Soft morning light with flowers and a journal — quiet calm

Babymoons

One last calm trip, before everything changes.

A babymoon isn't quite a honeymoon and isn't quite a regular vacation. We plan it specifically — easy travel times, hotels with proper bathtubs, restaurants that aren't going to make you feel sick, pacing built around how a pregnancy actually feels at 28 weeks.

The next time you take a trip just the two of you won't feel like this.

We plan babymoons that are calm by design. Direct flights. Hotels close to medical care if it ever matters (it usually doesn't, but it should be there). Beds that aren't a wreck on your back. Food you can actually eat. Activities that are gentle enough not to ruin you.

And we don't make a thing of it. The hotel just has the right pillow already in the room. The restaurant just doesn't seat you next to the kitchen. Quiet, considered, no fuss.

What we think about

Pregnancy-aware planning

The things you don't want to be Googling at 11pm.

Calm departures gate in soft morning light

Easy travel days

Direct flights when possible. Travel times that don't have you in the air on a difficult day. Comfortable cars to and from airports — no last-minute Ubers.

Calm hotel suite with proper bathtub

Pregnancy-friendly hotels

Real bathtubs, quality mattresses, rooms not above the bar. Within reasonable distance of medical care. We've vetted them — most properties haven't thought about a single one of these things.

Quiet restaurant table with thoughtful place settings

Food you can eat

Restaurants chosen with pregnancy in mind — nothing aggressively raw, plenty of options, kitchens that take dietary requests seriously. We brief them ahead so you don't have to explain at the table.

Soft morning city view from a hotel terrace

Gentle pacing

One activity per day, max. Long mornings. Naps protected. Dinners early enough that you actually want them. The opposite of a tour-bus week.

How we plan

Quiet, considered, fast

Most couples come to us in their second trimester. We can plan a great babymoon in 2–6 weeks if needed — earlier is better but we're used to short timelines.

  1. Discover

    A short call to understand how the pregnancy is going, what you can/can't eat or drink, and what kind of trip actually sounds good — beach, city, somewhere quiet.

  2. Design

    We send you a single routed proposal (couples in second trimester usually don't want a decision tree). Refine until it feels right.

  3. Book

    Every reservation handled. One readable itinerary. Notes for the hotels about everything we discussed.

  4. Travel

    We're a text away — and we'll quietly check in once or twice during the trip. You're free to nap.

I was 30 weeks pregnant and had assumed our 'babymoon' would just be a hotel weekend in the same city. Adrienne planned us five days in Sonoma. Direct flight, beautiful inn with the right bed, restaurants that already knew about my food restrictions. I cried twice. (Pregnancy hormones, but still.)
— A Momentella expecting parent, Babymoon · Sonoma · 5 days

Tell us about the trip

Start with what you know

Nothing here is set in stone. Share a sketch, a wish list, or a vague pull toward somewhere — we'll fill in the rest together.

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