Spam and other promotional pages, including pages solely consisting of touting.
Vandalism – namely page-creation vandalism.
Pages that contain no useful content – this includes test pages, only gibberish, or otherwise contain no legitimate content (such as article skeletons only consisting of [Destination] is in [Region name]).
Out of scope pages – this includes articles that cannot possibly ever be destinations or travel topics, as they are either much too limited in scope or entirely outside the scope of Wikivoyage. Examples include the names of people, companies, hotels, restaurants, hospitals, schools, and just plain gibberish.
Clear attack pages of any kind.
Clear copyright violations from sources that clearly attest copyright – the deleting admin must provide the source URL.
Imported pages from another wiki with no content (skeletons, redirects or text which has been entirely replaced by a new, non-derivative page). This one-time deletion for SEO purposes is without prejudice against re-creation and does not reflect a subject's validity as an article.
Author request. This includes:
Pages within the User: or User talk: namespaces at the request of the associated user (with the exception of pages that contain current or archived discussions).
Articles where a significant portion of the article was written by the requestor.
Images uploaded to English Wikivoyage without justification. Wikimedia Commons is now the repository for most images used on Wikivoyage. Any image uploaded to English Wikivoyage is subject to speedy deletion unless there is a clear explanation given about why the image was not uploaded to Commons instead (such as non-free content). When speedy deleting images uploaded to English Wikivoyage a message should be left on the uploader's talk page explaining that images must be uploaded to Wikimedia Commons.
Images that are blatant copyright violations from commercial, governmental, and non-commercial sites that clearly attest copyright. Examples include copyrighted maps and commercial PR materials. The deleting admin must provide the source URL.
Legacy categories left over from changes in the breadcrumb hierarchy. See #Categories above.
Empty categories.
Broken redirects.
Other uncontroversial housekeeping – this could include uncontroversial deletions of pages created in error, redirects with no (or trivial) history which are blocking a page move or redundant template documentation. (note that this is subjective – if you feel as though it is not "uncontroversial", list it at WV:VfD instead)