Destination
Small-Group and Solo-Friendly Tours
Multi-day tours take the planning off your plate and the awkwardness out of solo travel. How small-group operators differ and how to choose.
Published April 14, 2026 · AI-assisted editorial

A multi-day tour is the easy button for a complex trip — someone else handles the logistics, the transport, and the where-to-eat, and you get a ready-made group of travel companions. For solo travelers especially, it turns a daunting itinerary into a sociable adventure.
Operators worth comparing
Fresh Adventures runs small-group tours with an active, social slant, while Enjoy Travel offers guided holidays across a range of destinations and styles. For trips built specifically around solo travelers, Solo Group Trips matches you with a like-minded group. Compare group size, pace, and what is included.
How to choose
- Group size: smaller groups mean more flexibility and connection; larger ones often cost less.
- Pace: match the itinerary to your energy — some pack in dawn-to-dusk, others leave free time.
- Inclusions: check what is covered (accommodation, some meals, activities) versus paid locally.
- Single supplement: solo travelers should check whether a shared-room option avoids the single-room surcharge.
Round it out
A tour handles the big logistics, but bring your own travel insurance and an eSIM so you are covered and connected throughout.
What we are watching
Small-group and solo-focused tours keep growing as more people travel alone by choice. The format removes the planning burden and the isolation, which is why it is one of the fastest-growing ways to see complex or far-flung destinations.
