Busch Gardens Williamsburg: 2026 Multigenerational Guide
Where Grandparents, Teens, & Thrill-Seekers All Win
“We don’t stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing.”
Sophie & Rachel, posing in front of the river where three separate roller coaster tracks, Loch Ness Monster, Alpengeist, & Griffon, can be seen.
Last Updated: April 26, 2026
There are theme parks, and then there is Busch Gardens Williamsburg.
After almost three decades of family visits, we can say with confidence that this place does something most parks simply don't: It genuinely works for everyone at once!
We have watched our girls grow from stroller age to conquering every coaster in the lineup, and through it all, grandparents were content, teens were chasing thrills, and parents were somewhere in between, happy with how the day was going.
If you are planning a trip with tweens, teens, young adults, or a multigenerational crew that includes grandparents, this guide is for you.
Table of Contents
- 01Key Takeaways 2026
- 02Why It Works for Multi-Gen Families
- 03European-Themed Areas
- 04BGW Coasters
- 05Teen Independence
- 06Shows & Entertainment
- 07Grandparents & Non-Riders
- 08Low-Mobility Visitors
- 09What to Eat at BGW
- 10The Busch Gardens Williamsburg App
- 11Best Times to Visit
- 122026 Tickets & Passes
- 13FAQ BGW
- 14About the Author
Busch Gardens Williamsburg - Key Takeaways 2026
Before you dive in, here is what nearly thirty years of visits have taught us, the handful of things worth knowing before you set foot through the gates:
Busch Gardens Williamsburg is genuinely one of the best multigenerational theme parks in the country!
Opened in 1975, it has spent five decades quietly getting this right: non-riders, grandparents, teens, and parents can all have a full, satisfying day at the same park, on the same day, without anyone sacrificing their experience for someone else's. That is rarer than it sounds, and it is the reason we have kept coming back.
Two major ride updates are worth knowing about before you go.
The park debuted a significant new coaster, The Big Bad Wolf: The Wolf's Revenge, in May 2025, a nod to the beloved original that was replaced in 2012. And in spring 2026, Verbolten reopened as Verbolten: Forbidden Turn with reimagined special effects and updated storytelling throughout. If you rode either of these in a previous version, both are worth experiencing with fresh eyes.
Sophie, after conquering Verbolten for the very first time!
Always buy tickets online in advance, NEVER AT THE GATE!
Virginia residents qualify for discounted pricing, so check the official Busch Gardens Williamsburg website before purchasing anywhere else. The price difference between online and walk-up gate tickets is consistent and meaningful, and online purchases sometimes include perks not available at the window.
The park's loop layout is one of its most underrated features for group travel.
The nine European-themed areas flow in a natural circuit, signage is clear, and the layout makes splitting up by interest (and finding each other again) EASY. Set a central meeting spot (Das Festhaus works well), check in every 2 hours, and a multigenerational group can move all day independently without anyone feeling lost or left behind.
If anyone in your group has limited mobility, reserve a motor scooter in advance online.
Pick up (or if you forgot to book online, rent a motor scooter) at the park entrance. We learned this firsthand when my mother was navigating mobility issues on a family trip, and the difference it made was immediate. It is the difference between a full, enjoyable day and an exhausting one, and it applies equally to post-surgery recovery, temporary injuries, and anyone who simply cannot sustain a full day on hilly terrain on foot.
Howl-O-Scream & Christmas Town deserve their own dedicated trips.
These are not seasonal afterthoughts bolted onto a regular park day. They transform Busch Gardens Williamsburg into an entirely different experience. Plan around them rather than trying to squeeze them into a broader Williamsburg itinerary, and you will get significantly more out of both.
This post focuses on Busch Gardens Williamsburg. For our comprehensive Williamsburg family travel guide covering Colonial Williamsburg, accommodations, kid-friendly dining, free activities, family budgeting, and more, check out “Williamsburg with Kids: History, Thrills, & Hidden Gems (2026).”
Why Busch Gardens Williamsburg Works for Multigenerational Families
Most theme parks force a trade-off. The rides teens love leave grandparents with nothing to do. The shows that appeal to the grandparents are boring for the teens. Busch Gardens Williamsburg is one of the rare exceptions, and it is not an accident.
