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United States

Guide to United States

Must See United States

Places in United States

In association with:

Lonely Planet

At a glance

The USA is home to several of the world's most exciting cities, some truly mind-blowing landscapes, a strong sense of regionalism, a trenchant mythology, more history than the country gives itself credit for and, arguably, some of the most approachable natives in the world.

The US was fashioned from an incredibly disparate population who, with little in common apart from a desire to choose their own paths to wealth or heaven, rallied around the ennobling ideals of the Declaration of Independence to forge the richest, most inventive and most powerful country on earth.

When to go

The US is most popular with travellers during the summer, but this is when American families pack everything up and head out to visit Aunt Tilly. To avoid mobs (especially throughout the national park system), it's better to go during autumn or early spring.

Fast Facts

Full name:
United States of America (USA)
Capital city:
Washington DC
Area:
9,630,000 sq km / 3,718,143 sq miles
Population:
290,000,000
Time Zone:
GMT/UTC -5 (Greenwich Mean Time)
Language:
Spanish (other)
Spanish has effective dual-language status in parts of southern California, New Mexico, Texas and Miami.
Native American languages (other)
There are 400,000 speakers of Native American dialects.
English (essential)
American English encompasses a multitude of regional accents of differing degrees of intelligibility.
Religion:
Protestant (56%), Roman Catholic (28%), Jewish (2%), Muslim (1%)
Currency:
US Dollar
Electricity:
110V 60Hz
Electric plug details:
American-style plug with two parallel flat blades above a circular grounding pin
Japanese-style plug with two parallel flat blades