(CNN) — Stock traders seek it. Athletes crave it. And it's something that can help tourists as they navigate the pandemic.
It's "the edge" -- a desirable advantage that puts you ahead of the game. And in travel right now, there's one thing that can deliver that boost: a vaccination card. In many important aspects of travel, it pays big dividends to get jabbed and secure that proof of vaccination.
Here are eight ways that fully vaccinated tourists have the edge as we enter the fall travel season of 2021:
1. Access to more foreign destinations

This view shows bridges over the Seine as well as the northeastern Paris skyline.
Alain Jocard/Pool/AFP/Getty Images
Do you want to travel outside the borders of your own country? You have a longer list of nations from which to choose if you're fully vaccinated.
This is especially the case if you're arriving from a place that your host country deems high risk for Covid-19.
All of this remains in a state of flux as the pandemic situation changes weekly. And it's not just Americans itching to go abroad who are affected by vaccination rules.

A visitor looks out over Manhattan and beyond from the Edge, the highest outdoor sky deck in the Western Hemisphere. It's located at Hudson Yards.
Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty Images
The United States has barred citizens from key countries around world from going there to vacation. That includes citizens of Brazil, the European Schengen area, Ireland and the United Kingdom, all nations that sent lots of visitors to America before the pandemic.
That also means unvaccinated people in places that currently are allowed to visit by air -- Mexico and Panama, for instance -- will lose their travel edge and find that door closing later this fall.
Bottom line: The unvaccinated tourist isn't without foreign travel options, but the edge clearly goes to the fully vaccinated tourist.
2. Fewer Covid-19 tests to take

People rest at a fountain in front of the Karlskirche in Vienna, Austria.
JOE KLAMAR/AFP via Getty Images
This spring and early summer, it looked like vaccination cards were going to liberate travelers from all kinds of things, including Covid-19 tests. Then when the Delta variant surged, we learned that vaccinated people can still contract and spread the coronavirus in "breakthrough" cases.
So how much testing you can avoid when you're fully vaccinated depends on the destination.
And vaccinated people could be exempt in some places from follow-up tests that unvaccinated people have to take while on holiday.
Bottom line: In general, fully vaccinated tourists have the travel edge, but they can't expect to avoid all tests.
3. Shorter or bypassed quarantines

Pleasure boats are moored at the island of Tortola, part of the British Virgin Islands.
Steve Helber/AP
In some places, proof of vaccination can either get you out of quarantine altogether or let you at least shave some time off a mandatory quarantine.
4. A passport to cruises

Carnival's Mardi Gras cruise ship is docked in the bay of San Juan, Puerto Rico, in August.
Carlos Giusti/AP
Good luck finding a cruise at all if you're not fully vaccinated. Because of the close quarters on ships, the industry is having to be particularly cautious.
Bottom line: Vaccinated travelers have more than a travel edge with cruising; this is total travel domination.
5. Some more resort and hotel options

Elite Island Resorts owns properties throughout the Caribbean, including St. Lucia.
Daniel Slim/AFP/Getty Images
Unlike cruises, resorts and hotels are much more open to all comers. Still, there are land-based lodgings that are starting to enforce their own rules. Some examples:
Bottom line: Fully vaccinated tourists have a small -- and possibly growing -- edge in accessing more resorts and hotels.
6. Access to more entertainment and sports venues
More and more entertainment and sports venues, especially those indoors, are demanding either proof of vaccination or at least a negative result from a very recent Covid test. That includes major entertainment destinations such as:
Bottom line: Fully vaccinated tourists score a big travel edge when it comes to fun 'n' games.
7. More dining options

A customer shows proof of vaccination to a host at a restaurant as vaccine requirements are in effect in San Francisco.
David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images
For many tourists, it's all about the food. And in some of the top fine dining cities around the world, you need a vaccine card or a negative Covid-19 test result to enter.
And while an unvaccinated diner can get a Covid test to enter some cities' restricted indoor dining venues, a vaccine card saves you the trouble of getting a fresh one every few days.
Bottom line: Unvaccinated travelers have a place at the table, particularly outdoors, but fully vaccinated travelers have the edge with a bigger selection of the tastiest choices.
8. Less medical risk and more peace of mind

A nurse administers a Covid-19 vaccine to a client at a clinic in Lakewood, California, earlier this year.
Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times/Getty Images
There's the issue of can you go? But there's also the issue of should you go?
Answering that is CNN Medical Analyst Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and research professor of health policy and management at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health.
"We are at a point in the pandemic where people will be making very different decisions based on their personal medical circumstances, risk tolerance and the value of their activities to them," Wen said last week.
Wen said that fully vaccinated people who have been very cautious throughout the pandemic still might choose not travel because of the risks they perceive. "On the other hand, there are fully vaccinated people who say, 'I'm aware of the risks, but I'm still going to live my life as if there is no pandemic happening.'"
She said "both would be reasonable decisions" for a fully vaccinated adult.
It's a different situation for the unvaccinated adult, she said.
"I don't think it's responsible for people who choose to be unvaccinated to be engaging in travel and interacting in public where they could potentially be infecting other people."
Wen said that fully vaccinated people should "be aware that they could still have a breakthrough Covid-19 infection. Chances are it would be mild, and there's a small chance that they could also be a carrier who could infect other people."
Wen also said fully vaccinated travelers should wear high-quality N95 or KN95 masks in high-risk settings. Even fully vaccinated people should quarantine for at least three days upon returning home and get tested before seeing vulnerable individuals, she said.
What Wen wants people to know: "If you're fully vaccinated, you can travel. Whether you do depends on your own risk calculation. There are ways to reduce your risk and by being careful upon your return."
Bottom line: Fully vaccinated tourists have a significant travel edge when it comes to personal health safety.
Top image: A scene from Los Angeles International Airport. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
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