‘We left behind our spouses and grown-up children’: The rise of the girls’ trip
Whether they’re travelling alone or on female-only tours, women are packing their bags in unprecedented numbers.
Kathryn Hanes, second from right, in Queenstown with her sister, far left, and friends: “This was the first time since my 20s that I felt truly open to spontaneity again.” Credit: Courtesy of Kathryn Hanes
Think “early explorers” and it’s often names like Marco Polo, Francis Drake and Captain James Cook that spring to mind. Not so much Jeanne Baret – the first woman credited with circumnavigating the globe after she joined the botanical expedition of French captain Louis Antoine de Bougainville in 1766, with the help of her lover and professional partner in botany, Philibert Commerson. She did it dressed as a man until she was eventually found out, at which point Bougainville wrote in his journal, “her example will hardly be contagious.”
It’s only taken the best part of three centuries, but Baret – and the countless corseted would-have-been female explorers denied the chance to travel – may yet get the last laugh. One of the hottest trends in travel over the past 10 years is women carving out “me time” from work, family and caring responsibilities, to either travel alone or in all-female groups.
“The ‘mumcation’ is a whole new world of sisterly misadventure that recently opened up to me,” says financial services professional, Kathryn Hanes, who late last year joined her sister and two of her oldest friends on a week-long trip to New Zealand, which they dubbed “Mothers Uncorked”. “We left behind our spouses and nine (mostly) grown-up children and walked up and down mountains, around lakes, through valleys and talked and talked and talked,” says Hanes, who is in her early 50s. “It was so thrilling to have a holiday where the backing track wasn’t ‘Are we there yet?’ with an ‘I’m bored’ chorus.”
Hanes’ two children are now aged 22 and 18, but she well recalls the “draincations” with young kids: “So often on family holidays there’s no real downtime, days are planned with military precision,” she says. “This was the first time since my 20s that I felt truly open to spontaneity again. But unlike in our 20s, we now have well-paid, full-time jobs, so the trip wasn’t on a shoestring. We had long, lazy meals with lovely plonk. It was bliss.”
More women are choosing solo travel, with those over 50 the fastest-growing cohort.Credit: Duet Postscriptum / Stocksy Unit
Whether setting out in all-female groups or alone, more women are embracing the shift. In a survey by online portal Booking.com, 54 per cent of female respondents said they planned to travel solo in 2024. More than 64 per cent of the world’s travellers are women, according to New York-based Skift Research’s 2024 The Woman Traveller report, and women over 50 are the fastest-growing cohort. Almost a quarter of women aged 55-plus said they would prefer to travel solo than with their spouse and kids. Such figures are no surprise to Jenny Gray. She created the Women’s Expedition product range in 2018 for Australian-owned Intrepid Travel. The tours make a particular effort to support women-owned and operated businesses. “We launched our Women’s Expedition range seven years ago, when we realised more than 63 per cent of our travellers were female – and they were telling us they wanted to better understand and connect with women in a range of destinations and cultures,” says Gray.
Today, women aged over 45 represent the fastest-growing demographic for the Women’s Expedition category, and many are booking into an all-female trip on their own: “They are prioritising themselves like never before,” says Gray. “An increasing number of them are repeat travellers with us. It’s not that they want a ‘soft’ option, they just want the logistics taken care of, and to travel with like-minded women.”
India is the top-selling Women’s Expedition for Intrepid’s Australian customers, with a newly created women-only trip to Saudi Arabia and a long-standing tour to Morocco the next most popular. An increasing number of operators, including Banyan Tours in New Delhi (overseen by Lucy Davison), Girls’ Guide to the World and India Design Tours (run by Nicole Court, based out of Sydney) also facilitate trips for women to India.
Erin Forster, right, and friend, in France.Credit: Courtesy of Erin Forster
Australian outfit Pink Pelican Tours was founded last year. Next year it will run five women’s tours, to Italy, Indonesia and Slovenia. “The Bali Girls Tour and the Italy Food Tours book out the quickest,” says Pink Pelican’s director, Felicity Armstrong. “Women are redefining what it means to live fully, independently, and on their own terms. They feel less pressure to wait for a partner, family or friends before they travel. The narrative has shifted from ‘being selfish’ to ‘self-worth’.”
When it comes to travelling solo, safety remains the number-one concern for women, according to the Skift report. But technology has made things easier; laptops, mobile phones, global roaming, WhatsApp and online travel-support forums offer a greater degree of contact and backup.
And there’s more airplay online about the safest places to visit. Spartacus World’s 2025 Gay Travel index nominates Canada, Iceland, Malta, Portugal and Spain as all excellent for LGBTQ+ friendliness, a factor that tends to mirror safety indexes for women. New Zealand consistently rates highly, as does Japan, Norway, Austria, Italy and Switzerland.
Roving communications consultant Erin Forster, 33, spent almost six months in 2024 travelling through Europe and Asia, mainly solo. “For my age group, solo travel is seen as normal,” she says. “It can also be an even more social experience than travelling with friends. Travelling alone is something I wish I’d done much earlier. The personal growth you experience when pushed outside your comfort zone can’t be underestimated.”
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