The park is built around the concept of European countries, each with its own distinct atmosphere, food, architecture, and entertainment. That design means that even someone with zero interest in roller coasters can spend a full day wandering through the park, catching live shows, enjoying beautiful landscaping, and eating well.
This works beautifully for multigenerational groups. Teens can head off to ride Pantheon three times in a row while grandparents settle into Das Festhaus for a live show and a German meal. Parents can float between both worlds. Everyone meets back up for dinner with stories to tell. That is a harder thing to pull off than it sounds, and Busch Gardens consistently gets it right!
Multi-Gen Tip: Designate a central meeting spot at the start of the day. Das Festhaus works well because it is easy to find, centrally located, and nearly always has seating.
Set check-in times every 2 hours, and the group can split up freely without anyone feeling abandoned.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg's European-Themed Areas
The park is organized as a loop through nine European-themed countries, each with its own rides, dining, shopping, and entertainment.
England
England serves as the park's entrance area and sets the tone with its charming streetscape. It’s a good place to grab a map, get your bearings, and stop at the England Sweet Shoppe for morning donuts before the crowds build. You can catch one of a rotating series of shows at the Globe Theater or take the Sky Ride to one of the other areas of the park.
These stunning wreath decorations hang over the walkway in England near the entrance of Busch Gardens Williamsburg during their Christmas Town event.
Scotland
Scotland is home to the Loch Ness Monster, the park's most iconic coaster, and a rite of passage for first-time visitors of any age. Here, you’ll also find the Highland Stables, where you can get close to the stunning Clydesdale horses. Ready to move on to another part of the park? Hop on the Busch Gardens Railway and head to Festa Italia or New France.
Ireland
Ireland hosts Celtic Fyre, the park's award-winning step-dancing show, and Finnegan's Flyer, a gut-dropping swing ride that delivers serious thrills without a traditional coaster. The atmosphere in this area is warm and easy to linger in.
France
France is where you’ll find Griffon, one of the most dramatic coasters in the lineup, along with Trapper's Smokehouse, a family dining favorite with delicious BBQ options and portions big enough for your teens.
New France
New France is home to InvadR, the park’s only wooden coaster. If you’re looking to cool off, check out Le Scoot log flume ride. There are also some fun stores here with unique merchandise and activities. You can dip your own one-of-a-kind candle or head to Caribou Pottery, where non-riders can sit, paint, and genuinely enjoy themselves.
Germany
Germany is where you’ll find one of the park’s oldest coasters, Alpengeist, as well as the high-flying swings Der Wirbelwind. You can also stop into Das Edelweiss for some delicious funnel cakes with lots of toppings. You’ll find some fun German merchandise like hand-painted beer steins and unique nutcrackers.
Oktoberfest
This area is anchored by Das Festhaus, the park's largest indoor dining and entertainment venue. You can ride the newly updated Verbolten and even try your luck at some carnival-style games. If you’re in need of a snack, pretzels and beer can be found here… it is Oktoberfest after all.
Italy
Italy is where you’ll find San Marco Theater for entertainment while you eat food from Marco Polo’s Marketplace. You can also engage in one of our favorite activities: a screaming competition with strangers on the Battering Ram (trust me, it’s fun). Escape from Pompeii offers a great opportunity to cool off and, if you don’t want to wait in line, just stand in the observation area to get completely doused.
Festa Italia
Some of the best coasters are located in this area, including Pantheon and Apollo's Chariot, a personal favorite for its smooth ride and free-flight sensation. It also features one of the park’s major water rides: Roman Rapids. (Fair warning: you will get wet!)
Sophie & Rachel, prepare for an adrenaline rush on The Trade Wind in Festa Italia.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg Coasters Worth Knowing Before You Go
For families with teens who want to maximize ride time, here is the lineup at a glance:
Loch Ness Monster — The world's first interlocking loop coaster, recently fully restored with new thematic elements. It’s a strong first coaster for newer riders and a nostalgic ride for longtime visitors.
Apollo's Chariot — Smooth, fast, and visually stunning at 73 mph. The open restraint system creates a genuine free-flight sensation across 825 combined feet of drops. If your group rides only one coaster, make it this one.
Griffon — The first floorless dive coaster of its kind, with a 205-foot drop at 90 degrees. The moment of suspension at the top before the drop is either exhilarating or terrifying, depending on who you ask. Both reactions are valid.
