Travel wasn’t always this adventurous. Not long ago, most people stuck with the usual crowd: friends, family, maybe a partner. The idea of signing up to
explore a new place with perfect strangers was unheard of. That sounded bold, or most people did not sign up for group travel with strangers. But that’s starting to change. It’s mostly Gen Z and the younger millennials who are flipping the script.
The Loneliness Nobody Wants to Talk About
Loneliness pushes a lot of this trend, even if people rarely say it out loud. Gen Z feels way more isolated than generations before them, and the data backs that up. In 2024, EF Ultimate Break found that young people feel lonely while travelling. Group trips with strangers are a shortcut to connection. There’s no history, no cliques, and no inside jokes you’re out of. Everyone’s on the same page, which makes the whole thing way less intimidating—and actually kind of freeing.
Travelling With Friends Can Get Messy
Vacations with friends sound fun, but they get complicated fast. Budgets clash, sleep schedules don’t match, someone’s cranky because you’re always together, and there’s always that pressure to be the “version” of yourself your friends already know. With strangers, none of that follows you. You get to just show up as you are, without anyone’s expectations weighing you down.
Solo Travel Isn’t Always the Dream
Travelling solo has been hyped for years, and for good reason—it’s empowering. But if you’ve ever sat alone at a restaurant in a city you’ve always wanted to see, you know that independence can come with a side of emptiness. A lot of young people want a balance: the freedom to do their own thing, but also people to share those moments with. Travelling with strangers quietly solves that; you get independence, with company.
Social Media Made Travelling With Strangers Cool
Social media has made all of this feel normal. Nearly 90 per cent of Gen Z admit they pick travel spots based on what they see online. Watching strangers turn into friends on group trips has changed the story about what travel “should” be. Suddenly, what used to seem weird now looks exciting. Plus, platforms that were once blamed for everyone feeling more isolated are actually helping people find travel communities that get them off their phones and out into the world.
The Stories You Walk Away With
Ask people who’ve tried these trips, and you’ll hear the same thing: the friendships they made with strangers over a week or two felt truer than some relationships back home. There is something about sharing an intense experience, nobody pretending, nobody playing a role. A simple dinner turns into hours of real talk. A tough hike is a memory you all share, not just something to post. For a generation used to letting life play out through a screen, these trips offer memories that are unfiltered and completely, imperfectly real.