Prices on European Vacations on the Decline as the Dollar Gains Ground

It's time to take that European vacation off the back burner.

— -- Paris anyone?

For many Americans, a trip to the City of Lights -- and the rest of Europe, for that matter -- has been on the back burner for years, with a weak dollar and pricey flights keeping travelers stateside.

So which cities offer the most bang for your buck? Aside from the aforementioned cities, other places popular with Americans showing steep declines are Paris (down 17 percent), Rome (13 percent), Brussels (14 percent) and Dubrovnik, Croatia (13 percent), and Dublin (11 percent). Of the 25 destinations on TripAdvisor's list, only Moscow showed a price increase between June 1 and Aug. 31 (8 percent). That's a result of a significant increase in the price of airfare, up more than 50 percent.

The U.S. dollar has been gaining ground against the euro since mid-2014, meaning vacation expenses on the ground -- restaurants, tours and museum entry -- won't send Americans into the same sticker shock that's plagued wallets for several years.

Compared to last summer, Americans can expect to pay about 20 percent less on hotels in Europe when booking on TripAdvisor, and 8 percent less on round-trip airfare,” said Brooke Ferencsik, director of communications for TripAdvisor.