The Benefits of Slow Travel
One of the most noticeable benefits of slow travel is deeper cultural immersion. When you spend more time in one place, you begin to notice the details that short visits often miss (🔗 read our article on travelling slow during short trips). You learn how neighborhoods feel at different times of day. You become familiar with local customs and routines. You begin to understand how daily life unfolds in a place.
Slow travel also tends to be far less stressful. Constantly moving between destinations requires planning transportation, packing and unpacking, and navigating unfamiliar environments over and over again. Slowing down removes much of that pressure and allows travelers to explore at a more relaxed pace.
During the first 2 years of being nomads, our bigger 3-month long trips were chaotic and left us burned out. We stayed in new places every few days, had to keep track of booking information endlessly, and we were juggling remote work on top of the chaos. Now, we've come to embrace and love the slower side of travel.
Many of the most meaningful travel experiences also happen spontaneously. Conversations with locals, stumbling upon a neighborhood café, or unexpectedly finding yourself at a community event often become the most memorable parts of a trip. These kinds of experiences are far more likely to occur when you have the time to wander without a rigid schedule.
There are environmental benefits as well. Traveling slowly often involves fewer flights and more local forms of transportation such as trains, buses, or bicycles. This can significantly reduce the environmental footprint of travel.
Slow travel can also make long-term travel more affordable. Staying longer in one place allows travellers to take advantage of monthly accommodation discounts, reduce transportation costs, and prepare more meals at home. We save approximately 50% on all our Airbnb stays because of this (🔗 read our article on budget slow travel here).
How to Travel Slowly
The simplest way to begin traveling more slowly is to stay longer in each destination. A helpful rule is to spend at least a week in a place whenever possible. Even better is spending a full month, which gives enough time for routines and rhythms to naturally develop.
Transportation choices also influence the pace of travel. Traveling by train, bus, bicycle, or foot allows you to experience places more gradually and interact with people along the way. These slower forms of transportation can transform travel itself into part of the experience.
Building small routines also plays a powerful role in slow travel. Something as simple as visiting the same café each morning or walking through the same park can create a sense of familiarity. These routines change your accommodation from somewhere you're visiting into somewhere you're temporarily living.
Slow travellers also tend to focus on local experiences rather than only major attractions. Visiting local markets, eating at local restaurants, spending time in parks, and attending local events can provide far more insight into a place than simply seeing landmarks that even the locals don't pay any attention to.
How to Plan a Slow Travel Trip
Planning a slow travel trip often begins with choosing fewer destinations. Instead of visiting multiple countries within a short period, consider exploring one region for several weeks. This approach allows you to understand the character of an area more deeply rather than simply passing through.
🔗 Check out our articles on how long to stay in one place and how to plan 1-month of slow travel.
Choosing walkable cities can also make slow travel easier. Destinations where daily life can be accessed on foot create natural opportunities for exploration. Cities such as Florence, Valencia, Kyoto, and Lisbon are excellent examples because much of their character can be discovered simply by wandering their streets.
🔗 Top 10 Slow Travel Destinations
Booking longer stays is another key element of slow travel. Monthly accommodations through apartment rentals, co-living spaces, or local housing arrangements often reduce costs significantly while providing a more authentic living environment.
When planning your itinerary, it’s helpful to leave plenty of free time. Instead of planning activities every day, consider choosing just a few experiences you want to do each week. The rest of your time can remain open for spontaneous discoveries.