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Nobody to go on holiday with

(61 Posts)
Notjustaprettyface Sun 14-Jun-26 07:24:26

It’s holiday season.
My husband is in a care home and bed bound .
I have quite a lot of friends but most of them still have husbands to go on holiday with.
Another widowed friend has an unmarried daughter who goes on holiday with her and another friend , now divorced for a long time , has an unmarried sister who she can go with or she goes with her adult children.
I have 2 adult children; my daughter has told me that she just wants a holiday with her husband and kids .
My son and his wife are expecting their second baby early august .
I know there are companies that do holidays for solos and I haven’t tried that yet .
I be been on a couple of short breaks in this country on my own with my dog but it’s not much fun .
So I feel a bit sorry for myself.
I have joined U3a recently and there are quite a few ladies on their own but they all seem quite a lot older than me. .
I know it’s early days yet and we will see.
Does anyone have any encouragement they could give me please?
Thanks in advance

Marbelous Wed 17-Jun-26 23:29:37

I went on a solos holiday to Turkey. It felt strange standing on my own at the airport check in.

I got to the hotel later than everyone else (it was a small hotel with just our group) and beyond the darkness everyone was seated in a fairy lights area. I was greeted with shouts to come over there they had a glass of wine ready for me!

It was a wonderful week not having to reserve a sun lounger. We were a mixed bag of both sexes aged from 30 to 65 and we bonded well.

We used to eat on a long table by the pool and also went out to restaurants, sight seeing coach tours etc I’m still corresponding with several of the group 10 years later. Go for it, I’m sure you won’t regret it!

silverlining48 Wed 17-Jun-26 19:36:32

Avoid … smile

silverlining48 Wed 17-Jun-26 19:36:05

Swerve ?

Notjustaprettyface Wed 17-Jun-26 18:08:14

Withnobsonit
Hello
When you say : serve thé school holiday dates , what do you mean ?
And how have you managed to meet people when holidaying on your own ?
It sounds great , was it just random?

fancyflowers Tue 16-Jun-26 01:35:39

granto3

fancyflowers, I have just purchased a mobility scooter for myself as a birthday present. I have turned 70 today and feel life will pass me by if I don't get out and about by myself. My partner passed away 18 months ago and I felt I couldn't go on holiday due to my limitations of walking. Now that I have my scooter, the "world in my oyster" as they say. I am going to plan a week abroad by myself (and my scooter) and see where my fancy takes me. I have never gone abroad before, but I am sure it can't be that difficult. You should be brave and give it a try!

You are inspiring me to try a mobility scooter. I know I will never be able to walk more than a few steps so a scooter sounds the most logical solution.

WithNobsOnIt Tue 16-Jun-26 01:21:33

Find Saga a bit iffy tbh with really awful customer service. Also they are only really interested in the South Coast brigade.The ones that can easily fly from Gatwick Airport.

Do try a weeks holiday alone at hotel where you are not overrun with kids. Serve the school holiday dates.

I always go on holiday alone and have met some top people over the years.

Bon Voyage
🤞🏝️🏖️🏜️✈️

Tuliptree Mon 15-Jun-26 23:07:33

Janussi

I would love to get on a coach trip but since COVID lost the use of my leg muscles. I am living in a first floor apartment but have to crawl up the stairs.

Oh that’s so hard. I’m sorry. Have you no chance of moving? I guess not else you would have done so.

Janussi Mon 15-Jun-26 22:45:14

I would love to get on a coach trip but since COVID lost the use of my leg muscles. I am living in a first floor apartment but have to crawl up the stairs.

MT62 Mon 15-Jun-26 19:17:14

fancyflowers

I would love to go on holiday with DH but he isn't keen, and I have very limited mobility, so I can't see it happening.
I have thought about hiring a mobility scooter to enable me to go on short holidays.

You could buy a smallish scooter & take it on the plane. Save bothering with a wheelchair.
Few in our hotel had their own.
Quite expensive per day to hire one.

SueEH Mon 15-Jun-26 19:08:31

I holiday on my own regularly. I have a couple of “happy places” which I know well and can fly in and chill without having to do all the exploring of a new place. Do you have anywhere like that?
I intersperse with more exciting trips; last year to Uzbekistan and next up to India.
Uzbekistan was my first organised tour - I’d been a bit nervous of feeling “organised” but was very pleasantly surprised.

SunnySusie Mon 15-Jun-26 18:53:58

I have been going on holiday on my own for ten years now. Usually in a group on Ramble Worldwide or HF holidays. Both companies have a nice mix of singles and couples and normally around 10 to 18 in the group. They do hiking, gentle walking holidays and ones themed around hobbies with no walking. HF also own hotels in the UK which are really friendly. I went to the one in Shropshire last year. At breakfast and dinner you are directed to fill up the tables as you enter so that people dont form cliques. Most people then immediately introduce themselves to their neighbours. A single friend always goes to HF houses for New Year on her own and really loves it.

