Solo travel has a reputation problem. People imagine eating dinner alone, wandering empty streets, and scrolling a phone in a quiet café. The reality is almost the opposite. Travelling on your own is one of the most effective ways there is to meet new people — and once you understand why, it stops feeling daunting and starts feeling like the best part of the trip.
Why travelling alone makes you more social
When you travel with friends or a partner, you carry a small social bubble with you. It is comfortable, but it is also closed. Other people read it instantly and keep their distance. Travel solo and that bubble disappears. You sit at the shared table. You ask the question. You accept the invitation to join a group hike, because the alternative is your own company. Solo travellers consistently report meeting more people in a single week than they would in months at home — not because they are naturally more outgoing, but because the situation quietly pushes them to be.
Where to actually meet people on the road
Meeting people rarely happens purely by accident. It happens in places designed for it. A few that reliably work:
- Social accommodation. Hostels with common rooms, guesthouses with shared kitchens, and small boutique stays with communal breakfasts put you next to other travellers with no effort at all.
- Group activities. Walking tours, cooking classes, dive courses, day trips and food tours gather strangers around a shared experience — the easiest possible context for a first conversation.
- Co-working spaces and cafés. If you work as you travel, co-working spaces and laptop-friendly cafés are full of people in exactly your situation.
- Language and cultural exchanges. Many cities have regular meetups where locals and visitors trade languages over a drink.
- Travel-meeting platforms. Apps and sites built for travellers let you see who else is in the same city before you even arrive, so a coffee or a shared walk can be arranged in advance instead of left to chance.
How to start a conversation without the awkwardness
The hardest part is almost always the first sentence — and the secret is that it does not need to be clever. A shared situation gives you everything you need. "Have you been here before?" "What have you eaten that is worth trying?" "Is that hike really as hard as people say?" Questions about the place you are both standing in never feel forced. Follow up with genuine curiosity rather than a rehearsed script; people can always tell the difference. And be comfortable letting a conversation be short. Not every exchange has to become a friendship, and treating each one lightly takes all the pressure off.
Meet locals, not only other travellers
Other travellers are easy, familiar company, but the trips people remember most often involve locals. They show you the version of a city that no guidebook prints — the neighbourhood bar, the family recipe, the festival that is not on any tourist calendar. Find them through language exchanges, neighbourhood events, smaller family-run places rather than tourist restaurants, and platforms that connect visitors with residents who are genuinely open to showing people around. A meal cooked by someone who grew up in the city will teach you more than a week of sightseeing.
Staying safe while being social
Being open does not mean being careless. A few simple habits keep the social side of solo travel enjoyable rather than risky: meet new people in public places first, tell someone you trust where you are going and when you expect to be back, keep your own way home, and trust your instincts — if something feels off, you are always allowed to leave with no explanation. Prefer platforms and groups that verify their members; knowing that the person across the table is who they say they are removes most of the uncertainty. Safety and sociability are not opposites. Good habits are exactly what let you say yes more often.
Make connection part of the plan
The travellers who come home with the best stories are rarely the ones who saw the most sights. They are the ones who said yes — to the shared table, the group walk, the coffee with a stranger who is now a friend in another country. Treat meeting people as part of the itinerary rather than an accident, choose the places and tools that make it easy, and solo travel quietly stops being solo in every way that matters.