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European National Tourist Offices
ABOVE: Guard at Fredensborg Palace, Denmark. When we started developing our site back in the 1990s, the national tourist offices of Europe were still distributing travel information the old-fashioned way: by taking telephone calls, mailing out literature, and answering questions for visitors who walked in off the street. Our European National Tourist Offices Directory was designed to help readers find tourist-office phone numbers and addresses that could be contacted for more information. Much has changed since the turn of the 21st Century: Today, nearly all national tourist offices use the Web as their primary conduit for travel information, and some don't even publish brochures, accept travelers' phone calls, or have facilities for walk-in visitors. What's more, contact information for tourist offices that do offer traditional literature and services is readily available on the tourist offices' own Web sites. Because of this, our revamped European Tourist Office Directory eliminates addresses and phone numbers and replaces them with links to official Web sites. Many of these sites will automatically redirect your browser to tourist-office sites in your own country, so that (for example) a link to www.holland.com will take you to us.holland.com if you live in the United States. In other cases, you'll need to choose from a nationalities or language menu. Either way, the information that you're looking for is likely to be on the tourist offices' Web sites or here at Europeforvisitors.com. (See our European articles index to explore our site in greater depth.) And now, please go to the Tourist Offices Index and start clicking.
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