Pantheon — The record-breaker. Four launches, five airtime hills, two inversions, and a top speed of 73 mph. It is relentless from start to finish.
The Big Bad Wolf: The Wolf's Revenge — The newest addition. 2,500 feet of track through an abandoned Bavarian village at speeds up to 40 mph. Fans who are nostalgic for the park’s original Big Bad Wolf coaster that was demolished in 2012 will be pleased.
Verbolten: Forbidden Turn — The updated indoor/outdoor coaster with reimagined effects, reopened spring 2026.
Additional coasters include Alpengeist (inverted), InvadR (wooden), DarKoaster (fully indoor), and Tempesto (the only coaster we personally refuse to ride… It’s a whole thing).
For non-coaster thrill seekers, Finnegan's Flyer and The Trade Wind deliver serious airtime and spinning. Der Wirbelwind and Le Catapult offer classic swing and spinning experiences with lower height requirements.
Check out the complete line-up of Busch Gardens Williamsburg rides!
Giving Tweens & Teens Their First Taste of Independence
This is something we feel strongly about, and Busch Gardens Williamsburg is one of the best places to let it happen for the first time. The park layout is intuitive, the signage is clear, the park is fully enclosed, and the staff is visible throughout. Cell service is generally reliable, and the meeting-spot system is easy to execute.
Rachel invited her best friend to join us in Williamsburg for a weekend a few years ago. We loved showing her around, but the park day was the highlight. The older girls were gracious enough to let Sophie tag along, and the three of them spent the day enjoying rides and attractions entirely at their own pace, without the boring adults. It made the visit particularly memorable for all three of them.
Teen Tip: If your teen is bringing a friend, have a quick five-minute conversation at the entrance about the budget, the check-in plan, and the meeting location. It lets everyone relax into the experience from the start.
BGW Must-See Shows & Entertainment
The live entertainment at Busch Gardens Williamsburg is consistently underestimated by first-time visitors, and it is one of the strongest arguments for multigenerational visits.
Celtic Fyre, the park's Irish step-dancing production, has won awards and runs multiple times daily in Ireland. It is genuinely impressive and appeals across every age group.
Das Festhaus hosts rotating musical performances throughout the day in a large, air-conditioned setting where you can dine while you watch. The programming shifts with the season, from Oktoberfest-style entertainment in autumn to festive holiday shows during Christmas Town.
Das Festhaus, transformed into the Casket Club during Howl-O-Scream at Busch Gardens Williamsburg.
The Globe Theater and San Marco Theater round out the park's daily entertainment lineup with rotating shows.
Busch Gardens also hosts a summer concert series at the Royal Palace Theater on select nights between April 25th and September 5th, 2026. Visitors are admitted free with park admission. This summer's lineup features Hanson, Chris Kirkpatrick of NSYNC, Flo Rida, and more! These concerts provide a fun evening option for teens, young adults, and parents who grew up listening to these artists.
Seasonal events bring their own entertainment lineups. Howl-O-Scream adds shows designed specifically for older teens and adults. Christmas Town brings heartwarming performances that are among the highlights of the winter visit.
Check the daily schedule in the app or on the physical map as soon as you arrive. Seating for popular shows fills quickly during peak season, and the show schedule is one of the best tools for structuring a non-rider's day.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg for Grandparents & Non-Riders
One of the most common concerns we hear from families planning a multigenerational theme park visit is straightforward: What do the non-riders do all day?
At Busch Gardens Williamsburg, the answer is: Quite a lot!
The European-country theming means the park itself is genuinely pleasant to explore at a relaxed pace. The landscaping is beautiful, the architecture is interesting, and the atmosphere shifts enough between areas that wandering from Oktoberfest to New France to Italy feels like its own experience.
A grandparent with no interest in coasters can spend a full afternoon doing exactly that without feeling like they are simply waiting for everyone else to finish riding.
Beyond wandering, the Rhine River Cruise and Sky Ride offer relaxed, scenic experiences that consistently appeal across generations. The Busch Gardens Railway covers a meaningful portion of the park and, like the Sky Ride, it doubles as transportation, which matters at the end of a long day on hilly terrain.
