forms.
It wasn’t so much the medical directive or health care power of attorney that concerned her, although she noted it was more likely a parent would need those forms for themselves than for their children.
What worried Hendricks was what she described as fear-based marketing and a potential overreach in signing away students’ FERPA and HIPAA rights.
These forms go beyond allowing parents to have a say if a medical emergency strikes, she said. They could inform mom and dad that their child is talking to a therapist, taking birth control or going to the health center for a nasty hangover, Hendricks said.
“What I’m seeing is really infantilizing the adult children by having the mom prepare everything and then just say ‘sign this,’” Hendricks said.
Colorado-based family law attorney Rich Harris said he’s had conversations with his own family about whether they should consider some of these legal forms for their college-aged children. He advised talking to legal experts rather than outsourcing to a one-size-fits-all internet option.
“There’s a trend in these do-it-yourself legal form companies,” Harris said. “I’ve been cautioning people for years to be very, very careful about them because they purport to give you a one-size-fits-all approach for a super low fee and offer very little legal customization.”
Plus, Hendricks said, there are existing, free medical and university release forms allowing students to decide which parts of their lives their parents can access. For example, university FERPA waivers allow parents and kids to sign off on parents having access to their students’ financial information — useful for parents who are paying their kids’ tuition or handling financial aid forms.
“Parents have been trained to have a real sort of dystopian level of surveillance over their children, and this is a company trying to make money off of profiting off that anxiety and the need to monitor and surveil rather than to prepare their child to be an adult,” Hendricks said. “The company is playing on this fear that something terrible could happen and you won’t be able to help your kid.”
‘A gradual roll into adulthood’
Epps, the Littleton mom, felt her fear realized after her son got sick while at CU Boulder. He didn’t know how to advocate for himself when he went to the doctor, she said, and he didn’t say much when she asked how his appointment went. She tried to call the university to learn more, but was told she couldn’t access his medical information.
Epps’ son ended up developing pneumonia and needed to come home to get better, missing about a month of school, she said.
“Now that he has Mama Bear in place, I can talk to anyone,” she said. “Which would hopefully prevent something like that from happening in the future. I would have known had they said his oxygen levels are low that things were bad.”
Yet Epps would not define herself as a “mama bear.” Instead, she said she hails from the “suck it up, buttercup” line of parenting.
However, when she saw Mama Bear all over her social media feeds, she said it felt like the answer to anxieties that ramped up after her son’s sickness.
“I cannot recommend enough that people do it because you will have no authority, and it happens the day they turn 18,” Epps said. “There’s no grace period. There’s no, ‘Oh, let’s help you get used to this.’ It’s 18, and you’re cut off.”
Epps said she doesn’t track her son’s grades, but that it’s a nice feature to have just in case. Plus, she said the whole thing is a good deal because it doesn’t expire until her son revokes it, meaning she doesn’t have to pay some kind of annual fee.
She said she didn’t have much of a conversation with her son about the paperwork.
“I think I just said ‘sign this,’” she said. “I just don’t think they understand, to go from having someone who makes all of your medical appointments for you and manages your prescription drugs to being completely alone — they don’t understand that it’s so sudden. We’re covering his tuition and living expenses, so there’s a gradual roll into adulthood. It’s not like that for this. They’re so strict about privacy laws.”
The draw of retiring overseas can be tempting, especially in the face of stubbornly high costs of living throughout the country.
But before you go, experts recommend thorough research and planning. Retiring abroad comes with complications, including lifestyle changes, immigration hurdles and disruptions to health care coverage.
Here are a few critical considerations, according to people who help Americans move abroad.
Map out a long-term plan
Evaluate what moving abroad would mean for your entire life, not just the cost of daily living.
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“You need to think about what’s important to you,” said Jennifer Stevens, executive editor of International Living, a magazine about retiring overseas. “What kind of access you’ll have to health care and what the lifestyle is going to be like.”
Beyond your own life, consider what moving overseas means for people you leave behind.
For those with older parents who need long-term care, that means having a plan and network to oversee and manage their well-being while you’re abroad.
It also means putting in place proper succession planning, expat adviser David Lesperance wrote in an email. He also suggested having medical and financial powers of attorney in place in case of emergencies.
As other countries have their own laws, professional advice should be sought and followed to avoid hidden pitfalls such as forced heirship rules,” he added, referring to laws that guarantee children a portion of an estate, regardless of what’s written in a will. “This is especially true for common law and same-sex couples.
Look at your finances
Americans who move abroad are still required to file U.S. taxes. Before setting out, experts recommend having an understanding of what your obligations will be to both your new home and your old one.
“What’s the tax planning I need to do? What’s the tax ramifications of that?” said Lesperance, listing the questions that expats have on their minds.
Experts also urge people to research the financial implications for their retirement income. While people collecting Social Security can do so abroad, some pension benefits can only be deposited into U.S. financial institutions. Make sure you can access your retirement income abroad before you leave.
Also be aware of the risk that exchange rates pose, said Alex Ingrim, founder of Liberty Atlantic Advisors, a financial advisory for expats. When your savings and retirement income are in U.S. dollars but you’re spending another currency, you’re vulnerable to the volatility of exchange rates.
Changing immigration pathways
Immigration laws in other countries, just like those in the U.S., are constantly in flux. Current retirement visa programs might be terminated in the future; others might be introduced in countries where they previously were none. But by large, migration policies trend toward becoming more restrictive over time, said Stevens, the editor of International Living.
“For someone who’s considering going abroad, whether for retirement or earlier, now is a really good time to do it,” she said.
That doesn’t mean you should rush out. Rather, just be prepared for the possibility that immigration pathways might change faster than your timelines and have backup plans.
Long-term, expats may have the opportunity to acquire citizenship in their new home country. That could come with its own advantages, as well as responsibilities, wrote Lesperance — all considerations to keep in mind.
Talk to an expert
Moving abroad is possible, but it’s a significantly smoother process if you have guidance from someone who understands the complexities of the decision.
In recent months, Ingrim, the financial adviser, has seen more interest from Americans who are fully committed to moving abroad, unlike in the past when more of his clients were curious but not set on the idea.
“We’ve spoken to numerous people that say, ‘I’m moving to Portugal in three weeks — what do I need to do to prepare?’” Ingrim said. “Three weeks is a really short amount of time.”
Enlisting an expert early in the process can help people get a comprehensive sense of what it takes to relocate an entire life to another country and how to make it happen.