A traveler with a journal in a quiet morning setting

Solo travel

Solo travel, with the logistics taken off your shoulders.

Traveling alone is a particular kind of luxury — and a particular kind of vulnerability. We plan solo trips for travelers who want the freedom without the planning load. Hotels chosen for solo guests. Transfers handled. Pacing that respects how solo days actually feel.

A great solo trip is mostly things you didn't have to worry about.

Solo travel goes wrong in small ways: a hotel that feels uncomfortable when you're alone, a dinner table for one in a place that's loud and group-y, an arrival in a strange city at 11pm with no driver. None of those are fatal, but they accumulate.

We plan to remove all of them. Hotels we've chosen specifically for solo travelers. Restaurants where eating alone is normal. Transfers handled door-to-door. A daily plan that has structure when you want it and space when you don't.

What changes

Designed for one traveler

Solo travel needs different planning. We've done it enough to know what.

Boutique hotel lobby with quiet morning light

Solo-friendly hotels

Properties where you'll feel comfortable alone. Bars where it's normal to sit at the counter with a book. Breakfast rooms that aren't all couples and families. Smaller properties where staff actually learn your name.

Calm boarding gate with soft light

Door-to-door transfers

No solo arrival in a strange airport hunting for a taxi. We have a driver waiting with your name. We handle every transit. Late flight, early flight — we plan for it.

Quiet restaurant counter with a book and a glass of wine

Solo-comfortable dinners

Restaurants where eating alone isn't awkward — counter seating, a great book recommendation, a glass of wine the chef wants you to try. Booked with notes that you're solo so they can take care of you.

Solo traveler on a guided morning walk

Optional structure

Some days you'll want a guide, a class, a private boat. Some days you'll want to wander. We build both into the plan — bookings ready when you want them, optional, never mandatory.

How we plan

Calm, considered, comfortable solo

From first call to safe return.

  1. Discover

    A call to learn what kind of solo traveler you are — extrovert, introvert, somewhere in between — and what scares you about traveling alone (we've heard it all).

  2. Design

    A routed proposal with a daily structure that has more or less scaffolding depending on what you want. Refine until it feels right.

  3. Book + brief

    Every transfer locked. Hotels notified you're solo and to take care of you. Restaurants briefed. One readable itinerary plus a single number to call if anything happens.

  4. Travel + check-in

    We're a text away, and we'll quietly check in once or twice during the trip. You're free to actually be alone — without being unsupported.

I'd never traveled alone before. Two weeks in Portugal, post-divorce, and Adrienne walked me through every day of it like a friend who happened to know everyone. The hotel staff in Porto knew me by name on day two. The dinner table they gave me had a view of the river.
— A Momentella solo traveler, First solo trip · Portugal · 14 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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