Several years ago, I had a spinal surgery that prevented me from riding anything for several months. Sophie was still a bit too small for the bigger rides at the time, so the two of us spent a couple of hours painting pottery at Caribou Pottery under a cool fan while Kevin and the older girls rode all the big coasters. It was relaxing and fun, and it gave us each a souvenir worth keeping.
BGW Visitors with Low Mobility
Don't let limited mobility keep you from enjoying this park. Several years ago, we brought my parents along when my mother was having mobility issues. We quickly learned that the park's stunning yet hilly landscape makes a manual wheelchair far more difficult to manage than flatter parks.
Kevin headed back to the front of the park, where he rented a motor scooter for her, and it was life-changing. She kept up with the rest of us all day and had the best time. That experience paid off a couple of years later when Kevin broke his leg right before our annual Howl-O-Scream visit. We already knew exactly what to do.
If someone in your party needs a little help getting around, we recommend reserving a scooter in advance online. It can genuinely be the difference between a full, enjoyable day and an exhausting one. Review theaccessibility accommodations guide on the official website before your visit if mobility is a consideration for anyone in your group.
Low-Mobility Tip: One area worth noting before you go is the wildlife area between Ireland and France. It is a genuinely enjoyable stop with interesting animals, but the terrain is very steep and can be challenging for anyone with mobility considerations.
If your grandparent or low-mobility visitor is not using a motorized scooter, you’ll want to skip this section entirely rather than pushing through difficult terrain mid-day. The rest of the park is very manageable, but this stretch is the exception.
What to Eat at Busch Gardens Williamsburg
The quality of the food at Busch Gardens Williamsburg is genuinely above that of most theme parks, and the variety across the European areas keeps things interesting throughout the day.
Das Festhaus (Oktoberfest) is our go-to for a proper sit-down meal. Traditional German options like bratwurst and sauerkraut share the menu with pizza and desserts in a large, air-conditioned space with live entertainment running throughout the day.
It’s also the kind of place where grandparents can settle in comfortably for an hour while teens are off riding.
Trapper's Smokehouse (New France) has been a family favorite for over two decades. Located across from Griffon, it serves chicken, pulled pork, and beef brisket alongside hearty sides like mac and cheese and baked beans.
The Trapper's Sampler is large enough to share and gives everyone a taste of each protein. The fried dill pickles deserve their own mention.
Marco Polo's Marketplace is the most reliably crowd-pleasing option for groups with varying tastes. Pizza, pasta, and lo mein mean that both picky and adventurous eaters can find something to eat.
The chicken or vegetable lo mein is a solid choice that sneaks some vegetables into a day that might otherwise be filled with funnel cake.
For snacks and treats throughout the day, our favorites include morning donuts at England Sweet Shoppe, funnel cakes at Three Rivers Snacks, sundaes and shakes at Josephine's, and Bavarian-style pretzels at Beste Brezeln und Bier.
The park offers all-day dining deals that include an entree, a side or dessert, and a drink every 90 minutes for one price. If you have teens with serious appetites who plan to eat multiple times a day, run the math before you arrive to see if it could save your crew money.
Insider Tip: Purchase a souvenir cup! The park offers two options, and the right choice depends on how often you visit:
Single-day visitors will get solid value from the cheaper plastic cup, which includes free refills for the date of purchase and discounted refills for the remainder of the season.
Families who visit multiple times should consider the stainless steel insulated cup. While significantly pricier, it covers free unlimited fountain beverages and ICEE refills through January 3, 2027!
The Busch Gardens Williamsburg App
Download the Busch Gardens Williamsburg app before you arrive. It provides real-time wait times, the daily show schedule, dining locations, and a digital park map. It is especially useful for families splitting up, since everyone can check wait times independently before committing to a queue.
That said, Wi-Fi can be inconsistent in parts of the park. Always grab a physical map at the entrance as your backup. The physical map also includes the day's show schedule at a glance, which the app sometimes requires more navigation to find.
Best Times to Visit Busch Gardens Williamsburg
Best Time of the Year
Honestly, if you are asking for our recommendation after almost thirty years of visits, spring is the sweet spot. Crowds are lighter, the weather is comfortable without the full force of Virginia's summer heat and humidity, and the Food & Wine Festival offers a genuinely impressive food-and-drink component that appeals to every age in the group. If you have any flexibility in your schedule, this is the time to go!
