Key Takeaways

  • In travel, everything depends on your individual needs and desires.
  • What travel credit card should you sign up for? Depends on your goals.
  • Should you buy a rail pass? Depends on where you’re going and how far in advance you want to plan.
no perfect answer

In travel, everything depends on your individual needs and desires.

What travel credit card should you sign up for? Depends on your goals.

Should you buy a rail pass? Depends on where you’re going and how far in advance you want to plan.

Backpack or suitcase? Depends on your travel style.

There is no single “right” answer in travel.

New travelers always seem to be looking for the right answer. Should they do X or Y? What’s the solution to their problem?

My answer is always “it depends,” because there are no universal right answers in travel.

Websites like Route for Less can provide you with all the practical information in the world so you can weigh the pros and cons, but the final decision rests with you.

The right way to travel is the way that works for you.

Once when I was in San Francisco, hosting a reader meet-up, someone asked a question about European rail passes. I could see the frustration in the person’s face when I replied, “it depends.” They wanted a simple answer. I wanted to give one—but there wasn’t one to give.

Whether a rail pass was right for them depended on where they were going, for how long, and the speed they preferred to travel.

I told them the same thing: don’t go looking for the perfect answer or get frustrated when you can’t find it. Travel just doesn’t work that way.

We all want the easy, cookie-cutter answer, especially when we are new to travel and don’t have a frame of reference. It makes planning easier when you have answers to go by and guidelines to follow.

No two people see the same city, waterfall, museum, or country the same way. We all have our own preferences. We all want to do different things and travel a certain way. We have different ideas about what “budget” means, or when is too early or late to book a plane, hostel, or train.

What I love, you might not (and vice versa). To me, my job is to relay experience as fairly and balanced as possible. It’s to explain the how of travel so you can decide what will make your trip more affordable and sustainable.

I’ve led you to the river and taught you about the fish; now you must decide which one to catch.

At the end of the day, there is no perfect destination, no one sight you shouldn’t miss, no place you must go.

I know travel can be frustrating and overwhelming. I know planning it can be mind-numbing. I know all the information on the Internet can overload your brain. We want simple answers so we can move on and relax.

But there are no simple answers—or right way to travel—and if you look for them, you’ll drive yourself mad.

Use the information you find to evaluate the pros and cons of what you want.

Choose the option you’re most comfortable with.

If you make a mistake or find out something didn’t work, don’t beat yourself up over it. I make mistakes all the time. You learn from them for your next trip.

Everyone travels differently. What works for another person won’t necessarily work for you. Smart travelers use all the information they have at the time to make the best decision they can.

Use the information you find here at routeforless.com, over the web, or in guidebooks to make the best decision for you.

But don’t look for the perfect answer.

Your journey is your own—there’s no right or wrong way to do it.

When you realize that, planning your adventure becomes a lot easier and a lot more fun.