Spec1alk Mon 15-Jun-26 18:52:47

‘Limitless travel’ might be just what you are looking for. Phone them and they will send you a brochure

Grammaretto Mon 15-Jun-26 18:49:42

I was thinking of you today notjustaprettyface . I was on a walk with my U3A group who were discussing holidays, as they often do.
One woman had just returned from an excellent coach trip to Ireland with Glenton.
It wasn't for solo travellers but she was. They had a guide. It was good value. Excellent hotel s and meals included and although she's like to go back to explore further, it was a good taste of Dublin and Galway, where she hadn't been before.

It was mostly women, some solo, a few husbands and some with friends or mother's and daughters or sisters.

inishowen Mon 15-Jun-26 17:20:45

My neighbour was in a similar situation. She walked into her church group and announced she was looking for someone to go on holiday with. A widow jumped at the chance and they went to Madeira together. It all worked out well.

Luckygirl3 Mon 15-Jun-26 17:10:06

The problem for me is the sort of holiday that I like does not involve seeing the sights. I like to go to places of great natural beauty, especially near the sea, and bed down in one place and soak it all up.

Individual hire of a suitable property is very hard to find with walk-in shower, few steps, ability to get luggage from car to property (I can't lift much), and places to see also accessible.

cc Mon 15-Jun-26 16:53:40

I took my mother on a Jules Verne holiday some years ago and we had a great time. There were many single women on the trip and we stayed in some of the same hotels as a Saga group which seemed very similar.
I agree with SpinDriftCoastal, you could try a good hotel in a city you'd like the visit in the UK first, or try an organised UK touring holiday with a good company, just to see how you get on.

monami Mon 15-Jun-26 16:53:08

if youre rich

Cadenza123 Mon 15-Jun-26 16:41:00

I'm cruising next year but myself. It's somewhere I want to go and a short trip. I've self catered this year with my dog and it was a good break. I have also been looking at Titan holidays, big plus is that they pick you up from home.

Pinkrinse Mon 15-Jun-26 16:11:57

I’ve been holidaying on my own for years on and off. Since my husbands stroke I go 2-3 times a year as a bit of a respite break from looking after him, I’ve learnt to enjoy my own company. The best advice I can give is think about what you want from a holiday? I go to Barbados for a rest in January, then usually a walking holiday either totally on my own or with a group. I find the key thing is to have a holiday doing things I enjoy, I avoid places full of couple, so stay in small apartment blocks or hotels rather than large all inclusive full of couples and families. Make me feel sorry for myself. If I have things to do that I enjoy then being on my own doesn’t matter. Maybe a hobby? Or something you’d like to learn is a good place to start.enjoy!

4allweknow Mon 15-Jun-26 16:08:45

Quite a few of tge women who are in tge groups I attend go on holidays aimed at single people. One in particular who isn't yet retirement age but widowed goes on loads of cruises. She says she usually meets other singles or couples who include her for trips, meals etc. No-one I know has commented not enjoying some company on holiday.

Grannyjacq1 Mon 15-Jun-26 15:31:25

Recently returned from a Saga tour of Tuscany. There were several (5?) unaccompanied women on the trip, 2 unaccompanied men, and several couples. Everyone seemed to get on well and have a good time - all friendly and sociable. About 20 on the tour altogether. I think I would choose a tour rather than a 'flop on the beach' holiday so that you get a chance to chat to others. Also, choose one which has some group meals which are always sociable - no one gets left out. If you choose a tour company which caters for mature clientele, I'm sure you'll be able to find others with a similar outlook on life.

Stillness Mon 15-Jun-26 15:00:47

It’s quite a jump isn’t it to take a holiday alone and especially abroad. I think I’d go on the sort of holiday that we’ve never done…where it’s all arranged for you. Maybe a European excursion where each day, some trips are organised. There will be couples in that, but also some people on their own I’m sure. I’d treat it as an experiment, just do a week, and if I didn’t like it, chalk it up to experience. There would be a tour manager or similar, so it would provide the kind of more secure experience that you may be wanting.

granto3 Mon 15-Jun-26 14:56:13

fancyflowers, I have just purchased a mobility scooter for myself as a birthday present. I have turned 70 today and feel life will pass me by if I don't get out and about by myself. My partner passed away 18 months ago and I felt I couldn't go on holiday due to my limitations of walking. Now that I have my scooter, the "world in my oyster" as they say. I am going to plan a week abroad by myself (and my scooter) and see where my fancy takes me. I have never gone abroad before, but I am sure it can't be that difficult. You should be brave and give it a try!

Shill29 Mon 15-Jun-26 14:17:19

While on holiday with my daughter a few years ago there was a Saga group in same hotel. I was very impressed and told myself I’d go on a Saga holiday if on my own. Lovely rep. sounded a hard working nice genuine person and a happy group of guests. She organised quizzes and excursions etc or just a focal point if anyone wanted to sit with others in the evening.

Nicea Mon 15-Jun-26 13:54:08

Friendship Travel are good. Group trips for single people. Very friendly.
Also Riviera Travel.
Just You holidays are okay and Voyages Jules Verne.