Fall gets an honorable mention, with one caveat. Howl-O-Scream is our personal favorite seasonal event, and the cooler weather makes for a genuinely enjoyable park day. That said, crowds are larger than in spring, and while your teens might love the after-dark haunted houses and scare zones, it may not be the right fit if grandparents (or scaredy cats) are part of the crew.
If your group skews older teens and adults, fall is a fantastic choice! If you’re bringing a broader multigenerational group, spring will serve you better.
"Busch Gardens Williamsburg - Verbolten Howl-o-Scream" by holl7510 CC BY 2.0.
Best Days & Times
Weekdays are significantly less crowded than weekends, regardless of season. If your schedule has any flexibility, a Tuesday or Wednesday visit is a completely different experience from a busy Saturday (especially in July).
As far as the best time of day, we are honestly not early-bird park visitors. We like to stop for a donut and coffee on the way in and meander through our favorite areas. We might catch a show or two (and definitely grab some great food) and then really dig in during the evening hours when families with younger kids have cleared out for the day.
If that sounds like your crew, you will love how the energy shifts in the later hours. The coasters provide an extra thrill, and the park is beautifully lit up after dark.
Best Seasonal Events(2026)
Food & Wine Festival (Thursday – Sunday; April 23 – June 21, 2026): Spread throughout the park's European-themed areas, this food festival brings an impressive rotating lineup of international dishes and drink pairings that go well beyond standard theme park fare.
Adults and young adults can sample wines, craft cocktails, and specialty beverages from around the world. Teens can join in tasting limited-time food options you will not find on the regular menu. For a park that already does dining better than most, this event takes it up another level.
Bier Fest: Brews & BBQ (Friday – Sunday & Labor Day; July 31 – September 7, 2026): Seasonal craft brews and beer-inspired food recipes are spread throughout the park, giving the adults and young adults in your group something extra to look forward to beyond the coaster lineup.
It runs concurrently with regular park operations, so the teens can keep riding while the grown-ups sip and savor.
Howl-O-Scream (Select Nights; September 11 – November 1, 2026): This is our personal favorite seasonal event and one of the strongest reasons to plan a fall trip to Williamsburg.
Daytime hours are completely family-friendly with Halloween theming throughout the park, but after dark, the experience shifts entirely, with haunted houses and scare zones (terror-tories) designed for older teens and adults. For families whose teens are ready for genuine scares, this event delivers!
Christmas Town (Select Dates; November 23, 2026 – January 3, 2027): Millions of lights, festive live entertainment, seasonal food, and a completely transformed atmosphere make the park feel like an entirely different place.
In our experience, Christmas Town is among the most impressive holiday events at any theme park anywhere. It’s worth planning a dedicated trip, even though the full coaster lineup isn't running.
A large Santa Claus statue welcomes guests to Holiday Hills near Italy & Festa Italia during Christmas Town.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg 2026 Tickets
2026 Ticket Options
Busch Gardens Williamsburg offers single-day tickets, multi-day options, annual passes, and seasonal Bounce tickets. Always purchase online in advance. Walk-up gate pricing is consistently higher, and online purchases frequently include perks not available at the window.
Virginia residents qualify for discounted tickets, so check the official website before purchasing anywhere else.
Busch Gardens Williamsburg Annual & Seasonal Passes
If your family visits more than once in a 12-month period, an annual pass almost always wins on value. Most plans (excluding the Basic tier) include parking. Annual Memberships cost between $189 (Basic) and $537 (Platinum). You can pay a single price annually or break the cost into monthly payments. The park runs membership sales throughout the year, so check the site for discounted offers.
As a family, we held Platinum memberships for over a decade before we began traveling internationally. With admission to 11 parks in the SeaWorld Entertainment family and Preferred Parking, the value is consistently strong for families visiting multiple parks each year.
Annual Pass members also receive up to 30% off in-park purchases depending on their membership tier. Over the course of a full day, discounts on food, drinks, and merchandise add up to meaningful savings.
For current single-day ticket pricing, multi-day rates, and annual pass options, visit theofficial Busch Gardens Williamsburg website.
Frequently Asked Questions: Busch Gardens Williamsburg
Is Busch Gardens Williamsburg worth it?
