In an age where travel has become increasingly accessible, simply visiting a new destination isn’t enough to create truly memorable experiences.
The difference between a good holiday and an extraordinary one is often about how we approach our time abroad.
Here are five strategies to transform your next international adventure into a path you will treasure for years to come.
1. Plan beyond the tourist traps
While iconic attractions deserve their fame, limiting yourself to these well-trodden paths means missing the authentic essence of your destination.
Visitors to tourism attractions continue to grow, and last year it went up 3.4 per cent, but there are challenges such as the rise of costs of doing business, which increases what visitors pay.
For this reason, you should consider dedicating at least half of your itinerary to lesser-known neighbourhoods, local markets, or regional parks.
Applications like Google Maps’ “Popular Times” feature can help you visit must-see attractions during quieter periods, while community-driven platforms like Atlas Obscura can uncover fascinating local secrets that guidebooks often overlook.
2. Embrace local culture and customs
Cultural immersion changes a simple holiday into a great learning experience.
When people engage and allow participation in the visiting country’s environment with their traditions and stories, they can benefit from enhanced creativity, increased cultural sensitivity, and broader perspectives when returning home.
3. Consider active exploration
Physical movement changes how we experience new places.
When we explore actively, we engage more senses, notice finer details, and create stronger neural connections and memories.
Increasingly popular options like cycling holidays give you an ideal balance between covering substantial ground and maintaining an intimate connection with your surroundings.
4. Be present and flexible
The greatest challenge for modern travellers isn’t finding information but filtering it. While pre-planning gives you valuable structure, the most memorable travel moments often come spontaneously.
For that, you can consider scheduling only one major activity per day, leaving room for serendipitous discoveries.
5. Connect with locals
No guidebook can replicate the insights gained from conversations with residents. Beyond the casual interactions in shops and restaurants, you can also consider more structured opportunities for exchange.
Cooking classes, craftwork workshops, and community-based tourism initiatives can give you natural contexts for connection. Platforms like Meetup and Couchsurfing host events specifically designed to connect travellers with locals, while volunteer opportunities through organisations like Workaway give you deeper community integration.
When you’re open to these approaches, your next holiday abroad can exceed typical tourism and become a path of personal growth, cultural understanding, and genuine connection. The true value of travel is not just in the places we visit but in how thoroughly we experience them.