6 Reasons to Return to Sedona, Arizona for Your Next Trip

At FXExpress Publications, Inc., we’re eager to #ComeBacktoTravel and to see the travel industry and communities #ComeBacktoGT. Over the coming weeks, we’ll share photos of destinations that inspire us. Join us on a visual tour of Sedona’s most striking landscapes and cultural highlights.

  • Red Rock Crossing

    Red Rock Crossing on Oak Creek sits beside Cathedral Rock, a sandstone butte that ranks among Arizona’s most photographed sights. © Chris Curtis | Dreamstime.com
  • Cathedral Rock

    Cathedral Rock and nearby Bell Rock, which rises to 4,919 feet, are often described as vortex sites—places many visitors associate with concentrated spiritual energy. © Edwin Verin | Dreamstime.com
  • Chapel of the Holy Cross

    The Chapel of the Holy Cross is a Roman Catholic church built into Sedona’s red-rock formations. Completed in 1956, it was commissioned by a local rancher and sculptor and remains a striking architectural landmark. © Scott Prokop | Dreamstime.com
  • Sedona

    Famous for its mild climate, canyon walls, red-rock buttes and pine forests, Sedona offers more than scenery. The town supports a lively arts community and a rich outdoors culture. © Serge Novitsky | Dreamstime.com
  • Sedona

    For a unique perspective, take a hot-air balloon ride over Sedona’s red rocks. Operators such as Red Rock Balloons and Northern Lights Balloon Expeditions offer sunrise flights that showcase the landscape from above. © Derrick Neill | Dreamstime.com
  • Tlaquepaque Arts & Craft Village

    Tlaquepaque Arts & Craft Village—pronounced T-lockey-pockey, often translated as “best of everything”—has been a Sedona fixture since the 1970s and features dozens of specialty shops and galleries. © Iprintezis | Dreamstime.com
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