Yes, especially for multigenerational groups. Busch Gardens Williamsburg stands out from most theme parks because it genuinely works for everyone in the group on the same day.
The European theming, live entertainment, and dining quality mean non-riders and grandparents have a full day's worth of experiences while teens and young adults chase coasters. If your group includes a mix of ages and interests, it is one of the best-value theme parks on the East Coast.
How many days do you need at Busch Gardens Williamsburg?
One full day is enough to hit the highlights, but two days let you experience everything without rushing, including shows, dining, and seasonal events. If you are visiting during the Food & Wine Festival, Howl-O-Scream, or Christmas Town, budget an extra day to take full advantage of the event programming. Families with annual passes often split visits across multiple shorter trips throughout the season.
What is the best ride at Busch Gardens Williamsburg?
Apollo's Chariot is the most consistently praised ride in the park. It delivers a smooth, fast experience at 73 mph with an open restraint system that creates a genuine free-flight sensation, accessible enough for first-time coaster riders, thrilling enough for enthusiasts.
For pure intensity, Pantheon is the record-breaker with four launches and a top speed of 73 mph. For nostalgia and history, the Loch Ness Monster, the world's first interlocking loop coaster, remains a rite of passage.
Is Busch Gardens Williamsburg good for non-riders and grandparents?
Yes, and this is one of the park's most underrated strengths. Non-riders can spend a full day exploring the European-themed areas, watching live shows like Celtic Fyre (Irish step dancing) and Das Festhaus performances, riding the Rhine River Cruise and Busch Gardens Railway, and dining well across the park.
Grandparents with mobility limitations should rent a motor scooter at the park entrance; it is the difference between a full, enjoyable day and an exhausting one. Reserve one in advance online.
What is the best time to visit Busch Gardens Williamsburg?
Spring is the sweet spot for most families, with lighter crowds, comfortable weather (before Virginia's summer heat and humidity set in), and the Food & Wine Festival running Thursdays through Sundays from late April through late June.
Weekdays are significantly less crowded than weekends year-round. If your group skews older teens and adults, fall is a strong alternative thanks to Howl-O-Scream, though crowds are larger. Avoid peak summer weekends if crowd sensitivity is a concern.
Can you bring your own food into Busch Gardens Williamsburg?
Outside food and beverages are generally not permitted inside the park, with exceptions for guests with documented dietary needs or food allergies. The park's dining quality is genuinely above average for a theme park, and options like Trapper's Smokehouse, Das Festhaus, and Marco Polo's Marketplace offer enough variety for most groups. The all-day dining plan is worth running the math on before you arrive, especially for teens with large appetites who plan to eat multiple times throughout the day.
Why We Keep Coming Back
Busch Gardens Williamsburg has been part of our family's story for almost thirty years. What keeps bringing us back is not any single ride or seasonal event. It is that the park consistently delivers something meaningful for every person in the group, on the same day, without anyone having to sacrifice their experience for someone else's. That is genuinely rare, and it is why Busch Gardens Williamsburg belongs on every multigenerational family's list.
Planning a broader Williamsburg trip? Our complete Williamsburg with Kids guide covers everything else the area has to offer, from Colonial Williamsburg to the best places to eat and stay.
Have you visited Busch Gardens Williamsburg with your multigenerational crew? What are your family's favorite rides, restaurants, or seasonal events? Drop your tips in the comments. We would love to hear what works for your family!
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About the Author
Colleen is a Gen X mom, full-time traveler, and the voice behind Uncommon Family Adventures, a family travel blog read by families in more than 100 countries worldwide and featured in Power Homeschool.
She has been visiting Busch Gardens Williamsburg with her family for nearly three decades, from toddlerhood through the teen and young adult years, and has brought her own parents along for the ride, too. That longevity is not incidental; it means she has experienced the park across every family configuration: strollers and grandparents, newly independent tweens, teens chasing their first big coasters, and young adults who now out-ride her on everything except Apollo's Chariot.
Since 2024, Colleen has been traveling the world full-time with her husband, Kevin, and their three daughters, visiting 15+ countries across 4 continents. Her travel advice is honest, firsthand, and written specifically for families with older kids, no fluff, no filler, and no recommendations she has not personally tested.
Uncommon Family Adventures is read by families in 100+ countries. All recommendations on this blog are based on our own experience. This post contains no affiliate links.