How to Plan a Solo Trip on a Budget for the First Time
Slug: plan-solo-trip-budget-first-timePillar: Travel > DestinationsKeyword: how to plan a solo trip on a budgetExcerpt: Planning your first solo trip? This practical guide covers everything from choosing a destination to staying safe — and keeping costs low throughout.Publish Date: 2026-05-28
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Why Solo Travel Is Having a Moment
In 2026, solo travel has hit record highs — with "solo travel" searches at an all-time peak and "women solo travel" at a 15-year high. The appeal is easy to understand: you go where you want, when you want, at the pace you want, with no compromises. And thanks to a well-connected world of apps, hostels, and travel communities, solo travel is more accessible — and more social — than ever.
Your first solo trip can feel daunting. This guide breaks the process down into manageable steps so you can plan confidently, travel safely, and keep your budget under control.
Step 1: Choose the Right Destination for First-Timers
Not all destinations are equal for solo first-timers. The best choices for a first solo trip combine:
- Good public transport (reduces reliance on taxis and expensive transfers)
- English-speaking locals or widely available English signage
- A strong solo traveller community and hostel culture
- Overall safety and low-hassle entry (no complex visa requirements)
Top picks for budget first-timers in 2026: Lisbon (Portugal), Tbilisi (Georgia), Vietnam (particularly Hanoi and Hoi An), Bangkok (Thailand), and Prague (Czech Republic — searches up 180% year-on-year). For UK travellers, Madrid, Amsterdam, and Krakow are excellent short-haul options.
Avoid choosing a destination purely based on aesthetics if the logistics are complex. A place that's beautiful in photos but has unreliable transport, language barriers, and few budget accommodation options will stress you out on a first solo trip.
Step 2: Set a Realistic Budget
Break your budget into categories:
- Flights: Use Google Flights with "flexible dates" to find the cheapest windows. Flying midweek (Tuesday/Wednesday) and avoiding school holiday periods saves significantly. Set up price tracking alerts for your route.
- Accommodation: For solo budget travel, hostels are the gold standard — dormitories cost £10–20/$12–25 per night in most of Europe and Southeast Asia, and they're where you'll meet other travellers. Private hostel rooms offer a middle ground. Booking.com and Hostelworld are the most reliable platforms. Read recent reviews carefully.
- Daily spending: Research the average daily budget for your destination. Southeast Asia (Thailand, Vietnam) is typically £25–40/$30–50 per day all-in. Western Europe runs £60–100/$75–125 per day depending on city.
- Emergency fund: Add 20% to your total budget as a buffer for unexpected costs — a missed train, a medical appointment, a night in a higher-cost city.
Use a trip budget tracker (Google Sheets or the Trail Wallet app) and log every expense from day one. Seeing where money goes in real time prevents overspending.
Step 3: Plan the Essentials, Leave Room for Spontaneity
Over-planned trips leave no room for the best parts of solo travel — the unexpected conversations, the place a local recommended, the detour you couldn't have predicted. Plan the essentials:
- Flights booked in advance (ideally 6–12 weeks out for the best prices)
- First and last night accommodation confirmed (arrival is the most disorientating moment — know where you're going)
- One or two "anchor" activities per day as a loose structure
Then leave the middle of your days open. Some of the best experiences on solo trips come from following curiosity rather than a packed itinerary.
Step 4: Handle Logistics and Safety
Before You Go
- Check FCO (UK) or US State Department travel advisories for your destination
- Get comprehensive travel insurance that covers medical evacuation — World Nomads and True Traveller are popular with backpackers
- Scan all documents (passport, insurance, booking confirmations) and email copies to yourself and a trusted contact at home
- Download offline maps (Maps.me or Google Maps offline) so you can navigate without data
- Share your rough itinerary with someone at home who can raise the alarm if they don't hear from you
While Travelling
- Get a local SIM card on arrival (usually under £5/$6) for cheap data
- Use a money belt or anti-theft bag in busy tourist areas
- Use ATMs attached to banks rather than standalone street machines
- Trust your instincts — if a situation feels wrong, leave it
Step 5: Embrace the Social Side of Solo Travel
Solo travel doesn't mean lonely travel. Hostels with common rooms, free walking tours (common in most tourist cities — pay what you feel at the end), Meetup groups, and apps like Couchsurfing's Hangouts feature connect travellers instantly. Solo travellers are universally more approachable than groups — locals and other travellers will often start conversations with you first.
For more travel guides and destination tips, visit our Travel hub.
FAQ
Is solo travel safe as a woman?
Millions of women travel solo safely every year. Key practices: research destination-specific safety tips before going, trust your instincts, avoid walking alone late at night in unfamiliar areas, and stay in well-reviewed accommodation. The FCO and solo travel communities on Reddit (r/solotravel, r/solotravel_women) are excellent resources.
What is the cheapest way to travel solo?
Hostels + budget airlines + overnight trains (saves accommodation costs) + cooking occasional meals + free walking tours. South and Southeast Asia remain the most affordable destinations for Western travellers — high quality of experience at low daily cost.
How do I deal with loneliness on a solo trip?
Loneliness comes in waves, even on great solo trips. Strategies: stay in social hostels, join group activities, call home when you need to (but don't feel obligated to check in constantly), and remember that moments alone in a new city are often the most memorable parts.
Should I book everything in advance?
Book flights and first-night accommodation in advance. For everything else, a loose plan (know the rough area you want to stay, have a shortlist of hostels) with flexibility beats a rigid booking that removes the spontaneity that makes solo travel special.
How much money should I budget for a first solo trip?
For a 7-day budget trip to Southeast Asia: £600–900/$750–1100 all-in (flights, accommodation, food, activities). For European city-hopping for a week: £800–1200/$1000–1500. Have more than you think you need — the peace of mind is worth it.










